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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Questions Cloud Story Behind U.S. Sanctions
2020-09-27
[Spiegel (from Nov-2019)] The story of Sergei Magnitsky has come to symbolize the brutal persecution of whistleblowers in Russia. Ten years after his death, inconsistencies in Magnitsky's story suggest he may not have been the hero many people -- and Western governments -- believed him to be.

There's a tombstone in northeastern Moscow that bears the portrait of a man with a friendly yet somewhat uneasy smile. His name is Sergei Leonidovich Magnitsky. He was born in April 1972 in Odessa, Ukraine, and died in November 2009 in Moscow. To this day, 10 years after the fact, the circumstances of his death in a Russian pretrial detention facility remain unclear.

There are two versions of what happened to Magnitsky. The more well-known version has all the makings of a conspiracy thriller. It's been repeated in thousands of articles, TV interviews and in parliamentary hearings. In this version of the story, the man from the Moscow cemetery fought nobly against a corrupt system and was murdered for it.
Posted by:Clem

#3  And, as a side note, Browder renounced his US citizenship many years ago. A bit of a "hmmmmm".

Slime with a capital S.
Posted by: Clem   2020-09-27 10:32  

#2  Stiffen your carrot.
Posted by: Skidmark   2020-09-27 08:37  

#1  There are also some accounts of involvement with Browder (a buddy of John Mccain, naturally) by Robert Maxwell (RIP), Ghislaine's papa, and Edmund Safra (RIP).
Posted by: Clem   2020-09-27 07:57  

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