Before the so called theft of the companies,
law suits were filed against Browder's companies.
In 8 or so law suits almost a billion dollars was claimed from
Hermitage. Here, curiously, there's another rare fact everyone agrees
on. There was a series of lawsuits,
all fake in the
sense that the litigating parties were controlled by the same people.
The aim was to artificially wipe out the profit the companies had made
and paid the tax on. So that one can go back to the tax man and ask for
the tax to be refunded.
The question is who did all that.
Normally the default position would be that Browder was and remained in
control of his companies, and the burden of proof that he lost it is
entirely on him. But in the real world he's not required to prove his
story, especially if it has something to do with human rights and Putin.
If the Browder organisation had not known about the
preparations for the refund fraud, about those law suits in particular,
the question is when and how they found out about them eventually. If I
sue someone I need to notify those I sue. In Russia the plaintiff
notifies the defendant, and so does the court. The notification is sent
by registered mail, signed by the defendant, and the law suit goes
ahead. The law suits against Browder's companies did go ahead, in the
summer of 2007, before the so-called theft - re-registration - of the
companies in September that year.
The law suit notifications
were sent to the correct addresses of the companies, I'm sure Jamison
still remembers, Staropimenovsky 13. The letters were signed on
reception and returned. Which means the Browder organisation must have
known of the law suits.
One could claim, however, that the
criminals had sent the notifications to a wrong address under their
control, and persuaded many different officials to do the same, Russia's
so corrupt. But there are problems with that explanation. If the
criminals had the plan Browder says they had, the police raid, the
secret re-registration of the companies and then the tax refund, why did
they not re-register the companies
first (and the
companies were of course re-registered, but later)? The re-registration
would have given them a new address beyond Browder's reach. It simply
makes no sense suing someone for a billion dollars for artificial
criminal reasons, which requires secrecy by definition, when you are
suing a real company, with a real address, under control of Messrs.
Browder, Magnitsky and Firestone.
But it gets worse.
Magnitsky, out of all people, states on the record that he did receive
those law suits notifications. But he says he received them on the 16th
of October.
That is two and a half months after the beginning of
the law suits and a whole month after the companies' re-registration or
theft. For some extraordinary reason the criminals sent the
notifications to the correct address where Magnitsky and Browder would
get them. Even after the address was changed at the public companies
registry! Why would the criminals be notifying - alerting - the real old
owners about the sham law suits when they could have sent the letters
to their new addresses where the Browder organisation would have never
found them? Alerting the old owners - Browder, Magnitsky - means ruining
the whole operation!
None of this makes sense. The only logical
explanation is that the Browder organisation got all the letters as
they normally would, the law suits went ahead with their knowledge as
the lawsuits normally would, and the company theft story was made up
later.
But even if one accepts that the Browder organisation
only found out about the multimillion law suits on 16 October, one
wonders why they did nothing to thwart those lawsuits for many weeks
still to come. Magnitsky claimed they were determined to send a lawyer,
Mr Khairetdinov, to the next hearing the moment they found out about
this attack against their companies. The next hearing was on the Monday
October the 22nd. Well the court records show, and Khairetdinov
confirmed to me, that no one showed up for Hermitage. The first time
Browder's lawyers did show up, was the next year, well after the money
was stolen.
The Browder organisation claims that they filed
complaints to the authorities about the company theft in December.
Firstly, that's way too late, - if someone steals your companies and
sues you for hundreds of millions of dollars would you wait for weeks
and do nothing? And secondly, the letters ("complaints") they sent to
the authorities were not really about the company theft. It was about an
attempt to steal money from them. Most letters were not even proper
criminal complaints. The one which was did not have a return address of
the plaintiff and no information about the companies in question.
Strangely unprofessional. A red herring, an attempt at alibi, as far as I
can see.