Russian brings new charges against Kremlin critic Browder

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From left, an aide to the Russian Prosecutor General Mikhail Alexandrov, Russian Prosecutor General spokesman Alexander Kurennoi, and an aide to the Russian Prosecutor General Nikolai Atmoniev attend a news conference in Moscow, Russia, Monday, Nov. 19, 2018. Russian prosecutors on Monday announced new charges against Bill Browder, accusing him of forming a criminal group to embezzle funds in Russia. They also said they suspect Magnitsky’s death in prison was a poisoning and said they have a “theory” Browder is behind the poisoning. (AP Photo/Pavel Golovkin)

Russian prosecutors on Monday announced a new criminal case against Kremlin critic Bill Browder, raising the pressure on him before European Union discussions about a set of sanctions he is advocating.

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They also revealed a “theory” that he could be behind the death of his employee, Sergei Magnitsky, in a Russian prison.

Magnitsky, a lawyer, died in 2009 following a year in pre-trial detention after alleging he had uncovered $230 million in tax fraud by Russian officials. A Russian presidential commission concluded that he had been beaten and denied medical care. Two prison doctors were charged with negligence leading to his death, but one was acquitted by a court in 2013 and another didn’t face justice because of a statute of limitations.

U.S.-born Browder, who owned a major investment fund in Russia, then mounted a campaign to bring Magnitsky’s killers to justice. He pushed through legislation, named after Magnitsky, in the United States imposing travel and financial sanctions on top Russian officials including prosecutors. Several other countries have since adopted the Magnitsky Act.

Russian prosecutors on Monday announced new charges against Browder, accusing him of forming a criminal group to embezzle funds in Russia. They also said they suspect Magnitsky’s death in prison was a poisoning and said they have a “theory” Browder was behind it.

Mikhail Alexandrov of the Prosecutor General’s Office told reporters that they opened a criminal case into a poisoning with a military-grade substance of the three people they called Browder’s associates and said that it is “highly likely” that Magnitsky, who they said displayed similar symptoms, was poisoned as well.

The new charges against Browder follow his 2013 conviction in absentia by a Moscow court on tax evasion charges that he dismissed as a sham.

The announcement comes as the Netherlands is preparing to host diplomats from all EU member states to discuss a pan-EU Magnitsky Act.

Browder told The Associated Press on Monday that he has no relation to the three men named by the prosecutors and described the accusations of the poisoning as an attempt to discredit his campaign for justice for Magnitsky:

President Vladimir Putin’s “reaction is so absurd that it only helps our campaign and our cause,” he said.

Browder compared the new theory about Magnitsky’s death to the Russian denials of its role in the 2014 downing of Malaysian flight MH17: “It looks like MH17 where the Russians are blaming the Ukrainians for the plane that they shot down.”

Prosecutors said Monday that they will now be placing Browder on a wanted list and expect Interpol’s cooperation.

Russia has previously tried to get Browder placed on Interpol’s wanted list, but the organization has repelled the efforts, viewing his prosecution as politically motivated.

Browder was briefly detained in Spain in May and released after police found that the arrest warrant for him was no longer valid.

Monday’s announcement comes two days before Interpol is expected to elect its new chief, and a former Russian police official is a front-runner.

Browder said the possible appointment of a former Russian police official “puts the organization in a grave danger of being fully discredited.”

Other Kremlin critics have been vocal about the upcoming Interpol election.

Opposition leader Alexei Navalny who has faced a flurry of detentions and criminal charges tweeted Monday that his associates “have suffered abuse” from Interpol officials who were complying with Russian warrants to persecute Kremlin opponents and warned that the candidate from Russia would only make things worse: “I don’t think that a president from Russia will help to reduce such violations.”

Asked about the upcoming vote at Interpol in connection with the Browder case, Prosecutor General’s Office spokesman Alexander Kurennoy told reporters that Moscow views the organization as “trusted partners” and expressed hope that “the procedures will be followed in a regular manner” when it submits an arrest warrant for Browder.

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