Tribute to Sergey Magnitsky

Sergey Mag­nit­sky was our Russ­ian lawyer and friend who died at the age of 37 under excru­ci­at­ing cir­cum­stances in a Moscow pre-tri­al deten­tion cen­ter on Novem­ber 16, 2009. He died as a result of inhu­man treat­ment, cru­el­ty and tor­ture at the hands of cor­rupt Russ­ian police offi­cers. The sto­ry of what hap­pened to Sergey Mag­nit­sky is so medieval that it is hard to imag­ine that it could have tak­en place in today’s world. The sto­ry is also one of extra­or­di­nary brav­ery and hero­ism that should be an exam­ple to us all.

Sergey worked for the Amer­i­can-owned law firm, Fire­stone Dun­can, and was one of the exter­nal lawyers for the Her­mitage Fund in Moscow. He wasn’t involved in pol­i­tics, he wasn’t an oli­garch and he wasn’t a human rights activist. He was just a high­ly com­pe­tent pro­fes­sion­al – the kind of per­son whom you could call up as the work­day was fin­ish­ing at 7pm with a legal ques­tion and he would can­cel his din­ner plans and stay in the office until mid­night to fig­ure out the answer. He was what many peo­ple would describe as the good face of mod­ern Rus­sia: a smart and hon­est man work­ing hard to bet­ter him­self and to make a good life for his family.

The tragedy of Sergey Mag­nit­sky began on June 4, 2007. On that day, 50 police offi­cers from the Moscow Inte­ri­or Min­istry raid­ed Her­mitage and Fire­stone Duncan’s offices under the guise of a tax inves­ti­ga­tion into a Her­mitage client com­pa­ny. There was no appar­ent rea­son for the police inves­ti­ga­tion as that com­pa­ny was reg­u­lar­ly audit­ed by the tax author­i­ties, and they always found that the tax­es were paid cor­rect­ly, in full and on time. Dur­ing the raid, police offi­cers took away the cor­po­rate seals, char­ters and arti­cles of asso­ci­a­tion of all of the Her­mitage Fund’s invest­ment com­pa­nies – none of which were list­ed in their search war­rant. Sev­er­al months after the raids the police were still refus­ing to return the seized items, and we were won­der­ing about the true moti­va­tion for their raid and why the police were so des­per­ate to get their hands on all the orig­i­nal statu­to­ry doc­u­ments of the Her­mitage Fund’s Russ­ian companies.

In mid-Octo­ber 2007, the moti­va­tion for the raids became clear. We got a tele­phone call from a bailiff at the St. Peters­burg Arbi­tra­tion Court inquir­ing about a judg­ment against one of the Fund’s Russ­ian com­pa­nies. That was strange, because the com­pa­ny had nev­er been to court and nei­ther the Fund’s trustee, HSBC, nor we knew any­thing about any law­suits or judg­ments in St. Petersburg.

The first thing we did was call Sergey. If there was some­thing legal­ly com­pli­cat­ed going on in Rus­sia, he was the per­son who knew how to get to the bot­tom of it. He calmed us down and said it was like­ly to be some type of mis­take. He said he would make some inquiries and fig­ure out what was going on.

After research­ing the sit­u­a­tion, Sergey came back to us with shock­ing news. He checked with the St.Petersburg court and then went to the reg­is­tered address of our com­pa­nies and dis­cov­ered that our com­pa­nies had indeed been sued by some shell com­pa­nies we had nev­er heard of or done busi­ness with. The law­suits were based on forged and back­dat­ed con­tracts. He also dis­cov­ered that the Fund’s com­pa­nies had been rep­re­sent­ed by lawyers that the Fund had nev­er hired, and who pro­ceed­ed to plead guilty in court. Fur­ther inquiries showed that the law­suits against the Her­mitage Fund com­pa­nies were filed by a per­son using a stolen iden­ti­ty on the basis of a lost passport.

Despite all of these incon­sis­ten­cies, the St. Peters­burg court award­ed the plain­tiff shell com­pa­nies hun­dreds of mil­lions of dol­lars in dam­ages against the Her­mitage Fund’s Russ­ian com­pa­nies. Most shock­ing­ly, when Sergey ana­lyzed the forg­eries used in court, he was able to prove that they could have only been cre­at­ed with the doc­u­ments seized from our offices by the Moscow Inte­ri­or Min­istry on June 4th while these doc­u­ments had remained in their custody.

