The Washington Post: ‘Raiding’ Underlines Russian Legal Dysfunction

August 13, 2009

3 Lawyers Tar­get­ed After Uncov­er­ing Seizure of Firms

Philip P. Pan

When three of Rus­si­a’s finest lawyers agreed to rep­re­sent the invest­ment fund Her­mitage Cap­i­tal, they thought they were tak­ing on a rou­tine tax case.

Then they uncov­ered evi­dence of a breath­tak­ing crime: Top police and tax author­i­ty offi­cials appeared to have qui­et­ly seized own­er­ship of Her­mitage firms and used them to arrange a $230 mil­lion tax refund.

Now, the lawyers them­selves are in legal trou­ble. One has been jailed. The two oth­ers have fled the coun­try. All three face charges that seem intend­ed to dis­cred­it Her­mitage and divert atten­tion from the enor­mous theft.

Their plight high­lights the haz­ards of prac­tic­ing law in Rus­si­a’s cor­rup­tion-rid­den courts despite near­ly two decades of reforms sup­port­ed by hun­dreds of mil­lions in U.S. and Euro­pean aid. Pros­e­cu­tors and police con­tin­ue to dom­i­nate the judi­cia­ry as they did in the Sovi­et era, but unre­strained by the insti­tu­tions of the old Com­mu­nist sys­tem or the checks of a gen­uine democ­ra­cy, the oppor­tu­ni­ties for abuse have grown.

No crime illus­trates the state of the legal sys­tem bet­ter than what is known as “rei­der­st­vo,” or raid­ing — the takeover of busi­ness­es through court rul­ings and oth­er osten­si­bly legal means with the help of crooked judges or police. The prac­tice is so wide­spread that local media have report­ed what raiders charge: $10,000 to alter a cor­po­rate reg­istry, $50,000 to open a crim­i­nal case, $300,000 for a court order.

Her­mitage, once Rus­si­a’s largest for­eign share­hold­er with more than $4 bil­lion in hold­ings, says it encoun­tered a bold vari­a­tion on rei­der­st­vo: When raiders failed to seize its assets, they loot­ed the Russ­ian trea­sury instead, then went after the lawyers who caught them.

Pres­i­dent Dmit­ry Medvedev, a lawyer him­self, has called “legal nihilism” the main obsta­cle to growth in Rus­sia and has con­demned raid­ing as “shame­ful.” But nei­ther he nor his gov­ern­ment has respond­ed to Her­mitage’s pleas for help or the protests of the Moscow bar asso­ci­a­tion and inter­na­tion­al legal groups.

In a state­ment last month, the Inte­ri­or Min­istry tout­ed its suc­cess in solv­ing the tax theft. But the mon­ey has not been recov­ered, nor have any offi­cials been arrest­ed. Pros­e­cu­tors have charged only a con­vict­ed killer named on doc­u­ments as Her­mitage’s new owner.

Courts in Cohorts

For years, Her­mitage tar­get­ed cor­rup­tion in the state enter­pris­es in which it invest­ed. In 2005, it upset some­one in pow­er, and its British chief, William Brow­der, was barred from enter­ing Rus­sia. As a pre­cau­tion, the fund sold its Russ­ian assets and moved most employ­ees overseas.

Then, in June 2007, police raid­ed its Moscow offices and those of its Moscow-based law firm, Fire­stone Dun­can. Bran­dish­ing war­rants for mate­r­i­al about a Her­mitage affil­i­ate sus­pect­ed of tax eva­sion, they con­fis­cat­ed much more. When one lawyer object­ed, police beat him so bad­ly that he was hos­pi­tal­ized for two weeks, said Jami­son Fire­stone, the Amer­i­can head of the law firm.

Three days lat­er, Her­mitage hired the promi­nent Moscow defense lawyer Eduard Khayretdinov.

A tac­i­turn for­mer cop and judge, Khayret­di­nov, 50, was among a pio­neer­ing gen­er­a­tion who joined the bar in the ear­ly 1990s as lawyers first began to oper­ate inde­pen­dent­ly of the state. It was a hope­ful move, he recalled, made as then-Pres­i­dent Boris Yeltsin’s reform­ers were try­ing to build an impar­tial judiciary.

Near­ly two decades lat­er, Russ­ian lawyers are the embod­i­ment of that incom­plete task. Some are cor­rupt mid­dle­men, pulling strings and deliv­er­ing bribes. Oth­ers risk arrest and vio­lence in pur­suit of jus­tice. Most try to avoid trou­ble, though fig­ur­ing out how is more dif­fi­cult than ever. If the par­ty once con­trolled the courts, now the high­est bid­der often does.

Khayret­di­nov tried to make a dif­fer­ence. In a nation with a con­vic­tion rate near 99 per­cent — high­er, some say, than under Joseph Stal­in — he man­aged to win the release of five clients in 15 years. “I under­stood that our sys­tem was get­ting worse, but every time I pre­pared to speak in court, I hon­est­ly believed the court would hear me,” he said.

In Octo­ber 2007, he dis­cov­ered that law­suits had been filed in St. Peters­burg against three Her­mitage firms that once held shares of Gazprom, the state ener­gy giant. With­out telling his client, judges had issued more than $400 mil­lion in rul­ings against the firms.

Pho­tograph­ing each page of the court files, Khayret­di­nov real­ized that lawyers rep­re­sent­ing the firms had essen­tial­ly plead­ed guilty in every case. But Her­mitage had nev­er hired them.

In Moscow, Her­mitage checked the gov­ern­men­t’s cor­po­rate reg­is­tra­tion data­base and was aston­ished to dis­cov­er that it no longer owned the sub­sidiaries. A busi­ness in Kazan, 400 miles from Moscow, was list­ed as the proprietor.

