// In The Press - English Press
Robert Amsterdam: Interview with Jamison Firestone: “I would be a fool not to leave”
February 19, 2010
Over the years on this blog we have dedicated considerable coverage to what we perceive as a war against lawyers occurring in Russia, ranging from Boris Kuznetsov, to the jailing of Svetlana Bakhmina, the medical blackmail of Vasily Aleksanyan, the shooting of Stanislav Markelov (who used to be a guest contributor here), the murder by torture of Sergei Magnitsky, and several other instances.
The most recent individual to be featured in the news as he was forced to flee the country for his own safety is 44-year-old Jamison Firestone, a founding partner of Firestone Duncan, a law firm active in Russia since 1991. Firestone Duncan was the law firm where Sergei Magnitsky had been employed prior to his arrest, torture, and death in prison as related to the multi-million dollar fraud thefts against their clients. So although the murder of Magnitsky seized the world’s attention and outraged many Russian citizens, Firestone’s requests for justice went unanswered, and after publishing numerous materials alleging those responsible for these thefts and acts of violence, the machinery of the corrupt police turned against him, stealing the corporate charters and stamps, and seeking to get another unprecedented tax rebate in the name of a company he directs — the same methodology used against Hermitage.
I had the opportunity to catch up with Mr. Firestone by telephone today for a quick interview. What follows is a rough transcript of our conversation.
The Huffington Post: Open Season on Lawyers in Russia
February 19, 2010
Russia has become a pretty scary place for lawyers to work, and not for any lack of power lunches, major dealmaking, or luxury retailers. While we most often hear about the scores of journalists who pay a high price for their criticism of the Kremlin, the legal profession has come under attack as well, in both political cases as well as run-of-the-mill corruption. In recent years, dozens of lawyers have been forced into prison, out of the country, or worse.
The most famous lawyers to fall victim to these preying forces would be Stanislav Markelov, the human rights lawyer who was shot dead on a Moscow sidewalk; Vasily Alexanyan, the Yukos general counsel who was refused medication for AIDS and tuberculosis; and Sergei Magnistky, the corporate lawyer who most recently died in prison following abusive treatment in relation to the Hermitage case.
The most recent name to make the headlines is Jamison Firestone, the 44-year-old American founding partner of the law firm Firestone Duncan in Moscow, who has been forced to flee Russia for his own safety. Firestone was the former employer of Magnitsky, and represented Hermitage in their recent travails against state corruption.
Bloomberg: Firestone Flees Moscow ‘Mafia’ Police as Browder Affair Widens
February 19, 2010
Jamison Firestone, who spent 18 years helping U.S. companies navigate Russia’s legal system, said he fled the country because he’s the next target of “mafia” law-enforcement officials he says were responsible for the death of his colleague Sergei Magnitsky.
Firestone, 44, a U.S. citizen and former board member of the American Chamber of Commerce in Russia, said Interior Ministry officials made two attempts to obtain $21 million in taxes that a company he’s a director of paid to the government. He said the perpetrators forged his signature and corporate seals to seek tax rebates, similar to the $230 million in claims made by funds expropriated from Hermitage Capital Management, a $1 billion investment firm run by his client William Browder.
Businessweek: Deadly Business in Moscow
February 19, 2010
An American lawyer’s experience underscores the lawlessness outsiders operating in Russia can face.
Jamison Firestone was at his desk when the commotion began. On the morning of June 4, 2007, the American attorney heard loud voices coming from the reception area of his law firm, Firestone Duncan, on Krasnoproletarskaya Street in Moscow. He went out to investigate and was greeted by two dozen officers from the Russian Interior Ministry.
Global Voices: Theater Play to “Reconstruct” Lawyer Magnitsky’s Death
February 15, 2010
Sergei Magnitsky, a 37-year-old Russian tax lawyer, died in a Moscow prison on Nov. 16, 2009, after spending nearly a year in pre-trial detention with no access to adequate medical treatment.
The circumstances of his death received extensive coverage both in Russia (RUS) and abroad (ENG). Letters and appeals he wrote from prison were published as well (an English translation of one letter — at RFE/RL; scanned Russian-language originals of typed and handwritten documents — at NewTimes.ru). The Public Oversight Commission for Human Rights Observance in Moscow Detention Centers issued a review of the conditions of Magnitsky’s prison stay (in Russian and in English — at Law and Order in Russia blog).