WSJ won’t respond to evidence its Browder story is full of fabrications

Lucy Komisar
9 min readAug 20, 2019

Browdergate fake news: This is another in a series of how the U.S. media promotes the Browdergate conspiracy theory. Here is the last of 4 articles in the Wall Street Journal that support the hoax.

Kristin Broughton.

On June 20th, the Wall Street Journal ran this article by reporter Kristin Broughton, “Financier Bill Browder Plays the Long Game to Expose Russian Money-Laundering.” The paper invited comments to moderator@wsj.com, so I sent this, first explaining my background as a prize-winning journalist on financial crime whose past stories have been published by the Journal.

I asked the moderator to “consider seriously the evidence I present here that William Browder is a conman and everything he told your reporter is a lie.” Like most U.S. reporters on the subject, the reporter was Browder’s stenographer and apparently never bothered to check out what he told her. As I have received no response to my June 28th email, I am publishing key parts of the story and present evidence that they are false.

“….Bill Browder, the American-born financier who has been on a decade-long campaign to expose Russian corruption”

** No, he has been on a campaign to block the Russians from collecting some $100 million in evaded taxes.

“…has asked prosecutors across Europe to open criminal investigations into suspicious transactions linked to the death of Sergei Magnitsky, who died in 2009 while in Russian custody after he was detained on charges related to the tax fraud he uncovered. Mr. Magnitsky was an attorney for Mr. Browder.”

** They don’t open them because he has no evidence. He complained publicly at a hearing in Europe that British investigators had called him “a pain in the ass!”

** Magnitsky was detained for his role in Browder’s Hermitage Fund tax evasion not for any tax fraud he uncovered. And he was Browder’s auditor, not an attorney.

THE EVIDENCE

Start with documents filed in U.S. federal court Southern District of New York in the Prevezon case, which Browder got Preet Bharara to bring against a Russian Browder accused of receiving money laundered from the tax refund fraud.

See the deposition where Browder admits that the alleged “lawyer” Magnitsky did not go to law school or have a law degree and Magnitsky’s own testimony that identifies him as an “auditor” working for Firestone Duncan, the firm that handled Browder’s accounting. See #8 on each first page.

Why does that matter?

Magnitsky was an accountant who had worked for Browder since 1997, handling tax evasion on profits from sales of shares held by Russian shell companies run by his Hermitage Fund. One scam was to claim as a deduction a write-off for hiring disabled workers. Browder admits in his deposition that he did that. He said his accountants advised him he could. Except his shell companies existed only to hold shares and had no employees.

He also took deductions for investing in the Kalmykia region where his shells were registered. But he made no investments, just moved funds from one account to another. He bought Gazprom shares through pass-throughs at a time it was illegal for non-Russians to buy them in Russia. They could get them only as ADRs (American Depository Receipts) in London at a much higher price.

The Russians filed charges beginning in the early 2000s and found Browder guilty of tax evasion in 2004. But he refused to pay up. The Russians continued to press, and in 2006 called Magnitsky to an interrogation.

After Magnitsky died (more about that later) Browder invented a story about how he had hired Magnitsky, “a lawyer,” to investigate a fraud carried out by Russian officials. In May 2010 testimony at the Congressional Human Rights Commission, chaired by Rep. James McGovern (D-MA), that after an 2007 search of Browder’s office and that of his accountant by tax police, he had hired “a young man named Sergei Magnitsky, a 36-year-old lawyer” to investigate. That was a lie since Magnitsky had been doing Hermitage accounting for ten years. And he wasn’t an attorney. And the search happened six months before the fraud.

Let me explain what the fraud was.

The tax refund fraud involved criminals re-registering several Hermitage companies and using them in collusive lawsuits where other plaintiffs claimed the shells had failed to carry out contracts and sued for huge damages. It’s a scam that had been done before.

The shells paid the fake claims, which turned out to be the amount of the last taxes filed, $230 million. So, they asked for tax refunds. The money went to two Russian banks and then through layers of other banks out of the country. Several private individuals, who provided details of the scam in testimony, went to jail for it.

He says Russian officials stole his companies, re-registered them, and organized the fraud. The Russians say he was involved. I don’t have direct proof, but some circumstantial evidence indicates that he could have been involved. He says he found out about the re-registration of the companies in October 2007, but his trustee, HSBC, in July 2007 added $7 million to a legal fund to cover costs relating to the theft of the companies. The HSBC comptroller gave a deposition about that in the Prevezon case.

Magnitsky didn’t expose the fraud; that was done by Rimma Starova, the Russian nominee director of a British Virgin Islands shell that held the re-registered companies and who gave testimony to the police in April 9 and July 10, 2008. [Original Russian April and July]

Paul Wrench, a professional figurehead director fronting many different offshore firms including those controlled by Browder, filed a complaint for Browder about the fraud July 23, 2008. It claimed $230 million was stolen [from the Russian Treasury] with the help of police. Browder gave the story to the New York Times and Vedomosti, which ran it July 24th, months before Magnitsky mentioned it in a witness interrogation to which he had been summoned October 7.

Wrench was asked in a deposition in U.S. federal court in the Prevezon case in 2015 who he had discussed the complaint with.

Q. Did you discuss this document with anyone at the time you signed it?
A. At the time I signed it? I would have discussed this document before signing it.
Q. With whom?
A. With Ivan Cherkasov. [Browder’s partner.]
Q. Anyone else that you recall?
A. Not that I recall.