Com­plex Maneuvering

Raid­ing, a mix of extor­tion, iden­ti­ty theft and sim­ple thug­gery, has emerged as major prob­lem for the Russ­ian econ­o­my, where prop­er­ty rights remain cloud­ed by the chaot­ic pri­va­ti­za­tions of the 1990s. A U.S. Jus­tice Depart­ment offi­cial in Moscow has described it as “a new and sophis­ti­cat­ed form of orga­nized crime” that “pos­es a seri­ous threat to for­eign investors” and has even spilled into Amer­i­can courts.

In one high-pro­file case, the Nor­we­gian tele­com giant Telenor is bat­tling an attempt to seize its stake in a Russ­ian mobile oper­a­tor after a Siber­ian court issued a $2.8 bil­lion rul­ing against it. But small­er domes­tic firms are usu­al­ly the vic­tims. One vet­er­an police offi­cial has esti­mat­ed that as many as 10,000 takeovers occur annu­al­ly but that few­er than 100 are pros­e­cut­ed and result in convictions.

Raid­ing is dif­fi­cult to inves­ti­gate because it relies on police and judi­cial cor­rup­tion and often involves com­plex legal maneu­ver­ing. Her­mitage turned to Sergei Mag­nit­sky, 37, a spe­cial­ist in tax law at Fire­stone Dun­can who was also a licensed audi­tor. “The best I ever saw,” Fire­stone said.

To take own­er­ship of the firms, Mag­nit­sky con­clud­ed, the thieves would have need­ed orig­i­nal cor­po­rate seals and found­ing doc­u­ments — items that police had seized in the raids.

The lawyers sus­pect­ed the involve­ment of Lt. Col. Artem Kveuznetsov, an Inte­ri­or Min­istry offi­cial who super­vised the raids and had been pok­ing around Her­mitage bank accounts. He had no clear link to the law­suits, but raiders often use crim­i­nal cas­es to smear their vic­tims and obtain key documents.

On Nov. 29, 2007, Her­mitage con­front­ed Maj. Pavel Kar­pov, the offi­cer super­vis­ing the tax probe, with its find­ings. The com­pa­ny says he blanched and motioned one of its attor­neys to his desk. Appar­ent­ly wor­ried that his office was bugged, he typed a mes­sage: Kuznetsov had pres­sured him to open the inquiry.

Kuznetsov and Kar­pov referred a reporter’s queries to the Inte­ri­or Min­istry, which did not respond to faxed questions.

Only one law enforce­ment agency opened a probe into Her­mitage’s alle­ga­tions. But when Mag­nit­sky showed up 10 min­utes ear­ly for a meet­ing with its inves­ti­ga­tor last sum­mer, Kuznetsov was in the office.

Loot­ing the Treasury

Why would any­one go to the trou­ble of obtain­ing mul­ti­mil­lion-dol­lar judg­ments against com­pa­nies that no longer hold any assets?

The mys­tery stumped Vladimir Pas­tukhov, 46, a long­time Her­mitage advis­er and a law pro­fes­sor at the High­er School of Eco­nom­ics. “No one knew what the crime was, but it was clear that if we did­n’t imme­di­ate­ly argue our case, Her­mitage would be blamed for some­thing,” he recalled.

He and the oth­ers filed a series of court motions. Pros­e­cu­tors respond­ed by indict­ing Her­mitage exec­u­tives in absen­tia and dis­clos­ing that the pow­er­ful Fed­er­al Secu­ri­ty Ser­vice, the domes­tic suc­ces­sor to the KGB, had ini­ti­at­ed the tax inquiry.

It was Brow­der, the com­pa­ny’s British chief, who first sug­gest­ed that the raiders might be using the court rul­ings to erase prof­its on paper and apply for a huge tax refund. The lawyers were skep­ti­cal. Mag­nit­sky not­ed that it often took years to get a refund in Russia.

But then they dis­cov­ered that the firms had opened accounts at two banks that report­ed a spike in deposits after­ward. With more dig­ging, they con­firmed that $230 mil­lion was deposit­ed days after the com­pa­nies applied for a tax refund. The mon­ey quick­ly dis­ap­peared overseas.

When Her­mitage report­ed the fraud in July 2008, police went after the lawyers, sum­mon­ing them to Kazan.

After speak­ing to police, Pas­tukhov con­clud­ed that he would be arrest­ed if he went. “I used to believe that if you were per­sis­tent and tar­get­ed, you could get results, even in the Russ­ian courts,” he said after flee­ing to Lon­don. “But I’ve changed my mind. I’ll nev­er step into anoth­er court­room again as a Russ­ian lawyer.”

Khayret­di­nov was sure he could prove his inno­cence and hid in Rus­sia for months. But then police accused him of improp­er­ly rep­re­sent­ing the stolen firms because Her­mitage no longer owned them. He decid­ed he had no hope in court and flew to London.

Mag­nit­sky nev­er con­sid­ered leav­ing because he did­n’t believe he could be jailed for noth­ing, col­leagues said. But in Novem­ber, police charged him with help­ing a Her­mitage firm evade tax­es in 2001. His attor­ney said he did­n’t even begin work­ing with the firm until 2002.

They’ve told him that if he says bad things about Her­mitage, they’ll let him go,” Fire­stone said. “But Sergei told them no.… He believes the only way that Rus­sia gets bet­ter, the only way the law starts to work here, is if good peo­ple stand up for it.”

Orig­i­nal arti­cle was print­ed in The Wash­ing­ton Times.

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