// In The Press - English Press

Reuters: The Hermitage case and corruption in Russia

October 20, 2009

For­eign investors have come to accept that Rus­sia is a pret­ty unfor­giv­ing place to put your mon­ey. Just ask BP, which was embroiled last year in a bit­ter feud at its joint ven­ture TNK-BP, dur­ing the course of which BP endured a slew of ques­tion­able inves­ti­ga­tions and court cas­es. Or Norway’s Telenor, pres­sured recent­ly into set­tling a dis­pute with its local part­ners under pain of see­ing its stake at Russ­ian mobile oper­a­tor Vim­pel­com con­fis­cat­ed by the government.

Such cas­es show how pow­er­ful inter­ests seem able to use the legal process to extract mon­ey and con­ces­sions from for­eign investors. But one foreigner’s tale makes even these well-known con­tro­ver­sies look mild. Her­mitage Cap­i­tal Man­age­ment, once the largest for­eign investor in the Russ­ian stock mar­ket, has become embroiled in a case that rais­es even more dis­turb­ing ques­tions about the Russ­ian jus­tice system.

Her­mitage claims to have uncov­ered evi­dence which shows that Russ­ian gang­sters con­spired with bent cops and cor­rupt courts to steal three of its Russ­ian sub­sidiaries, and sub­se­quent­ly used them to loot $230 mil­lion from the Russ­ian bud­get by reclaim­ing tax­es those com­pa­nies had paid.

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The Telegraph: Russia jails sawmill foreman for largest ‘tax fraud’ in country’s history

October 19, 2009

Vik­tor Markelov has plead­ed guilty to “fraud by pri­or col­lu­sion by a group of per­sons and in an espe­cial­ly large amount” in a Moscow court, after the case was brought to the author­i­ties’ atten­tion by Her­mitage Cap­i­tal Man­age­ment, the hedge fund bat­tling to expose cor­po­rate cor­rup­tion in Russia.

Accord­ing to the ver­dict, Mr Markelov, 42, “a fore­man for deliv­er­ies of lum­ber from sawmill DOZ-160”, used three for­mer Her­mitage sub­sidiaries to reclaim RUB5.41bn (£106m) of cap­i­tal gains tax­es paid by the hedge fund in a high­ly com­plex fraud. He will serve five years “in a cor­rec­tion­al colony … with no fine”. There is no men­tion of any attempt to recov­er the lost tax­es in the ver­dict or pur­sue oth­er conspirators.

Mr Markelov’s sen­tence was reduced from 10 years after the court took “into con­sid­er­a­tion per­son­al infor­ma­tion”. It omit­ted to men­tion that he had pre­vi­ous­ly been sen­tenced to two-and-a-half years for manslaughter.

Her­mitage, the biggest for­eign investor in the Russ­ian stock mar­ket until 2006, has claimed that the sophis­ti­cat­ed fraud could only have been com­mit­ted with the col­lu­sion of senior fig­ures in the nation’s law enforce­ment agen­cies and tax offices.

Bill Brow­der, the founder of Her­mitage, has stepped up his cam­paign against Russ­ian cor­rup­tion by post­ing his alle­ga­tions on YouTube.

Arti­cle by Philip Aldrick was pub­lished in The Tele­graph.



The Times: Hermitage alleges fraud in high places in Moscow

October 19, 2009

In a let­ter Her­mitage Cap­i­tal accus­es senior gov­ern­ment offi­cials of con­spir­ing with a crim­i­nal gang to steal £235 million.

Fraud­sters oper­at­ing with­in the Russ­ian Inte­ri­or Min­istry and the Moscow Tax Author­i­ty have stolen 11.2 bil­lion rou­bles (£235 mil­lion) from the state bud­get, accord­ing to a com­plaint filed today with the Accounts Cham­ber of the Russ­ian Federation.

In a let­ter to Sergei Stepashin, the chair­man of the cham­ber and head of Russia’s anti-cor­rup­tion com­mit­tee, Her­mitage Cap­i­tal, a British-based hedge fund man­ag­er that for­mer­ly was the biggest for­eign port­fo­lio investor in Rus­sia, accus­es senior gov­ern­ment offi­cials of con­spir­ing with a pri­vate crim­i­nal gang to steal the money.

Lead­ing offi­cials in the Moscow Tax Author­i­ty cov­ered up crimes involv­ing bil­lions of rou­bles embez­zled from the state bud­get, Her­mitage alleges in its let­ter, which names indi­vid­u­als, accus­es them of cov­er­ing up the fraud­u­lent activ­i­ty and urges the Accounts Cham­ber to investigate.

Evi­dence uncov­ered by Her­mitage, the com­pa­ny stat­ed in its let­ter to Mr Stepashin, point­ed to “an organ­ised crim­i­nal group com­prised of pri­vate indi­vid­u­als and gov­ern­ment offi­cials”. The frauds “would not have been pos­si­ble with­out the direct involve­ment of offi­cials” from the Moscow Tax Author­i­ty, Her­mitage wrote.

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Newsweek: Where Vultures Prey

October 17, 2009

Last month Dmit­ry Medvedev set out his bold new vision of a “more civ­i­lized” Rus­sia, no longer prone to the “legal nihilism” that has rot­ted the fab­ric of Russ­ian cap­i­tal­ism and turned the courts and police into tools for set­tling pri­vate busi­ness dis­putes. Many hoped that such a pow­er­ful sig­nal from the pres­i­dent would set Rus­sia on course to estab­lish the rule of law. Now, a high-pro­file test case will show who runs Rus­sia — crooks with offi­cial con­nec­tions, or the state itself. This week a crim­i­nal suit filed in a Moscow court details a scam in which senior bureau­crats, judges, and police defraud­ed the Russ­ian tax­pay­er of half a bil­lion dol­lars — and then used the courts to per­se­cute the scam’s vic­tims when they tried to blow the whistle.

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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.

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