Posts Tagged ‘firestone’

21
July 2011

Colonel Natalya Vinogradova

Ruspress.net

Deputy Head of the Investigative Committee of the Interior Ministry colonel Natalya Vinogradova, who participated in the investigation of investment fund Hermitage Capital of lawyer Magnitsky may be involved in receiving a bribe of 40 thousand dollars for the renewal of terminating the criminal case, said Chairman of the National Anti-Corruption Committee Kirill Kabanov, in his statement sent to the Chairman of the Investigative Committee, Alexander Bastrykin.

In 2008, the bribe, divided into tranches, Vinogradova, who had the name of Shcherbakova and then worked in a methodical control of the Interior Ministry met with the member of the “Guild of Lawyers of Moscow,” Vladimir Podolyakin. In 2003, the lawyer involved in client assets under the Moscow factory “Stekloagregat.” The case of forgery in the privatization was investigating at the police department of the Southern District, and to achieve the seizure of the plant, Podolyakina requsted Vinogradova to help him. After giving her a total of 40 thousand dollars, the case was sent to the main investigation department of the Moscow police, but the property has not been arrested. Then Vladimir Podolyakin asked Natalya Vinogradova to back money. After refusing, he went to the police. According to Kirill Kabanov, this is not the only accusation against N.Vinogradova.

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19
July 2011

Jail Officials Targeted Over Magnitsky

The Moscow Times

Investigators said Monday that a criminal case has been opened into two prison officials in connection with the death of Hermitage lawyer Sergei Magnitsky and that they face possible charges of negligence.

Larisa Litvinova, former medical official at Moscow’s Butyrskaya pretrial prison, faces up to three years in prison if charged and convicted of unintentional manslaughter by breach of professional duty, the Investigative Committee said.

Her former superior, Dmitry Kratov, may be jailed for five years if charged with negligence that resulted in death, committee spokesman Vladimir Markin said, Interfax reported.

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13
June 2011

Firestone boss runs Moscow practice from London as partner death probed

The Lawyer

The managing partner of a US law firm in Russia is being forced to run his firm from London after continuing to speak out against the authorities he believes are responsible for his former partner’s death.

The managing partner of a US law firm in Russia is being forced to run his firm from London after continuing to speak out against the authorities he believes are responsible for his former partner’s death.

Jamison Firestone is managing partner and co-founder of Moscow-based tax firm Firestone Duncan. In 2009 a partner at the firm, Sergei Magnitsky, died in custody after allegedly being refused medical treatment (TheLawyer.com, 30 November 2009).

Magnitsky had been held without trial for almost a year on charges of tax ­evasion as a consequence of an investigation into his client, investment company Hermitage Capital.

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28
April 2011

Magnitsky’s Colleagues: He exposed a fraud and paid for it with his life

WPS: What the Papers Say

Once they recovered from the shock caused by the news of Sergei Magnitsky’s death behind the bars, his colleagues initiated an investigation of their own. They are convinced that Magnitsky was murdered because he had exposed a fraud costing the Russian treasury 5.4 billion rubles and because he was prepared to testify in an open trial. Hermitage Foundation is still following the trail of the vast sums gone from the treasury in the hope to unearth a connection with people on the so called Cardin’s List. A video appeared in the Internet last week, focused on the colossal sums to be found on foreign bank accounts of Vladlen Stepanov, the husband of the former chief of Moscow Tax Inspectorate No 28 Olga Stepanova. It had been Stepanova who authorized return of the billions of rubles from the budget on December 24, 2007.

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18
April 2011

Moscow tax official’s $39 million fortune revealed

Forbes.com

A Moscow tax official who approved a fraudulent $230 million tax return in 2007 has bought luxury real estate in Moscow, Dubai and Montenegro and wired money through her husband’s bank accounts worth $39 million, a U.S. investor said Monday.

All that was done with an average annual household income equivalent to $38,000, according to documents released by William Browder, an American-born investor barred from Russia.

Browder has been campaigning against Russian corruption since 2009 when his lawyer died a year after being sent to prison. Authorities have not explained why Browder was himself expelled as a security risk in 2005 in the first place.

Browder, who used to head up Hermitage Capital Management in Moscow, a multibillion-dollar fund, is seeking to get justice for lawyer Sergey Magnitsky, who discovered the alleged fraud involving the Interior Ministry.

Magnitsky, who died in prison in 2009 after being charged with tax evasion linked to his defense of Hermitage, had discovered that officers at the Interior Ministry had seized ownership documents for three of the fund’s subsidiaries, then used those documents to register their own people as owners and directors.

They then reportedly filed a tax claim, saying they made a much smaller profit than originally described and asked for a tax return, according to Hermitage.

The $230 million refund was made in one day.

Magnitsky’s former employers, including Browder and Jamison Firestone, the head of the law firm where Magnitsky worked, revealed an array of documents Monday, which they said described the wealth of the tax official allegedly involved in the fraud.

