RUSSIAN TYCOON MAGOMEDOV ARRESTED ON EMBEZZLEMENT CHARGES
Russian authorities on Saturday arrested
billionaire Ziyavudin Magomedov on charges of embezzling more than $35 million,
in one of the highest-profile prosecutions of a Russian tycoon in years.
Magomedov
denied the charges at a pre-trial hearing, where a judge ordered that he be
held in custody until May 30.
One of
Russia’s richest men, the 49-year-old Magomedov holds assets in construction
and logistics through his sprawling Summa Group. He also has investments in
U.S. tech ventures, including the Virgin One Hyperloop project.
He was
detained along with his business partner and brother, Magomed Magomedov, and
Artur Maksidov, the head of a company in the Summa Group that was involved in
the construction of a soccer World Cup venue in the Russian exclave of
Kaliningrad.
Both
businessmen will also be held in custody until May 30, the court ruled.
At a
hearing in Moscow’s Tverskoy District Court to decide whether Magomedov and his
associates should be detained before their trial, Judge Maria Sizintseva said
they had acted as part of an organized crime group and had tried to put
pressure on witnesses. She rejected an offer from Magomedov to put up a $35
million bail bond, and ordered he be detained.
Citing the
arguments against granting bail, the judge said Magomedov had access to his own
aircraft, and assets abroad. The day before he was detained, he had booked a
flight from Moscow to Miami, the judge said.
Summa said
it planned to appeal the court decision and was ready to cooperate with the
investigation.
MUSCULAR STATE
Invited to
speak from a cage in the courtroom, Magomedov, dressed in a dark-blue jogging
suit, said: “I categorically disagree with the charges presented ... The
prosecution case does not stand up to scrutiny.”
He said he needed
treatment in the United States for a medical problem, and offered to put up the
$35 million bail. “I’m willing to pull together this money, so no one has any
thoughts that I might go on the run,” Magomedov said.
Magomedov is part of
a group of Russian multi-millionaires who, while publicly loyal to the Kremlin,
are not in President Vladimir Putin’s inner circle.
Some members of the
group say they are being squeezed by a tough economy, Western sanctions on
Russia, and powerful state-run companies that are muscling in on nearly all
sectors of the economy.
In past cases when
magnates have been prosecuted, some in the Russia business community have said
the tycoons were victims of a plot by the Kremlin or by politically connected
business rivals - though the authorities deny that.
People familiar with
the Russian judicial system say high-profile corruption cases are rarely
fabricated, but that the law is applied selectively, and that prosecutions can
be influenced by outside factors.
Ziyavudin Magomedov
ranked 63rd last year on the Forbes list of the richest business people in
Russia with $1.4 billion. In January, he was listed by the U.S. Treasury
Department as one of 96 “oligarchs” close to Putin.
His Caspian Venture
Capital fund has investments in ride-hailing service Uber UBER.UL; Diamond
Foundry, a company that produces man-made diamonds; and Peek, an online leisure
activities company.
Magomedov is also
co-executive chairman of Los Angeles-based tech firm Virgin Hyperloop One,
which is chaired by Richard Branson. It is one of several firms developing a
futuristic transport system that involves propelling people at high speed
through sealed tubes.
He also co-owns the
Novorossiysk Commercial Sea Port (NMTP.MM) with Russian oil pipeline monopoly
Transneft (TRNF_p.MM) and transportation group Fesco (FESH.MM).
SOURCE: REUTERS
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