Six years after Magnitsky’s death, with Browder shouting to the world his “lawyer” was a whistleblower, Wrench under oath and cognizant of the rules of perjury, did not back Browder up.

Though Browder now calls Magnitsky the “whistleblower,” a Hermitage press release September 16, 2008 says that Starova went to the police in April 2008 and accused representatives of the shell companies of the theft of state funds. The release was removed from the internet but exists on the Wayback Machine.

The refund occurred at the end of December 2007. However, Magnitsky had already been interrogated in October 2006 by tax investigators about fake tax returns for Hermitage.

Then he says, “Our top targets are the people who tortured and killed Sergei Magnitsky. But our secondary targets are those people who profited from the crime that he was killed over or facilitated the money laundering for those people.”

** Magnitsky died on November 16, 2009. There is no evidence that he was tortured or killed.

Browder is on the record, on separate occasions saying that Magnitsky died of natural causes, was tied up and left to die, was tied up and beaten with rubber batons by prison guards until dead, and finally tortured to death.

Here is how the story changed through time.

How Browder changed his story on how Magnitsky died, graphic Michael Thau.

Official Hermitage video, October 2009 (before his November death): Magnitsky “a lawyer and accountant” mentioned once, briefly, at very end of video. No mention of his ‘whistleblowing’, no mention of him being tortured in prison, etc.

Browder tells Chatham House, London, about the circumstances of Magnitsky’s death, a month earlier, in December 2009: “I don’t know what they were thinking. I don’t know whether they killed him deliberately on the night of the 16th, or if he died of neglect”

“They him in a straight-jacket put him in an isolation room and waited 1 hour and 18 minutes until he died” — 6 Dec 2010. San Diego Law School.

“They put him isolation cell, tied him to bed, then allowed eight guards guards beat him with rubber batons for 118 minutes until he was dead” — 13 Dec 2011. University of Cambridge Judge Business School

The story changed when Browder started promoting the Magnitsky Act, and by the time he testified before the Senate Judiciary Committee in July 2017, he declared: “…. they put him in an isolation cell, chained him to a bed, and eight riot guards came in and beat him with rubber batons.” Video.

On a website devoted to Magnitsky, Browder posted the hospital death certificate, highlighting the notation, “closed craniocerebral injury?” But the report in full, not just Browder’s excerpt, puts a question mark after the finding, which wasn’t explained, and provided no evidence to indicate Magnitsky was beaten to death. In fact, it said there was no sign of violence. The selected “injury” was more Browder fakery.

The report of the Public Oversight Commission, to which the Wall Street Journal links on its website, and the report of the Physicians for Human Rights in Cambridge, Mass., to which Browder sent 44 documents and photos to argue his case, say he died of illness made worse by medical neglect. No evidence of a beating has ever been made public by Browder or anyone else.

By the way, there is a Browder fabrication on that WSJ-linked POC report, a paragraph he inserted to buttress the story that Magnitsky was jailed as a whistleblower. It says:

Magnitsky wrote: I believe that [Interior Ministry Lieutenant Colonel Artem] Kuznetsov and other law enforcement officers in conspiracy with him could be involved in the theft of OOO Rilend, OOO Makhaon, OOO Parfenion and the subsequent theft of 5.4 billion rubles from the State Treasury and were extremely interested in suppressing my activity relating to assisting my client in investigating the circumstances connected with these criminal offences. This was the reason for my unlawful criminal prosecution being carried out by investigator Silchenko. I believe that with Silchenko’s participation or with his tacit approval, inhuman conditions were created for me in the detention center, which humiliate human dignity.

The underlined part, in the report the Journal linked to, a copy of the one on Browder’s website, does not appear in the notarized translation of the POC report filed in US federal court in the Prevezon case. See top of page 3 for both. That paragraph is a forgery. Browder told a reporter that it was the result of a clerical error, that the original Russian included that paragraph. Except the error was never “corrected” in the Russian or the notarized translation filed in US court.

Plus the fact Browder’s fabrication was deliberate is shown by the fake labels he put on links to the Magnitsky testimonies on his website to “prove” that Magnitsky was arrested for fingering Russian police.

Magnitsky names Lt Col Kuznetsov and Major Karpov and their role in the thefts (5 June 2008)
Magnitsky describes the role of Interior Ministry officers in the thefts (7 October 2008)

The links go to documents in Russian, with no English translations. However, the translated testimonies filed in U.S. federal court in the Prevezon case show these labels are lies and do not describe the texts, which make no such claims.

Finally, regarding Browder’s assertion: “We took all of the information that we got from [a previous] case file, and we collaborated with Berlingske newspaper, which is one of the major Danish newspapers. Then that led to eventually Danske Bank sort of coming clean…..”

After I sent the long email cited above to moderator@wsj.com, I contacted Flemming Rose, the author of this article in Berlingske, which asserts that Browder is a fraud. When I asked Rose to explain Browder’s declaration that the paper collaborated with him, he replied that the paper says Browder is “just a source.”

Posted July 8, 2019 at The Komisar Scoop.

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Lucy Komisar

journalist investigating financial crime, esp using offshore bank & corporate secrecy, focus now on Browder/Magnitsky hoax. @lucykomisar thekomisarscoop.com/