Russia accuses US intelligence of graft
Russia’s top prosecutor on Monday accused both a major Western investor who fell out with the Kremlin and the US secret services of being behind an Opposition film alleging serious corruption among hi

Russia’s top prosecutor on Monday accused both a major Western investor who fell out with the Kremlin and the US secret services of being behind an Opposition film alleging serious corruption among his family members.
An online video relea-sed earlier this month by leading Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny’s anti-corruption fund accused the two sons of Russia’s prosecutor general Yury Chaika of illegally amassing large fortunes with the help of officials under their father’s command.
Mr Chaika dismissed the charges in a letter published in Kommersant newspaper and said they were masterminded by American-born Bill Browder, once the biggest foreign investor in Russia, and the US secret services as part of a broader effort to tarnish Moscow’s credibility.
“I have no doubt that the people that ordered this mendacious film are Browder and the secret services that stand behind him,” Russia’s top prosecutor wrote. Browder, who now has British citizenship, has accused Russian tax officials of carrying out large-scale fraud scam uncovered by his late lawyer Sergei Magnitsky but has himself been sentenced by a Moscow court in absentia to nine years in prison.
Magnitsky, a lawyer for Browder’s Hermit-age Capital hedge fund, was himself arrested for tax evasion in 2008 and died in a Moscow prison in 2009.