THE ROTENBERG FILES [30 thousand emails and 12 thousand documents] show how Putin hides assets
26/06/2023
Intro
- IStories has revealed the Rotenberg Files, a leak of 30 thousand emails and 12 thousand documents that demonstrated how oligarchs Boris and Arkady Rotenberg hid their assets and the assets of Vladimir Putin’s family from Western sanctions using “frontmen”.
- The archive was handed over to IStories by a source that wished to remain anonymous due to security reasons.
- The journalist says “frontmen” is a term the Kremlin uses to refer to people who handle financial matters of Putin’s close circle without revealing who’s the beneficiary of their affairs.
- A man named Maxim Viktorov, a former security officer and now a lawyer who owns businesses in the UK, is the “frontman” for the Rotenberg brothers. His documents have now also been accessed by the journalists.
Back ground
- Vladimir Putin has spent his presidency crushing dissent, jailing journalists and opposition leaders, and waging a relentless war against Ukraine.
- Throughout the increasingly dark years of his rule, some of his most loyal enablers have been Russian oligarchs — above all, his childhood friends Boris and Arkady Rotenberg.
- The two brothers became key allies of the Russian state as their vast enterprises executed megaprojects including the Sochi Olympics and the bridge to annexed Crimea. In return, Putin’s government helped make them billionaires.
- Though they were sanctioned by the West in 2014, little seemed to change in the Rotenbergs’ world-spanning, ultra-wealthy lifestyle. They managed to hang onto yachts, mansions, and other luxury assets — and even today, they’re still worth billions.
How is this possible?
- The Rotenberg Files, an investigative series based on a new leak of over 50,000 emails and documents from a Russian management firm that worked for the brothers, provides unique insight.
- Dozens of journalists from 17 outlets spent months analyzing and reporting on the archive, obtained by IStories and OCCRP from a source who cannot be identified for their safety.
- This unprecedented access reveals the complex strategies the Rotenbergs used to preserve their holdings — and pulls back the curtain on the Western lawyers, bankers, and corporate service providers without whom they would have been helpless.
- The rare glimpse provided by this project serves as a warning: All the sanctions in the world will accomplish little when there are willing enablers in every Western capital
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