Posts Tagged ‘kabanov’

19
July 2011

More officials to be sued over Magnitsky death

RIA Novosti

The Russian presidential civil society and human rights council does not rule out that more law enforcement and state security officials could be prosecuted over the death of lawyer Sergei Magnitsky in custody, National Anticorruption Committee head Kirill Kabanov said on Monday.

The Russian Investigative Committee has launched a criminal case against two former pre-trial detention center staff Larisa Litvinova and Dmitry Kratov.

Litvinova, who was Magnitsky’s doctor, is charged with causing the lawyer’s death by neglecting to render professional care. Her superior at the detention center, Kratov, is charged with negligence.

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18
July 2011

A Return Visit to Earlier Stories: The Trouble with Russia

Barron’s

Russia’s official version of the prison death of Hermitage Capital lawyer Sergei Magnitsky got a sharp revision on July 5, when a human-rights council appointed by President Dmitry Medvedev reported that Magnitsky had been illegally detained and had probably died from a truncheon beating inflicted by eight guards in November 2009 — and not from heart failure, as claimed by prison doctors.

When Magnitsky’s family received the body of the 37-year-old lawyer, it was bruised and his fingers were broken, said the report (“Crime and Punishment in Putin’s Russia,” April 18).

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12
July 2011

FSB, police officials could figure in Magnitsky death investigation

RIA Novosti

Officials from the Federal Security Service (FSB) and the Interior Ministry may be implicated in the death of lawyer Sergei Magnitsky in police custody, a member of the Kremlin’s human rights council said on Thursday..

Magnitsky died after almost a year in a notorious Moscow pre-trial detention center in November 2009. He had been arrested on tax evasion charges just days after claiming that police investigators had stolen $230 million from the state.

On Wednesday a council report said his death was likely to have been the result of a beating and that the charges against him were fraudulent. Human rights activists and his former colleagues allege the officers he had accused were involved in his death, which was originally said to have been the result of “heart failure.”

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12
July 2011

Inside Russia, new light shines on Magnitsky case

Russia Beyond The Headlines

Investigators, prison doctors, prosecutors and judges are responsible for the death of the Hermitage Capital fund lawyer, the presidential council on human rights stated. The international community watches to see what happens next.

The Russian lawyer who once worked for a U.S. investment fund died after a brutal beating from prison guards, the presidential council on human rights confirmed last week. Investigators, prison doctors, prosecutors and judges are all responsible for the death of the Hermitage Capital fund lawyer, the Presidential Council on Human Rights also found.

Their findings have international implications, as the case is seen as another litmus test for how the Kremlin can handle cases of alleged official corruption and abuses of power. In death, Magnitsky has become an international cause celebre: The 37-year-old lawyer died alone in prison in November 2009. He had accused officials of tax fraud before his arrest.

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08
July 2011

Report Blames Prison Officials In Magnitsky Death, Russian President Cites ‘Criminal Actions’

FIN Alternatives

Nearly two years after Sergei Magnitsky died in a Moscow prison, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev called his treatment “criminal” in the wake of a damning report blaming prison officials for the hedge fund lawyer’s death.

A report issued yesterday by Medvedev’s investigative council concluded that Magnitsky, who represented Hermitage Capital Management, “was completely deprived of medical care. Additionally, there are grounds to suspect that Magnitsky’s death was the result of a beating,” and not merely the pancreatitis he contracted during the year he spent behind bars on suspicion of tax evasion.

One member of the investigative committee went even further, telling The Telegraph, “we have concluded he died of a beating. It was real torture to beat an ailing man with truncheons.”

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04
July 2011

Dutch MPs impose sanctions on under-fire officials, but Moscow bids to arrest dead lawyer’s colleague

Moscow News

Europe’s relations with Russia have been handed another test, as Dutch lawmakers voted unanimously to slap sanctions on Russian officials on the ever more notorious Magnitsky list.

In The Hague, 150 Dutch MPs voted in favor of sanctions against 60 officials implicated in the prosecution and death in disputed circumstances of Sergei Magnitsky.

Magnitsky was a lawyer with British hedge fund Hermitage Capital and claimed to have exposed how Russian officials had embezzled $230 million of public funds.

But on the same day that Magnistky supporters were clapping themselves on the back a Moscow court issued an arrest warrant for Ivan Cherkasov, Magnitsky’s old colleague.

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23
December 2010

Magnitsky Investigator handed case of embezzlement from “Transneft”

GZT.ru
(This translation was carried out using Google Translate software.)

The case of misuse of funds during the construction of the ESPO oil pipeline was recently transferred to Investigator Oleg Sil’chenko who conducted the case into Hermitage Capital lawyer Sergei Magnitsky. About it ” Statements” Said the chairman of the National Anti-Corruption Committee Kirill Kabanov.

