FBI raids Washington, New York homes linked to Russia's Deripaska
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[October 20, 2021]
By Sarah N. Lynch and Mark Hosenball
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - FBI agents on
Tuesday raided Washington and New York City homes linked to Oleg
Deripaska, a Russian billionaire under U.S. sanctions who once employed
Paul Manafort, a chairman of Donald Trump's 2016 U.S. presidential
campaign.
Two sources familiar with the investigation said the U.S. Attorney's
office in Manhattan, also known as the Southern District of New York, is
leading the probe related to Deripaska, a metals industry magnate with
Kremlin ties.
In Washington, FBI agents sealed off and searched a mansion in one of
the U.S. capital's wealthiest neighborhoods, carrying boxes out of the
house, which had yellow "CRIME SCENE DO NOT ENTER" tape across the
front, and towing away a vehicle.
A spokesperson for the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation confirmed
the agency was conducting a court-authorized law enforcement activity at
the home, which the Washington Post has previously reported was linked
to the Russian oligarch.

A separate spokesperson for the FBI's New York field office confirmed
"law enforcement activity" at a home in New York's Greenwich Village
neighborhood but declined further comment.
Three FBI SUV vehicles converged on the two-story home in New York, with
agents carrying out boxes and rolls of bubble wrap which they put in a
white van. Officers blocked off access to the street and prevented local
residents from entering it.
The reason for the searches was unclear, and the FBI spokespeople gave
no details.
A representative for Deripaska said the homes being searched belong to
relatives of the oligarch. Reuters could not immediately determine
Deripaska's whereabouts.
Washington imposed sanctions on Deripaska, 53, and other influential
Russians because of their ties to Russian President Vladimir Putin after
alleged Russian interference in the 2016 election which Moscow denies.
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An FBI agent mans his post as the U.S. law enforcement agency
conducted a raid at Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska's home in
Washington, U.S., October 19, 2021. REUTERS/Kevin Fogarty

Deripaska once employed Manafort, who was convicted
in 2018 of criminal charges arising from the U.S. investigation into
the alleged interference but was pardoned by then-president Trump in
December.
The U.S. Treasury said Deripaska was sanctioned because he acted, or
claimed to act, for the Russian government. It said he had been
investigated for money laundering and accused of threatening rivals,
illegal wiretapping, extortion and racketeering.
Deripaska owns part of Rusal via his stake in the giant aluminum
producer's parent company En+ Group. Washington previously dropped
sanctions against both companies but kept them on Deripaska.
Rusal's Moscow-listed shares extended losses after the report of the
raid on the Washington home, falling 6%.
The representative for Deripaska, who declined to give their name
because of company policy, confirmed the raid on both homes and said
they belong to Deripaska's family rather than the executive himself.
Deripaska's representative said the searches were carried out on the
basis of two court warrants related to the U.S. sanctions but
provided no further details.
(Reporting by Susan Heavey, Sarah N. Lynch, Mark Hosenball, Jonathan
Landay and Kevin Fogarty; additional reporting by Anastasia
Lyrchikova and Polina Devitt in Moscow and by Carlo Allegri in New
York; Writing by Arshad Mohammed and Susan Heavey; Editing by
Jonathan Oatis, Mark Porter and Howard Goller)
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