The news went from bad to worse. Sergey­went to the Moscow com­pa­ny reg­is­tra­tion office, where he dis­cov­ered that our three Russ­ian com­pa­nies had been fraud­u­lent­ly re-reg­is­tered from the name of the Her­mitage Fund’s trustee, HSBC, into the name of a com­pa­ny owned by a man con­vict­ed of manslaugh­ter. Again, Sergey deter­mined that the only way that the own­er­ship could have been changed was with the orig­i­nal cor­po­rate mate­ri­als seized by the police.

On the back of Sergey’s dis­cov­er­ies, on Decem­ber 3 and 10, 2007, HSBC and Her­mitage filed six 255-page com­plaints out­lin­ing all the details of the frauds and the names of the police offi­cers involved. The com­plaints were filed with the heads of the three main law enforce­ment agen­cies in Rus­sia. How­ev­er, instead of inves­ti­gat­ing the frauds against us, the law enforce­ment agen­cies passed the com­plaints right back to the spe­cif­ic police offi­cers named as con­spir­a­tors in the com­plaints. Those offi­cers then per­son­al­ly ini­ti­at­ed new retal­ia­to­ry crim­i­nal cas­es against employ­ees at Hermitage.

At this point, Sergey was becom­ing vis­i­bly angry that the Inte­ri­or Min­istry offi­cials could be so bla­tant­ly cor­rupt. Sergey wasn’t a dis­pas­sion­ate lawyer like many we have encoun­tered in the past. He was our advo­cate in the truest sense of the word. It was very com­fort­ing that a pro­fes­sion­al as tal­ent­ed as Sergey was putting in so much effort and pas­sion into pro­tect­ing us. Although we were still unsure what the cor­rupt offi­cers had in store for us, we felt a sense of calm hav­ing Sergey by our side.

By the sum­mer of 2008 it still wasn’t clear why the police would have been so keen to steal our three invest­ment com­pa­nies, cre­ate fake judg­ments and fab­ri­cate crim­i­nal cas­es against us. If the inten­tion was to steal the fund assets in Rus­sia, they had failed because, by the moment our com­pa­nies were stolen, the assets had been safe­ly moved by the Fund’s trustee out­side the coun­try. To help us find the answer, Sergey method­i­cal­ly fol­lowed up all the loose ends hop­ing to make sense of the per­se­cu­tion against us. He sent out more than 50 let­ters to dif­fer­ent tax author­i­ties and reg­is­tra­tion offices request­ing infor­ma­tion on our stolen com­pa­nies. Almost nobody replied, but on June 5th, Sergey received a let­ter from the Khim­ki (a sub­urb of Moscow) tax author­i­ties, which broke the case wide open. Accord­ing to the let­ter, our stolen com­pa­nies had been re-reg­is­tered in Khim­ki, after which time they had opened bank accounts at two obscure Russ­ian banks.

Once we learned about the banks, every­thing start­ed to make sense. Sergey found the Russ­ian cen­tral bank web­site where all aggre­gate bank deposit infor­ma­tion is stored, and it showed an enor­mous spike in deposits at these two obscure banks right after the accounts for our stolen com­pa­nies were opened. The spike in deposits was exact­ly equal to the tax­es that the Her­mitage Fund com­pa­nies had paid in 2006. At that moment, we final­ly under­stood the rea­son why our com­pa­nies had been stolen. The peo­ple who stole our com­pa­nies did so to fraud­u­lent­ly obtain $230 mil­lion that the Her­mitage Fund com­pa­nies had paid in tax­es in 2006 by claim­ing the sham court judg­ments had wiped out their his­toric prof­its. The refund of “over­paid tax­es” – the largest in Russ­ian his­to­ry – had been grant­ed by the Moscow tax author­i­ties in two days with no ques­tions asked, and the entire amount was wired to the new bank accounts opened by the per­pe­tra­tors. The date of the wire trans­fer (Decem­ber 26, 2007) showed that it was car­ried out after and in total dis­re­gard of the com­plaints from HSBC and Her­mitage to the Russ­ian author­i­ties that had alert­ed them to the details of the ongo­ing frauds three weeks ear­li­er. Had those com­plaints been act­ed upon by the Russ­ian law enforce­ment author­i­ties, the theft of $230 mil­lion from the gov­ern­ment sim­ply could not have tak­en place.