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16
November 2010

A year on, Magnitsky probe stalls

The Moscow News

15 November 2010 – On 16th November, it will be a year since Sergei Magnitsky, a lawyer for Hermitage Capital, died in jail after repeated refusals by investigators to get him treated for gall bladder disease. Despite the ordering of a criminal investigation and a series of high-profile sackings by President Dmitry Medvedev, who tacked prison reform onto his ambitious overhaul of law enforcement, no one has been brought to justice.

“They’re doing something, but to this day, we have neither suspects nor accusations,” Magnitsky’s lawyer Yelena Oreshnikova told The Moscow News. “The time for a hot pursuit has been wasted. It’s difficult to recreate what happened a year ago. But I’d like to believe that the guilty will be punished.”

Three investigators connected to Magnitsky’s case – people who refused to get him medical treatment – have been promoted and given awards.

Another, Artyom Kuznetsov, is suing Hermitage Capital over videos implicating him in helping embezzle $230 million and blaming Magnitsky for tax evasion. In a Kafkaesque saga, despite an international outcry and calls from the Kremlin to pursue the investigation, the probe’s deadline has now been put back for a third time, until next February. NGOs conducting their own, unofficial investigation into Magnitsky’s case believe that high-placed officials – possibly within the Federal Security Service or other law enforcement structures – are the reason that the negligence case launched with Medvedev’s backing isn’t going anywhere.

The Interior Ministry’s investigative committee has repeatedly refused to launch a criminal probe against Oleg Silchenko, one of the three decorated with the Best Investigator Badge last week. But Valery Borshchev, a member of the Moscow Helsinki Group who is heading an independent investigation into Magnitsky’s death, says he submitted its findings to the Investigative Committee of the Prosecutor’s Office in December 2009. Last month, he met top prosecutors who promised a reply – but none came.

“It was Silchenko who refused to give his approval for a medical examination when lawyers asked him,” Borshchev told The Moscow News. “When we talked to doctors at the Butyrka jail, they said that they tried to get him examined, but they met with resistance” from the investigators. “We had believed that our materials would be of interest to the investigation, but apparently the [Investigative Committee of the Prosecutor’s Office] didn’t find it useful, since no one approached us for additional information or clarifications. It was a dead-end wall.”

Borshchev found it “strange” that after Hermitage’s accusations against Artyom Kuznetsov and Pavel Karpov, another investigator involved in Magnitsky’s case, that no action was taken against them, and that Karpov received a professional decoration. “I think that high-placed officials are involved. And a political decision cannot be made about what measures to take against them. That is my opinion.”

Browder’s visa
The reasons for the stalled investigation – and, indeed, for Magnitsky’s death – go back to a dispute between Hermitage Capital, once Russia’s largest hedge fund, and a group of Interior Ministry officials.

It began in 2005, when William Browder, head of the fund, was denied an entry visa. An investigation by the firm led them to implicate investigator Artyom Kuznetsov in a $230 million tax fraud scheme, according to Firestone Duncan, the law firm. In 2007, Hermitage’s offices were raided as part of an investigation Kuznetsov helped launch. Magnitsky was arrested on Nov. 14, 2008, on charges of helping Hermitage Capital to evade $3.25 million in taxes, while an extradition request is still out for Browder.

“The Hermitage story is what’s keeping Magnitsky’s case from being investigated,” Kirill Kabanov, a former FSB officer who now heads the National Anti-Corruption Committee, told The Moscow News.

As a member of the Presidential Council for Civil Society Development, he has been piecing the case together for over a year now, and is due to submit his findings to Medvedev in the next few days. “If the investigators are probed, they will testify about those in whose interests they acted,” Kabanov told The Moscow News. “And among them are officials of the Federal Security Service. It’s not a group of one or two people.”

Kabanov says he has evidence of contacts between the investigators and security officials – evidence that he plans to submit to the president and the Investigative Committee of the Prosecutor General’s Office. Asked if he could identify the security officials involved, he said he knew their names, but could not reveal them in the interests of the investigation. The problem, he said, is systemic, possibly suggesting rivalries within law enforcement structures.

“I don’t understand how a year goes by after the president issues a command, and it turns out that the Investigative Committee [of the Interior Ministry] has not carried out an internal probe.” Nor is the Investigative Committee of the Prosecutor General’s Office questioning anyone from the Interior Ministry, Kabanov said.

A spokesman for the Investigative Committee could not immediately comment on the status of the case.

International outcry
Meanwhile, Magnitsky’s cause has been taken up abroad. Hermitage Capital has called on the European Parliament and legislators in Britain, U.S., Canada and Poland, to impose a visa ban on 60 officials the fund’s officials claim are connected to Magnitsky’s death. In September, US Senator Benjamin Cardin and Congressman James McGovern introduced a bill in Washington that would freeze assets and ban visas of the officials.
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