Posts Tagged ‘magnitskaya’

23
November 2011

Sergei Magnitsky’s mother vows to continue fight for justice in Russia

The Guardian

Two years after the Russian whistleblower died in custody, Natalia Magnitskaya says many people were behind his death.

Natalia Magnitskaya speaks in whispers, her tired eyes looking down at fingers that twist and turn from anxiety. She barely slept last night, as with most nights in the two years since her son died within the walls of one of Russia’s most notorious prisons.

Sergei Magnitsky was 37 when he died in November 2009 of multiple ailments he developed after being arrested a year earlier. The charges against him, of fraud and tax evasion, were designed to pressure the young lawyer into backing off on an investigation into an alleged attempt by corrupt state officials to steal $230m (£143m) in fake tax refunds, his supporters say.

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16
November 2011

Death in a Russian prison cell: Britain’s shameful silence

The Independent

One minute Sergei Magnitsky was investigating tax fraud. The next he was dead. A coincidence? No, the businessman campaigning for the truth tells Jerome Taylor

Two years ago today the body of a father of two from Moscow was found face down in a prison isolation cell where he had languished in squalid conditions for more than 11 months. Every year hundreds of people die inside Russian prisons and most go unreported.

But the death of Sergei Magnitsky, a corporate lawyer hired by a British firm to investigate a multimillion-dollar tax scam, lit a fire that has rallied those seeking to end the culture of corruption and impunity among Russian government officials and has caused diplomatic rifts that have reverberated around the world.

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24
October 2011

Magnitsky’s mother complaint over case resumption dismissed

Rapsi

The Moscow City Court has upheld the lower-court’s dismissal of a complaint filed by the mother of Sergei Magnitsky, a legal consultant who died in the pre-trial detention center, the Russian Legal Information Agency (RAPSI) reports from the courtroom.

The woman requested to cancel the decision to resume the criminal case against her son.

“The Tverskoy District Court’s decision to dismiss the complaint is legal and founded,” a judge of the cassation board said.

Magnitsky, 37, who was accused of corporate tax evasion in relation to his work for the Hermitage Capital investment fund, died in an isolation ward in November 2009. According to the Prosecutor General’s Office, his death was caused by cardiovascular insufficiency.

His death evoked a major public outcry.

The criminal case against Magnitsky was terminated by the Investigative Committee due to his death, but the Prosecutor General’s Office decided to resume the investigation.

Magnitsky’s relatives have demanded that the case against him be dropped. онлайн займы payday loan zp-pdl.com www.zp-pdl.com микрозайм онлайн

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24
October 2011

My whistleblower son is dead – now they’re after me

The Sunday Times

The mother of a Russian anti-corruption lawyer, who died in custody after being jailed on trumped-up charges, has spoken of her “utter disbelief” that prosecutors have reopened a criminal inquiry into her son.

Natalia Magnitskaya, whose son Sergei Magnitsky died nearly two years ago after a savage beating by prison guards, described as “perverse” an attempt to question her as part of the investigation.

“This is a clear attempt to put pressure on me and Sergei’s family,” said Magnitskaya, 60, who is frail and suffers from high blood pressure.

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27
September 2011

Murder in the Magnitsky case

Russia Today

The mother and friends of the deceased plan to prove that his death in jail was caused by severe torture.

A new twist has occurred in the case of Hermitage Capital Foundation lawyer Sergey Magnitsky’s death at Matrosskaya Tishina (Sailor’s Silence) detention center in Moscow in 2009. The lawyer’s friends and family have learned that investigators initially had strong evidence indicating that he was tortured and killed in jail, though it was presented simply as negligence on the part of medical staff. Now, Magnitsky’s mother is asking the Investigation Committee to file a criminal case against Prosecutor General Yury Chaika, staff members of the Interior Ministry, the FSB, the Federal Penitentiary Service (FSIN) and 11 judges, who, according to her, are responsible for her son’s death.

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27
September 2011

Sergei Magnitsky’s mother demands Russian murder investigation

Daily Telegraph

Russia has come under fresh pressure to investigate the high-profile prison death of Sergei Magnitsky, the lawyer who uncovered the biggest tax fraud in Russian history.

In a complaint lodged with prosecutors, the late man’s mother has alleged he was illegally arrested, tortured and murdered in a Moscow prison in November 2009.

Demanding that a fully fledged murder investigation be opened into a case that continues to damage Russia’s relations with the West, Natalia Magnitskaya said: “During the more than one and a half years that have passed since my son’s death I have learnt and reviewed information proving that a crime was committed against my son, and that his death came about as a result of premeditated violent actions.”

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26
September 2011

Late lawyer’s mother challenges Russia’s top prosecutor

AFP

The mother of Sergei Magnitsky, the lawyer whose 2009 death in pre-trial detention sparked global outrage, Monday filed a criminal complaint against Russia’s top prosecutor and a slew of top officials she said had contributed to her son’s death.