At this point Sergey was indig­nant. It wasn’t just about his client, it was now also about his coun­try. The police offi­cers who were sup­posed to be fight­ing crime were inti­mate­ly involved in one of the biggest crimes ever per­pe­trat­ed against the Russ­ian peo­ple. Sergey didn’t start out as an anti­cor­rup­tion cru­sad­er, but when cor­rup­tion stared him in the face, he felt he had a duty to fight it. In July 2008, Sergey helped us pre­pare a detailed crim­i­nal com­plaint about the stolen tax mon­ey, which was filed with sev­en dif­fer­ent Russ­ian gov­ern­ment agen­cies. We also shared the infor­ma­tion with the press, and Sergey briefed some Moscow-based press cor­re­spon­dents on the details of the tax rebate fraud and the com­plic­i­ty of Russ­ian offi­cials in it.

We had hoped that the details in our com­plaints would be shock­ing enough to force the Russ­ian author­i­ties to inves­ti­gate the fraud and to pun­ish the cor­rupt offi­cials. Instead, the Inte­ri­or Min­istry offi­cers who were involved in the fraud react­ed by open­ing crim­i­nal cas­es tar­get­ing the lawyers who rep­re­sent­ed HSBC and the Her­mitage Fund. These lawyers tried to resist by fil­ing com­plaints with the Russ­ian author­i­ties detail­ing the breach by police offi­cers of the oblig­a­tion to pro­tect lawyers from harass­ment and intim­i­da­tion, but that had no effect. In response, the intim­i­da­tion only wors­ened. Final­ly, six of our lawyers from four dif­fer­ent law firms were forced to either leave the coun­try or to go into hiding.

The one lawyer who didn’t leave Rus­sia was Sergey. In spite of the clear actions by the police tar­get­ing all of our lawyers, he was sure that he was safe because he had nev­er done any­thing wrong or ille­gal. He believed that the law of Rus­sia would pro­tect him. When Jami­son Fire­stone, the head of the law firm Sergey worked for, encour­aged him to leave Rus­sia like the oth­er lawyers, Sergey replied, “You watch too many movies, this isn’t the 1930’s.”

His belief in jus­tice was so strong that he went on to do some­thing many peo­ple would be pet­ri­fied to do. On Octo­ber 7, 2008, he went to the offices of the Russ­ian State Inves­tiga­tive Com­mit­tee (the Russ­ian equiv­a­lent of the FBI) and tes­ti­fied against two offi­cers of the Inte­ri­or Min­istry, Lt. Colonel Artem Kuznetsov and Major Pavel Kar­pov, for their involve­ment in the theft of the Her­mitage Fund com­pa­nies and the theft of $230 mil­lion from the Russ­ian bud­get. It was an enor­mous­ly brave move, and we feared for him that day. Amaz­ing­ly, Sergey was the only per­son who wasn’t wor­ried. It was a big relief when he emerged from the Inves­tiga­tive Com­mit­tee at the end of the day unscathed.

In ret­ro­spect, our relief was mis­guid­ed. On Novem­ber 24, 2008, just over a month after tes­ti­fy­ing against Kuznetsov and Kar­pov, three offi­cers who direct­ly report­ed to Kuznetsov went to Sergey’s apart­ment at 8am while he was prepar­ing his chil­dren for school and arrest­ed him. He was charged with being the direc­tor of two Her­mitage Fund com­pa­nies that alleged­ly under­paid tax­es in 2001. He was arrest­ed in spite of the facts that the com­pa­nies had clean audits, the statute of lim­i­ta­tions expired in 2004 and Sergey was nei­ther a direc­tor nor had any oth­er role at these two com­pa­nies in 2001 so he couldn’t have had any legal respon­si­bil­i­ty for tax­es, under­paid or not. How­ev­er, the law didn’t mat­ter because the inves­ti­ga­tors had oth­er plans for Sergey.

