Telegraph: Russia called to probe police role in Magnitsky death
April 23, 2010
Mr Magnitsky, who represented Hermitage Capital Management, the hedge fund run by Bill Browder, died in prison after being held for 358 days without trial on tax evasion charges.
He had previously testified about the involvement of Russian police officers in the alleged theft of $230m (£150m) of taxpayer funds. An investigation was launched into his death following public outcry, but its focus was on the failure of the On Thursday, Lyudmila Alekseyeva, the founder of the independent Moscow Helsinki Group, called for an inquiry into the police officers alleged to have brought “the criminal case against Mr Magnitsky and used torture against him”.
The Daily Telegraph: Hermitage points to RenCap in fraud case
July 31, 2009
By Philip Aldrick
Hermitage Capital Management, the hedge fund battling state corruption in Russia, has accused Renaissance Capital, one of Russia’s leading investment banks, of possible involvement in two alleged frauds costing the Russian taxpayer $337m (£204m).
In a testimony filed by Hermitage’s lawyer in a New York court, the hedge fund claims there is sufficient circumstantial evidence to suggest that RenCap and its former directors, including Stephen Jennings, the “Kiwi oligarch” who founded and is chief executive of parent company Renaissance Group, may be “implicated in the tax rebate fraud”.
Hermitage has been fighting the Russian authorities for two years to get them to acknowledge “a sophisticated conspiracy” involving “senior officers in the Russian Interior Ministry, the Russian Federal Security Service, senior officers of the Russian tax bureaux and certain senior Russian court judges”.
The hedge fund, once Russia’s largest foreign investor, led by US national Bill Browder, first uncovered the alleged fraud in 2007 after three of its subsidiaries were stolen in a complicated scam following a police raid on its Moscow offices, when legal documents and seals were confiscated.
The Daily Telegraph: Law society warning over Russia’s ‘state-sponsored intimidation’
September 11, 2008
By Philip Aldrick
A leading international law society has condemned Russia for the “state-sponsored intimidation” of lawyers representing HSBC and the hedge fund Hermitage Capital Management after they uncovered a large alleged tax fraud.
In comments that will add to growing unease about operating in Russia, the International Bar Association warned of a “deterioration in the rule of law” after officers at the Interior Ministry raided the offices of lawyers working for Hermitage and HSBC and issued summons for them to appear as witnesses on cases in which they are acting.
Mark Ellis, executive director of the IBA, said: “Respect for the role of lawyers and the independence of the judiciary represent an essential feature of the rule of law. When government agents interfere with the work of lawyers, it is not only the legal profession that is threatened, but the overall legal order in the state.”
Hermitage claims to have been under attack by sophisticated criminals with connections in Russia’s Interior Ministry. The Ministry last month raided four law firms in Moscow, including Firestone Duncan of the US.
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