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After the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, many hoped that post-Soviet Russia would transform into a democratic and capitalist system. That didn't happen. With no economic regulations in place, the transition to capitalism invited rampant corruption. A small elite, known as oligarchs, gained control of state industries and made a fortune. They operated as a criminal organization. Boris Yeltsin, the Russian President in the 1990s, was unable to put regulations in place and establish democratic procedures. It was in this unregulated arena that Bill Browder operated his hedge fund. In these early years, he was able to use the international media to call out corruption in an effort to protect his investors.
In 2000, Vladimir Putin assumed the Presidency. He systematically eliminated all sources of opposition to him. He weakened the Duma, or Russian Legislature, destroyed the independence of the judiciary, took control of the media, and substantially weakened the powers of regional and local governments. Putin, a former KGB, or secret police officer, deeply regretted the fall of the Soviet Union and set out to restore it. He cut a deal with Russian oligarchs promising that he'd allow them their wealth if they gave him political support. He dealt ruthlessly with those who didn't support him. As Putin consolidated power, Browder’s exposure of corruption became increasingly unacceptable. Putin himself was a beneficiary of this corruption. Putin named Browder a threat to national security and expelled him from the country in 2005. Given the corruption and lack of a rule of law, Browder had no chance of finding justice in Russia and sought it in Western countries.
Browder’s tenacity and courage in insisting on justice for Magnitsky and others are critical parts of this story. Relating an incident about his how his flute was stolen in Chicago when he was a boy, Browder refers to his burning desire for justice. He testified against those who stole his flute. Later, when he gained British citizenship, he renounced his US citizenship because of the unjust way that his grandfather, who was a Communist, was treated in the McCarthy era and the subsequent effects on his own father. Thus, Browder establishes that he's a person who acts against injustice.
In Russia, where corrupt business practices were the norm in the 1990s and beyond, Browder’s acts of resistance to these practices made him an enemy of the state. Although he was unable to get justice in the Russian system, he didn't give up. Instead, he devised a strategy to make the perpetrators of human rights crimes in Russia pay. One of those perpetrators was Putin himself. Using his wealth and multiple contacts, Browder essentially had his team do the research, gather the evidence, and then use the media to pressure lawmakers to pass Magnitsky acts and prosecutors to bring charges. He did all this despite threats to his life. Additionally, he exposed Western supporters of Putin. In so doing, he remained a thorn in Putin’s side and gained some measure of economic justice for his friend Sergei Magnitsky.
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