We were tru­ly shocked by his arrest. Although there were signs that some­thing like this could hap­pen, Sergey’s self-con­fi­dence gave us a sense that our fears were overblown. Up until this point, our prob­lems with cor­rup­tion in Rus­sia had all been abstract – on bank state­ments, share reg­istries and bal­ance sheets. We had nev­er expe­ri­enced a real human cost before. No mat­ter how many unpleas­ant sit­u­a­tions one might have encoun­tered in a busi­ness career, noth­ing pre­pares you for hav­ing some­one you know tak­en hostage.

Our first con­cern was how a high­ly edu­cat­ed lawyer, like Sergey, was going to fare among oth­er pris­on­ers. It is not dif­fi­cult to imag­ine the ter­ri­ble things that go on behind prison walls, and it was extreme­ly wor­ry­ing to imag­ine Sergey among bur­glars, rapists and mur­der­ers. For­tu­nate­ly, on this front the reports from his lawyers who vis­it­ed him gave us some com­fort. Although his back­ground made him quite con­spic­u­ous among oth­er pris­on­ers, his char­ac­ter allowed for him to gain the respect of oth­er pris­on­ers almost imme­di­ate­ly. Because he was a lawyer, he helped oth­er pris­on­ers who didn’t have access to legal assis­tance to pre­pare their appeals, and for that he was appre­ci­at­ed and pro­tect­ed. Although the con­di­tions of prison were harsh, we took some com­fort that he was well treat­ed by the oth­er prisoners.

Ini­tial­ly, he was sent to Pre-Tri­al Deten­tion Cen­ter No. 5 in Moscow, but with­in months he was trans­ferred to a tem­po­rary deten­tion facil­i­ty with much harsh­er con­di­tions, and then he was moved sev­en times between four more deten­tion cen­ters until he was moved to Matrosskaya Tishi­na prison.
Decem­ber 14, 2009 Page 4
Each move was pro­gres­sive­ly worse, and we start­ed to get word that he was being kept in very harsh con­di­tions. We heard about him being kept with eight oth­er inmates in prison cells that only had four beds so they had to sleep in shifts. We heard about how the prison author­i­ties nev­er turned the lights off at night so even if he got a bed, it was almost impos­si­ble to sleep. Most dis­turb­ing of all, we got news that he was start­ing to lose weight pre­cip­i­tous­ly. Since his arrest, he had lost 40 pounds.

On July 1, 2009, at Matrosskaya Tishi­na, Sergey was diag­nosed with pan­cre­ati­tis and gall­stones. He was told that he should be mon­i­tored close­ly, and that he would need a repeat exam­i­na­tion and surgery with­in a month. As he was prepar­ing for a fol­low-up vis­it to the med­ical cen­ter, on July 25, 2009, he was abrupt­ly trans­ferred to Butyr­ka prison, a max­i­mum secu­ri­ty prison known to be one of the tough­est in Rus­sia. Sergey was put in an eight square meter cell with three oth­er pris­on­ers. The cell had no toi­let – just a hole in the floor – and rats ran freely at night.

At Butyr­ka, Sergey’s con­di­tion dete­ri­o­rat­ed sharply, and he devel­oped excru­ci­at­ing stom­ach pains. He repeat­ed­ly asked the prison author­i­ties, pros­e­cu­tors, inves­ti­ga­tors and the courts for med­ical atten­tion, and he was repeat­ed­ly denied it by all of them. At one point the pain became so bad that he couldn’t even lie down. His cell­mate banged on the door for hours scream­ing for a doc­tor. When one final­ly arrived, he refused to do any­thing for Sergey, telling him he should have obtained med­ical treatment
before his arrest.

It was extreme­ly frus­trat­ing because there was very lit­tle we could do to help him. We tried to do any­thing we could think of. We tes­ti­fied in front of the US Con­gress about Sergey; we asked the US State Depart­ment and the UK For­eign Office to bring his case up with the Russ­ian For­eign Min­istry; we reached out to the pro­fes­sion­al asso­ci­a­tions; and we con­stant­ly pro­vid­ed infor­ma­tion to jour­nal­ists to write about his sit­u­a­tion. Every­one was sym­pa­thet­ic and did what they could. In the sum­mer of 2009, the Inter­na­tion­al Bar Asso­ci­a­tion and the UK Law Soci­ety wrote to Pres­i­dent Medvedev protest­ing the ille­gal deten­tion of Sergey­Mag­nit­sky and per­se­cu­tion of oth­er Her­mitage Fund lawyers. On Sep­tem­ber 30, 2009, the Par­lia­men­tary Assem­bly of the Coun­cil of Europe con­demned the attacks on the Her­mitage Fund lawyers, and par­tic­u­lar­ly Sergey, but none of that had any influ­ence on what went on inside of Rus­sia. While we were lob­by­ing from the out­side, the cor­rupt offi­cers were putting more and more pres­sure on Sergey from the inside.

