Posts Tagged ‘dudukina’

16
November 2010

Kremlin Says New Evidence Ties Lawyer Who Died in Jail to Theft of $230 Million

The New York Times

16 November 2010 – Senior Russian police officials, stung by accusations that they had framed a lawyer and then allowed him to die of an untreated illness in jail, sought on Monday to defend themselves by disclosing what they said was new evidence of his guilt.

The police officials contended that the lawyer, Sergei L. Magnitsky, had helped to mastermind a complex tax scheme to steal $230 million from the government. Their announcement, scheduled for the eve of the anniversary of his death last year, represented an effort to turn the tables on Mr. Magnitsky’s supporters, who have organized a concerted campaign in Russia and abroad to show that high-ranking police officials themselves embezzled the money.

The Interior Ministry called a news conference to offer what it called the new information about Mr. Magnitsky. Col. Irina V. Dudukina, a spokeswoman, said the ministry had arrested a person she called an accomplice of Mr. Magnitsky’s who was ready to testify against him.

”Magnitsky was an accountant and participated, in particular, in tax evasion schemes,” Colonel Dudukina said. ”It is not possible to say that he simply fulfilled the will of this employer without being informed of the final goal of his actions.”

In response, Mr. Magnitsky’s colleagues assailed the ministry, saying it was smearing a dead man.

Mr. Magnitsky had been caught in a feud between an international investment fund, Hermitage Capital Management, and law enforcement authorities.

Hermitage has contended that senior Interior Ministry officers raided its offices in Moscow in 2007, took documents related to three of its subsidiaries and used those documents to illegally assume ownership of the subsidiaries. The officers then filed fake tax returns for the subsidiaries and received an illegal $230 million tax refund, Hermitage said.

William Browder, the founder of Hermitage, who was expelled from Russia in 2005 and now lives in London, called the Interior Ministry’s announcement abhorrent.

”Sergei Magnitsky reported a crime committed by police officers,” Mr. Browder said. ”They then arrested him, tortured him and killed him. Now, one year later, they are accusing him of the crime that they committed. There is a special place in hell for people like this.”

Mr. Browder has circulated documents showing that two investigators assigned to the Hermitage case spent a combined amount of more than $4 million on real estate and vehicles during the period that followed the tax fraud.

Colonel Dudukina said the Interior Ministry had looked into these charges as part of a slander case initiated by ministry officials. She said the properties in question were all bought before the tax fraud occurred.

Colonel Dudukina was scathing about a measure put forward by Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, Democrat of Maryland, that would impose financial penalties and visa bans on officials implicated in Mr. Magnitsky’s case. She said the list was ”aimed at preventing investigators from taking part in investigative actions on the territories” of countries that have such measures. She said only 7 or 8 of the 60 names on the list were of people involved in the investigation.

”We don’t know why the other people are on that list,” she said.

Mr. Magnitsky documented repeated requests for medical care in prison, and numerous Russian officials have acknowledged that official misconduct contributed to his death. President Dmitri A. Medvedev ordered an official inquiry and dismissed about 20 prison officials. But a year later, the investigation has not led to any arrests, a fact that human rights advocates planned to protest on Tuesday. buy viagra online займы онлайн на карту срочно https://zp-pdl.com/get-quick-online-payday-loan-now.php www.zp-pdl.com займ срочно без отказов и проверок

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16
November 2010

Police in Russian fraud case implicate dead lawyer

The Washington Post

16 November 2010 – A year ago, lawyer Sergei Magnitsky died in prison here months after testifying about police involvement in the theft of millions of dollars in tax receipts. On Monday, the police accused the dead man of that very theft.

William F. Browder, a U.S.-born investor who was Magnitsky’s client, calls the accusation evil.

“It’s beyond absurd, beyond cynical – it is pure evil,” Browder, the head of Hermitage Capital Management, said Monday. “They are trying to blacken the name of Sergei on the anniversary of his death at their hands, accusing him of the very crime they committed.”

Magnitsky died Nov. 16, 2009, at age 37, after more than a year in pretrial detention. He had not been given medical treatment, although he was suffering from pancreatitis, and a public oversight committee called the conditions of his detention “torturous.”

Well before that, Browder, whose Hermitage Capital had been the largest foreign investment fund in Russia, had become a business dissident, an activist stockholder who was denied entry to the country in late 2005. Magnitsky provided legal work for Hermitage, and Browder has been tireless in his efforts to pressure Russia into pursuing those involved in Magnitsky’s arrest and death.

Last year, President Dmitry A. Medvedev ordered an investigation into Magnitsky’s death, and about 20 prison officials were fired, but no charges have been filed. On Monday, the Interior Ministry – the police department – informed reporters that it had thoroughly investigated during the past year and pronounced Magnitsky guilty.

The case dates to October 2007, when Magnitsky alleged that three Hermitage companies had been stolen and registered in other names, using documents police had seized in a raid on Hermitage that June. Hermitage filed three criminal complaints in early December, describing a complicated scheme involving police and fake tax deductions that would result in a tax refund of $230 million to the stolen, shell companies.

Those complaints failed to prevent the fraud, Browder said. On Dec. 24, 2007, the swindle was carried out with a $230 million tax refund – the largest ever paid in a single day.

In June 2008, Magnitsky testified that police were involved in the scheme. In November, some of the same people he accused were appointed to investigate the missing $230 million, and later that month Magnitsky was arrested. One year later, he died.

“They spent the last year trying to figure out how to make this go away,” said Jamison Firestone, managing partner of Firestone Duncan, the law firm where Magnitsky worked. “Now they want to pin it on Magnitsky.”

Firestone, who left Russia while Magnitsky was in prison, said Magnitsky died refusing to falsely implicate Browder and Hermitage in the scheme.

On Monday, at a Moscow news conference, Irina Dudukina, spokeswoman for the Ministry of Interior Investigative Committee, accused Magnitsky of the crime.

“Magnitsky had a degree in economics and worked as an accountant and auditor. He was not a lawyer,” she said. “And as an accountant, he was developing a tax-evasion scheme.”

She said results of the investigation would be sent to prosecutors for action. And she offered Browder a deal: If he repaid the missing money, she said, criminal charges against him in another tax-evasion case would be dropped.

Casting a wide web of blame, Dudukina accused Congress of interfering with the investigation. In September, after hearing passionate testimony from Browder, Sen. Benjamin L. Cardin (D-Md.) and Rep. James P. McGovern (D-Mass.) introduced bills that would bar visas for about 60 Russian officials connected to the case.

“We believe this . . . is aimed at preventing investigators from taking part in investigative actions on the territories of these countries,” Dudukina said.

Last week, at a conference in Bangkok, Transparency International, a worldwide anti-corruption organization, gave Magnitsky its Integrity Award for courage in pursuing corruption.

Before that, the Interior Ministry made annual awards for Russian Police Day. Five officials whom Firestone connects to the Magnitsky case were honored for their service, including spokeswoman Dudukina.

The Interior Ministry says it will pursue the case. So does Browder, who is promoting a documentary scheduled to be shown Tuesday in the Capitol Visitors Center and at parliaments in five other countries. It’s called “Justice for Sergei.” займ на карту hairy woman https://zp-pdl.com/online-payday-loans-cash-advances.php https://zp-pdl.com/online-payday-loans-in-america.php займы на карту срочно

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