In an extensive letter to Russia’s top investigators, Natalia Magnitskaya listed evidence that the death of her son was not caused by negligence but was a premeditated murder brought on by months of torture to keep him silent.

A 37-year old corporate lawyer, Magnitsky died of untreated heart condition and pancreatitis in an isolation cell in November 2009 after his arrest in 2008.

Before his arrest, he claimed to have uncovered a scheme used by police officials to reclaim about $235 million in taxes paid by his employer Hermitage Capital. He was charged with fraud and spent nearly a year in Moscow prisons.

“In over 1.5 years since the death of my son… I became aware of information evident of a crime against my son, specifically that his death was brought on by deliberate violent actions,” the letter states.

Russian investigators have charged two prison doctors with negligence and carelessness over Magnitsky’s death.

Magnitskaya however claimed in her letter that the doctors were only part of a scheme that included far more senior officials.

Officials from the interior ministry, FSB security service, and the prosecutor’s office, that “created torturous conditions in Sergei Magnitsky’s detention”, she said.

Numerous complaints lodged by the lawyer were ignored by all levels of the justice system — including Russia’s top prosecutor Yury Chaika — “due to either criminal negligence or personal interest”, she said.

“I ask to open a criminal case into torture and premeditated murder of Sergei Magnitsky,” she wrote, listing 11 interior ministry officers, five prosecutors, and a slew of other officials.

The United States and other Western countries expressed alarm over the tragedy and Washington has now imposed a visa blacklist against Russian officials whom it believes were involved. срочный займ hairy girl https://zp-pdl.com/fast-and-easy-payday-loans-online.php https://zp-pdl.com/online-payday-loans-in-america.php hairy girl

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26
September 2011

Mother of late Russian lawyer claims he was killed in detention

Interfax

The mother of Hermitage Capital fund’s lawyer Sergey Magnitskiy, who died in a Moscow remand prison in November 2009, claims that her son was killed while in pre-trial detention, Russian Interfax news agency reported on 26 September, citing a statement issued by Hermitage Capital.

Lawyer Nikolay Gorokhov has filed Magnitskiy’s mother’s petition to the Russian Investigations Committee to initiate criminal proceedings against officials from the Prosecutor-General’s Office, the Interior Ministry, the Federal Security Service, the Federal Penal Service and 11 judges “as accomplices in organizing the illegal arrest, torture and killing of her son”, the statement says.

In total, more than 30 officials are named in Natalya Magnitskaya’s petition, who, she claims, were either involved in her son’s death or showed criminal negligence in connection with his case, Ekho Moskvy radio reported on 26 September.

“During more than 18 months since my son, Sergey Magnitskiy, died in pre-trial detention, (…) I have discovered and gained access to the information attesting to criminal wrongdoing against my son, specifically that his death had been the result of intentional acts of violence,” Interfax quoted from Magnitskaya’s statement.

The statement also noted that there had been signs of beating on Sergey Magnitskiy’s body, including damaged knuckles on both hands, multiple grazes and bruises, a puncture wound on his tongue and suspected head injury, as recorded in the death certificate.

“The fact of Sergey Magnitskiy’s murder is further substantiated by the results of a pre-investigation examination conducted, as we have learned, in the first days after his death, but made public only now. Three days after Magnitskiy’s death, on 19 November 2009, the investigations authorities of Moscow’s Preobrazhenskiy district collected evidence pointing to signs of murder, which was reflected in a corresponding report about the initiation of criminal proceedings under Article 105 of the Russian Criminal Code (murder),” Magnitskaya wrote in the petition.

She insists that the investigators looking into Magnitskiy’s death and the last hours of his life are relying on the theory of events proposed by employees of the remand prison where Magnitskiy had died, thus allowing them to conceal relevant evidence and information.

The law-enforcement agencies have not yet commented on Magnitskaya’s petition, Ekho Moskvy radio said. быстрые займы на карту займы на карту https://zp-pdl.com/get-quick-online-payday-loan-now.php https://zp-pdl.com/online-payday-loans-cash-advances.php займ на карту

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26
September 2011

Magnitsky’s Mother Files Criminal Complaint Against Russian Officials

Radio Free Europe

The mother of Sergei Magnitsky has filed a criminal complaint against Russian Prosecutor-General Yuri Chaika, senior officials of the Russian Interior Ministry, the Federal Security Service, the Penitentiary Service, and 11 judges, accusing them of being involved in a conspiracy to murder her son.

Magnitsky, an attorney who was jailed after accusing Interior Ministry officials of involvement in a massive corruption scandal, died in pre-trial detention in 2009 after suffering abuse and medical neglect.

He was acting as outside counsel for the investment firm Hermitage Capital Management.

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