The cor­rupt offi­cials whom Sergey had tes­ti­fied against had a very spe­cif­ic plan for him. They want­ed to put enough pres­sure on Sergey so he would with­draw his tes­ti­mo­ny against them and make false state­ments against him­self and his client, the Her­mitage Fund. Most cyn­i­cal­ly, they specif­i­cal­ly want­ed him to take respon­si­bil­i­ty for the theft of $230 mil­lion that they had stolen from the state. After mov­ing him through sev­en deten­tion cen­ters and an incal­cu­la­ble num­ber of cells, they pre­sent­ed him with their plan. They told him, “If you sign the fol­low­ing state­ments, then you will be freed.” In spite of the hard­ships he was sub­ject­ed to, he reject­ed their pro­pos­al. As a lawyer and some­one who believed in jus­tice, there was no way he would be pres­sured into per­jur­ing him­self. Instead, he wrote new com­plaints in which he described the pres­sure he was sub­ject­ed to and how offi­cers know­ing his inno­cence were pro­duc­ing false evi­dence. He explained how the tax charges against him were a smoke­screen to cov­er up their own involve­ment in the large-scale fraud against the Russ­ian people.

On Sep­tem­ber 11, 2009, Sergey wrote to the investigator:

My crim­i­nal per­se­cu­tion has been ordered, to serve as a ret­ri­bu­tion … It is impos­si­ble to jus­ti­fy the charges brought against me, as I assert again that I did not com­mit any offens­es, and the doc­u­ments col­lect­ed by the inves­ti­ga­tors only prove my inno­cence … If this case is ever heard in court, these experts will sim­ply be unable to jus­ti­fy their con­clu­sions dur­ing cross-exam­i­na­tion by the defense… Real­iz­ing the inva­lid­i­ty of their claims, the inves­ti­ga­tors have arranged for phys­i­cal and psy­cho­log­i­cal pres­sure to be exert­ed upon me in order to sup­press my will and to force me to make accu­sa­tions against myself and oth­er per­sons … in exchange for a sus­pend­ed sen­tence and free­dom. Every time I reject these propo­si­tions by the inves­ti­ga­tors push­ing me to com­mit such a base act, the con­di­tions of my deten­tion become worse and worse … The admin­is­tra­tion of deten­tion cen­ters has assist­ed the inves­ti­ga­tors to orga­nize my per­se­cu­tion by cre­at­ing intol­er­a­ble con­di­tions for me in their facilities.”

The more he com­plained, the more the pres­sure increased. He was moved to cells where sewage would bub­ble up from the “toi­let” and cov­er the floor and cells with no glass in the win­dows to pro­tect the inmates from the bit­ter Russ­ian weath­er. The prison author­i­ties con­trived to deny him any oppor­tu­ni­ty to show­er, or access to hot water. Worst of all they denied him any vis­its from his wife or moth­er, or even the pos­si­bil­i­ty to speak to his two young chil­dren on the tele­phone for the 11 months he was in deten­tion, which must have been tru­ly heart­break­ing for a man so com­mit­ted to his family.

Through­out this ordeal, Sergey stood true to his beliefs and prin­ci­ples no mat­ter what new suf­fer­ing was devised for him. His belief in those prin­ci­ples was so strong, and Sergey knew them to be so unde­ni­ably cor­rect, that uphold­ing them became his pri­ma­ry aim no mat­ter the phys­i­cal and psy­cho­log­i­cal tor­ture he was forced to endure.

