Russia hands U.S. investor Calvey 5.5-year suspended sentence
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[August 07, 2021] By
Lev Sergeev and Alexander Marrow
MOSCOW (Reuters) - A Russian court on
Friday handed U.S. investor Michael Calvey a 5.5-year suspended sentence
for embezzlement, a day after finding him guilty, in a case that has
rattled Russia's business community.
Calvey, the founder of Russia-focused private equity group Baring Vostok,
was detained along with other executives in early 2019 on charges of
embezzlement linked to mid-sized lender Vostochny. He and the executives
deny the charges.
"The court, unfortunately, didn't or couldn't understand substance of
the case with no victim, no damage and no beneficiary," Calvey told
reporters outside the court after the more than 12-hour-long sitting was
over.
Calvey will not be allowed to change his permanent place of residence in
the next five years without informing Russian prison authorities, the
verdict said.
"Compared to most cases receiving a suspended sentence is already almost
a victory but, on the other hand, it is simply outrageous to be
convicted of a crime that never happened," Calvey said.
The court handed French national Philippe Delpal, a partner at the fund,
a suspended sentence of 4.5 years.
"Our colleagues are innocent, and both the criminal case and the verdict
handed down by the court are groundless", Baring Vostok said about the
verdict in a statement.
The case prompted several prominent officials and businessmen to voice
concerns about the way the state deals with commercial disputes and
executives caught up in them.
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U.S. investor and founder of the Baring Vostok private equity group
Michael Calvey, who is under house arrest on suspicion of fraud,
attends a court hearing in Moscow, Russia August 15, 2019. REUTERS/Evgenia
Novozhenina
Calvey last month told a court that an innocent verdict in his case would
trigger billions of dollars in foreign investment and help create thousands of
new jobs.
The state prosecutor asked for the six-year suspended sentence over a 2.5
billion rouble ($34.04 million) embezzlement charge.
Initially placed in pre-trial detention and then house arrest, Calvey and his
colleagues saw their restrictions ease in November, a move hailed at the time by
the head of Russia's sovereign wealth fund as an important signal to all the
investment community.
Sovcombank, Russia's third biggest private bank and among the country's top 10
by assets agreed to buy Vostochny Bank, the small lender at the heart of the
dispute, in March, but did not disclose financial terms of the deal.
The corporate dispute between Vostochny's top shareholders - Baring Vostok and
businessman Artem Avetisyan's Finvision - was settled in October.
Baring Vostok has invested more than $2.8 billion in projects in Russia since
1994, including in internet giant Yandex, online bank Tinkoff and e-commerce
firm Ozon, which enjoyed a successful Nasdaq debut late last year.
($1 = 73.4358 roubles)
(Reporting by Lev Sergeev, Alexander Marrow and Maria Tsvetkova; Editing by
Leslie Adler and David Gregorio)
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