U.S. investor Calvey tells court: Find me innocent and Russia will get
billions in investment
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[July 19, 2021] MOSCOW
(Reuters) - U.S. investor Michael Calvey on Monday told a Moscow court
trying him on embezzlement charges that an innocent verdict in his case
would trigger billions of dollars in foreign investment and help create
thousands of new jobs.
Calvey, one of Russia's most prominent foreign investors, faces a
possible six-year suspended jail sentence if found guilty with a verdict
expected on Aug. 2.
The founder of Russia-focused private equity group Baring Vostok, Calvey
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 detention of the Wisconsin-born investor rattled Russia's business
community and prompted several prominent officials and businessmen to
voice concerns about the way the state deals with commercial disputes
and executives caught up in them.
A state prosecutor last week asked a court to hand Calvey a six-year
suspended sentence.
“A court decision to reject the accusation would be an enormous positive
sign about the independence of the courts and the protection of
investors’ rights,” Calvey told the court, in remarks shared online by
his press team.
“It would not be an exaggeration to say that such a positive decision by
the court could bring Russia billions of dollars in new investments,
adding thousands of jobs,” Calvey said.
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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
Initially placed in pre-trial detention, Calvey was subsequently freed and put
under house arrest instead.
President Vladimir Putin's spokesman said on Monday that the Kremlin was fully
aware that the international business community was watching Calvey’s case very
closely.
Dmitry Peskov, the spokesperson, told reporters that international business
representatives had raised the case with Putin before, and that Putin has
responded by saying that the government could not meddle in the work of the
courts.
One such individual case alone could not have a major effect on Russia’s
investment climate, Peskov added.
“Most important are the systemic measures that are taken to raise the country’s
attractiveness for investors. These processes are far more important,” Peskov
said.
(Reporting by Polina Ivanova; Editing by Andrew Osborn and Bernadette Baum)
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