Despite all this and more, he was nev­er bro­ken. Dur­ing his 358 days in deten­tion, Sergey and his lawyers filed over 450 com­plaints doc­u­ment­ing in detail all of the breach­es of Russ­ian law, vio­la­tions of his human rights, the repeat­ed denials of med­ical treat­ment and the ever-wors­en­ing deten­tion con­di­tions. He wrote on behalf of him­self and on behalf of oth­er detainees. He filed a com­plaint with the Con­sti­tu­tion­al Court to make changes in Russ­ian crim­i­nal pro­ce­dure to pre­vent some of the abus­es he and oth­er inmates were fac­ing that lim­it­ed their access to coun­sel and deprived them of the fun­da­men­tal right to defend them­selves. Few peo­ple could have man­aged such a prodi­gious effort while being sub­ject­ed to such phys­i­cal tor­ment. Sergey didn’t have access to an office, library or a com­put­er. He man­aged to do all this with­out even a table to write on. Each time Sergey filed a com­plaint, it was reject­ed or sim­ply ignored, but each defeat just served to make him more indig­nant and deter­mined. He was always the con­sum­mate pro­fes­sion­al. There was nev­er any emo­tion in his com­plaints, even after all the tor­ture he endured. They were crisp and exact.

The cor­rupt offi­cers tried to break him, but they found him stronger than they could have ever imag­ined. They prob­a­bly nev­er had a hostage who didn’t break under this type of pres­sure before. Ulti­mate­ly, he reached the one-year dead­line for pre-tri­al deten­tion under Russ­ian law, and the inves­ti­ga­tors had to put him on tri­al or release him. They were plan­ning a big show tri­al for him where they were hop­ing for his false con­fes­sions to be the pri­ma­ry evi­dence of the tri­al. Instead they had no evi­dence of his wrong­do­ing, and more wor­ry­ing for them, he was con­tin­u­ing to make very spe­cif­ic, pub­lic and incrim­i­nat­ing state­ments about police involve­ment in the theft of $230 mil­lion from the Russ­ian gov­ern­ment. He had become a very incon­ve­nient hostage.

In the end, Sergey died sud­den­ly on Novem­ber 16, 2009, at the age of 37. At first, the prison said the cause of his death was a rup­ture to his abdom­i­nal mem­brane, but lat­er that day they revised their sto­ry, say­ing he had died of a heart attack. We do not know the exact cir­cum­stances of his death, and the prison author­i­ties refused his family’s request to con­duct an inde­pen­dent autop­sy. His diaries are report­ed to be miss­ing. What is clear is that the abus­es he suf­fered dur­ing his final year were what ulti­mate­ly caused his death. Before his arrest and deten­tion, Sergey was a healthy 36-year-old in the prime of life. After a year in pre-tri­al deten­tion he was dead.

One can nev­er judge the true char­ac­ter of a per­son until they are faced with extreme adver­si­ty. Most peo­ple, if faced with a far less­er chal­lenge than Sergey, would have giv­en in, and it would have been under­stand­able if he had as well. But for Sergey, his integri­ty and hon­or were more impor­tant than any phys­i­cal pain he was suf­fer­ing. His resolve nev­er fal­tered no mat­ter how insur­mount­able the obsta­cle might have seemed. He did what to most peo­ple seems impos­si­ble: he bat­tled as a lone indi­vid­ual against the pow­er of an entire state. Sergey was an ordi­nary man who became an extra­or­di­nary hero. If we all could only show a frac­tion of the brav­ery and for­ti­tude Sergey did, the world would be a much bet­ter place. Sergey, his hero­ic fight, and the ideals he stood for must nev­er be forgotten.

God bless Sergey and his family.

  • Link

Hermitage TV

Visit “Stop the Untouchables” site

For more information please visit http://russian-untouchables.com site..
Privacy Overview

This website uses cookies so that we can provide you with the best user experience possible. Cookie information is stored in your browser and performs functions such as recognising you when you return to our website and helping our team to understand which sections of the website you find most interesting and useful.

Strictly Necessary Cookies

Strictly Necessary Cookie should be enabled at all times so that we can save your preferences for cookie settings.

If you disable this cookie, we will not be able to save your preferences. This means that every time you visit this website you will need to enable or disable cookies again.

3rd Party Cookies

This website uses Google Analytics to collect anonymous information such as the number of visitors to the site, and the most popular pages.

Keeping this cookie enabled helps us to improve our website.