I'm Bill Browder. Here's the Biggest Mistake Putin Made When Trying to Get Access to Me Through Trump
I'm Bill
Browder. Here's the Biggest Mistake Putin Made When Trying to Get Access to Me
Through Trump
By: Bill
Browder
Taken from:
Time Magazine
I wasn’t
watching the Donald Trump–Vladimir Putin press conference from Helsinki. But
when my phone started burning up with messages, I knew something was going on.
I quickly discovered that Putin had mentioned me by name. No journalist had
asked about me. He just brought me up out of the blue.
Putin
offered to allow American investigators to interview the 12 Russian
intelligence agents just indicted by Special Counsel Robert Mueller in exchange
for allowing Russians to have access to me and those close to me. This is no
idle threat. For the last ten years, I’ve been trying to avoid getting killed
by Putin’s regime, and there already exists a trail of dead bodies connected to
its desire to see me dead. Amazingly, Trump stood next to him, appearing to nod
approvingly. He even later said that he considered it “an incredible offer.”
I’m lodged
so firmly under Putin’s skin because I’m the person responsible for getting the
Magnitsky Act passed in the United States in 2012. This is a law that allows
the U.S. government to freeze assets and ban visas of human-rights violators
around the world. Some of these human-rights violators had killed Sergei
Magnitsky, my Russian lawyer who was murdered in a Moscow jail for uncovering a
massive $230 million government-corruption scheme that we’ve since traced to
known Putin cronies. In essence, Putin received some of the proceeds of this
crime, and he is terrified that the Magnitsky Act could be applied to his
offshore fortune, which is probably one of the largest amassed in modern times.
The
Helsinki summit is not the first time my name has come up at a Putin press
conference. Back in 2006 at the G-8 Conference in St. Petersburg, a young
reporter for the Moscow Times asked why I’d been denied an entry visa to Russia
and declared a threat to national security, all with no explanation. She
pointed out that I was the biggest foreign investor in the Russian stock
market, and that the prime minister of the United Kingdom had asked Putin about
my situation earlier that day.
Putin
frowned. “To be honest, I don’t know why this particular person has been
refused entry to Russia. I can imagine that this person has broken the laws of
our country, and if others do the same we’ll refuse them entry, too.”
“This
person.” Putin almost never utters the names of his enemies — except for mine,
which he lately seems to utter at every opportunity. To my mind, this can only
mean that he is seriously rattled.
Since 2012,
Putin has made it perhaps his largest foreign policy priority to have the
Magnitsky Act repealed. But none of his efforts have worked. Not only has it
not been repealed, it’s spread to six additional countries, including the
United Kingdom, Canada, the Baltic states and Gibraltar. There are eight other
countries with Magnitsky Acts on deck: Sweden, France, Germany, the Netherlands,
Denmark, Australia, South Africa and Ukraine. The Magnitsky Act is going viral,
and countries that have Magnitsky Acts are sanctioning Putin’s cronies, who I
imagine soon will be sanctioned by other countries as well.
In
addition, the Global Magnitsky Justice Campaign has investigated and found the
$230 million that Sergei Magnitsky exposed and was killed over. There are now a
number of live law-enforcement investigations around the world determining just
who benefited from this crime. These have resulted in tens of millions of
dollars of frozen assets. Furthermore, these investigations don’t only put at
risk the beneficiaries of this crime, but the benificiaries of many other
similar crimes. These people are ready to kill to keep their money. Losing it
would be devastating.
Putin’s
latest allegation that I donated $400 million to Hillary Clinton is so
ludicrous and untrue that it falls into delusion. I’ve never made a political
donation to Hillary Clinton or any other political candidate. It’s in the same
category as other Russian government allegations against me: they accused me of
being a serial killer; they accused me of being a CIA/MI6 agent determined to
destroy the Russian government; and they accused me of somehow stealing $4.8
billion of IMF money back in the 1990s that was destined for the Russian
Treasury. These guys have seriously lost their cool and are beginning to make
mistakes.
The biggest
mistake that Putin made in his offer today to effectively swap me for the 12
Russian agents is that he went to the wrong head of state. Although I was born
in America, I emigrated to the United Kingdom 29 years ago and am a British
citizen. If he really wants me, he better go talk to Theresa May, who might
have a few choice words for him after Russian agents spread the military-grade
nerve agent Novichok across the cathedral town of Salisbury, England.
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