The two are working together to expose the officials they believe are responsible for Magnitsky’s death and the tax fraud. More than a year later, Magnitsky’s death remains uninvestigated.

Browder and Firestone said the family of Olga Stepanova, who headed Moscow’s district tax office No. 28 until January this year, had incurred $39 million in expenses in the past few years.

Copies of bank account statements and property registration papers show Stepanova’s husband, an employee of a small construction firm, wire money through Switzerland’s Credit Suisse ( CS – news – people ) to build a $8 million luxury house west of Moscow and buy a vacation home in Montenegro and multi-million dollar properties on the Palm Jumeriah in Dubai in the name of his 85-year-old mother.

These transactions were allegedly made several weeks after Stepanova’s tax office authorized the $230 million tax refund.

Firestone on Monday sent the documents to Russia’s chief investigator and petitioned him to open a criminal probe against Stepanova and her colleagues.

Meanwhile, Browder said in a letter to Switzerland’s attorney general that criminal proceeds from the tax fraud may be held on various accounts in Credit Suisse.

The Interior Ministry has acknowledged the fraud but said it has been unable to locate the funds. The ministry said its officials had no part in the fraud and insisted the tax authorities were also innocent and had simply been deceived by the criminals.

Over the past year, authorities have turned down scores of petitions by Magnitsky’s former employers and human rights groups to investigate the Interior Ministry officials that Magnitsky believed were involved in the tax fraud.

Magnitsky posthumously received a prestigious anti-corruption award from Transparency International, an international anti-corruption watchdog.

Browder told the Associated Press on Monday that the documents came from a person who worked with Stepanova and her partners. Browder would not identify the person.

“This information is so complete and so damning that the Russian government will lose any legitimacy it has left in bilateral relations with the West if it doesn’t act and prosecute the officials who killed Sergei Magnitsky and stole $230 million from their own people,” Browder said. займ на карту займы онлайн на карту срочно https://zp-pdl.com/get-a-next-business-day-payday-loan.php https://zp-pdl.com/best-payday-loans.php hairy women

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18
April 2011

New Video of Tax Official’s $40M Fortune

The Moscow Times

Real estate in Dubai and Montenegro. Regular first-class travel. Millions of dollars in Swiss bank accounts. Russia’s second-best country house. And all made possible with an annual household salary of less than $40,000.

Those are the findings of a private investigation into the assets of Olga Stepanova — the former Moscow tax official who authorized a $230 million payment that no one disputes was embezzled.

The investigation is the latest conducted by supporters of Hermitage lawyer Sergei Magnitsky, who died in jail after accusing senior Interior Ministry officials of masterminding the $230 million fraud.

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06
April 2011

Who was Sergei Magnitsky?

The Daily Telegraph

Sergei Magnitsky was a humble Moscow lawyer who stumbled across possibly the greatest corporate tax fraud Russia has ever known. It was a discovery that would ultimately cost him his life.

His investigations uncovered a web of alleged corruption involving senior members of the police, judges, officials, lawyers and the Russian mafia. Despite death threats, he refused to leave Russia, instead deciding to probe deeper into the apparent fraud – uncovering two other suspected cases.

One of the policemen he had testified was at the heart of the crime was appointed to investigate him. Magnitsky was subsequently arrested on suspicion of tax avoidance and jailed.

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05
April 2011

Fall guy in Russian fraud uncovered by Sergei Magnitsky paid $2.1m

The Daily Telegraph

Questions have been raised about the role played by a sawmill foreman convicted of Russia’s largest tax fraud after new papers emerged purporting to show that he received payments worth $2.1m (£1.3m) following his detention for an alleged separate kidnapping.

Victor Markelov, 43, confessed in April 2009 to a vastly complex $230m theft of taxes paid to the Russian people and was jailed for five years with no fine in an apparent attempt to draw a veil over what was becoming an embarrassing episode for senior state officials implicated in the crime.

According to claims filed with the Russian prosecutor’s office, Mr Markelov may have been paid to take the fall. Two days after being arrested for the alleged kidnapping of a company director in late 2006 and attempting to extort $20m out of his boss, Mr Markelov was transferred ownership of a company with a book value of $1m.

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09
December 2010

Hermitage Capital urges Russian authorities to conduct transparent trial

Interfax
Jamison Firestone, the former boss of Hermitage Capital fund lawyer Sergey Magnitskiy [who died in Russian custody], has asked the Russian Prosecutor-General [Yuriy Chayka] and the head of the Russian Investigations Committee [Aleksandr Bastrykin] to conduct an open trial against Vyacheslav Khlebnikov, who figures in the case relating to embezzlement.

“J. Firestone demanded that the Prosecutor-General’s Office refuse Khlebnikov’s appeal, which is supported by the Interior Ministry, to conduct the trial in a ‘special’ (reduced) manner, without any examination of the evidence in court,” says a statement from the fund received by Interfax today.

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