Russian billionaire Fridman says UK raid based on 'kompromat'
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[July 27, 2023]
By Sam Tobin
LONDON (Reuters) - Russian billionaire Mikhail Fridman told London's
High Court on Thursday that Britain's National Crime Agency (NCA) raided
his family home with an unlawfully-obtained search warrant based on
"classic kompromat".
The sanctioned oligarch's lawyers say the warrant was based on false
allegations, including claims he funded Russian organized crime,
laundered money for Colombian drug cartels and was involved in the
murder of two journalists.
"Kompromat" comes from a Russian word denoting damaging and compromising
information collected for use in blackmailing, discrediting or
manipulating someone, often for political ends.
Fridman's multi-million-pound London mansion was searched in December
over an alleged conspiracy to evade British sanctions, conspiracy to
defraud the Home Office (interior ministry), conspiracy to commit
perjury, and money laundering.
Fridman's lawyer Hugo Keith said in court filings that the NCA has since
dropped its inquiry into the alleged conspiracies to defraud and commit
perjury, as well as money laundering.
He said the investigation into an alleged conspiracy to circumvent
British sanctions – relating to a loan made by Alfa Bank to Fridman's
executive assistant – continues.
Fridman is pursuing a legal challenge against the NCA, arguing that the
warrant was unlawfully obtained and seeking to have it overturned.
The 59-year-old strongly denies the accusations of wrongdoing, which his
lawyers told the court were "gratuitous and unjustified slurs against a
businessman of good character".
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Russian businessman and co-founder of
Alfa-Group Mikhail Fridman attends a conference of the Israeli
foundation Keren Hayesod in Moscow, Russia, September 17, 2019.
Pavel Golovkin/Pool via REUTERS/File Photo
Keith said in court filings that the allegations, which came from a
15-year-old report published by WikiLeaks in 2012, were "absolutely
typical of classic kompromat, damaging and untrue information
assembled and used to create negative publicity and to exert
influence over the subject".
The NCA's Cathryn McGahey said in court filings that the agency
accepts that "failures on its part led to the search of (Fridman's)
property and the seizure of items being unlawful".
But Fridman argues the warrant was also unlawfully obtained on other
grounds, including that there was no reasonable basis to believe he
had committed a criminal offence and because NCA media officers were
allowed to enter his home under the warrant.
Fridman, whose net worth is estimated by Forbes magazine at $12.6
billion, has been subject to British and European Union sanctions
since March 2022, a month after Russia invaded Ukraine, over his
alleged ties to the Kremlin.
Keith said Fridman is currently challenging his designation under
both the British and EU sanctions regimes targeting Russia over the
war in Ukraine.
(Reporting by Sam Tobin; editing by Mark Heinrich)
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