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Banking Leak Exposes Russian Network With Link To Prince Charles - World News - The Guardian

The document summarizes an investigation into leaked banking records that expose a Russian money laundering network involving over $4.6 billion sent to Europe and the US through shell companies in Lithuania. The network was used to funnel money from several major fraud schemes in Russia, including one linked to the death of Sergei Magnitsky. Records show some money from this network was donated to a charity run by Prince Charles and was also used to pay for expenses of Russian financier Ruben Vardanyan, though there is no evidence they knew the original criminal sources of the funds. The leak is being investigated by prosecutors in Lithuania and raises questions about how such illicit funds could flow through the international banking system.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
336 views7 pages

Banking Leak Exposes Russian Network With Link To Prince Charles - World News - The Guardian

The document summarizes an investigation into leaked banking records that expose a Russian money laundering network involving over $4.6 billion sent to Europe and the US through shell companies in Lithuania. The network was used to funnel money from several major fraud schemes in Russia, including one linked to the death of Sergei Magnitsky. Records show some money from this network was donated to a charity run by Prince Charles and was also used to pay for expenses of Russian financier Ruben Vardanyan, though there is no evidence they knew the original criminal sources of the funds. The leak is being investigated by prosecutors in Lithuania and raises questions about how such illicit funds could flow through the international banking system.

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Banking leak exposes Russian network with link to Prince Charles | World news | The Guardian 4/3/19 16(32

Banking leak exposes Russian


network with link to Prince
Charles
Exclusive: investigation reveals how Troika Dialog channelled
$4.6bn to Europe and US

How prince’s stately home revamp linked him to Russian money


Q&A: what is the ‘Troika Laundromat’?
Juliette Garside
and Caelainn Barr
Mon 4 Mar 2019
15.00 GMT

Ruben Vardanyan (second left) with Prince Charles at a black-tie dinner in 2014.

A charity run by Prince Charles received donations from an offshore company that was used
to funnel vast amounts of cash from Russia in a scheme that is under investigation by
prosecutors, the Guardian can reveal.

Money flowing through the network included cash that can be linked to some of the most
notorious frauds committed during Vladimir Putin’s presidency.

In all, it is estimated that $4.6bn (£3.5bn) was sent to Europe and the US from a Russian-
operated network of 70 offshore companies with accounts in Lithuania.

The details have emerged from 1.3m banking transactions obtained by the Organized Crime
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Banking leak exposes Russian network with link to Prince Charles | World news | The Guardian 4/3/19 16(32

and Corruption Reporting Project and the Lithuanian website 15min.lt.

Shared with media partners including the Guardian, the data represents one of the largest
ever banking leaks.

There is no suggestion that end recipients of funds were aware of the original source of the
money, which arrived via a disguised route. However, the documents indicate that criminal
and legitimate money may have been mixed together, making it impossible to trace the
original source, before passing through screen companies into the global banking system.

Financier Ruben Vardanyan with the Russian president, Vladimir


Putin. Photograph: Sputnik/Alamy

The cash was then used legally to pay for private jets, custom-built yachts, luxury
properties, holidays, football tickets and fees at top English private schools.

“This is the pipe through which the proceeds of kleptocracy flow from Russia to the west,”
said the anti-corruption campaigner Bill Browder.

For years, Browder has been trying to trace what happened to $230m stolen from the
Moscow tax office by a gang that took control of subsidiaries of his investment fund,
Hermitage Capital. Evidence from the leak suggests some of the proceeds moved through
this network.

The findings will be likely to add to concerns expressed by UK ministers who have vowed to
crack down on those facilitating the transfer of fortunes out of Russia by elites seeking to
spend their money in the west. Ministers have demanded better due diligence by British
institutions before accepting money from offshore companies.

The leak focuses on Troika Dialog, a leading Russian investment bank now merged with the
country’s biggest high street bank. Emails reveal how certain managers at Troika kept
money flowing through the pipeline for more than eight years, starting in 2004.

Troika’s overall boss at the time was Ruben Vardanyan, an Armenian financier with close
ties to Putin, a host of international celebrities and members of the British royal family. Two
years ago he was listed as the 99th richest Russian by Forbes magazine.

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Banking leak exposes Russian network with link to Prince Charles | World news | The Guardian 4/3/19 16(32

There is no suggestion Vardanyan did anything illegal, though he may have been an
unwitting beneficiary of the flow of money.

Vardanyan said he believed the bank knew its clients and “applied regulations and
compliance procedures that met the requirements of the legislation of that time”. And he
insisted he was unaware that Troika companies received funds relating to any frauds.

However, the data, which is being examined by government prosecutors in Lithuania, raises
questions about the light-touch scrutiny of payments organised by the bank.

The files highlight how money flowed through the network in a way that kept the sources of
funds unclear. They reveal a number of intriguing transactions, including how staff at Troika
apparently helped organise the transfer of $70m to one of Putin’s best friends, Sergei
Roldugin.

A cellist who is godfather to Putin’s eldest child, Roldugin was unmasked by the Panama
Papers as the potential beneficiary of money suspected of being held on behalf of the
Russian president. The sums revealed by this leak are higher than previously uncovered.

Vardanyan admitted he had heard of Roldugin, but said: “I haven’t done any business with
him personally. Why did he receive money from Troika Dialog companies? I don’t know
anything about that.”

In 2009, 2010 and 2011, three transfers from Vardanyan totalling $200,000 went to the
Prince’s Charities Foundation, a fundraising vehicle for Prince Charles. The money came
from a British Virgin Islands shell company, Quantus Division Ltd.

The donations were, said Vardanyan, charitable donations intended to “preserve


architectural heritage in England”.

The money went towards the rescue of Dumfries House, a stately home in Ayrshire with a
priceless collection of Chippendale furniture. In 2007, the mansion and its collection were
set to be auctioned off to private buyers. Charles came to the rescue, raising £45m at
breakneck speed to save the property for the nation.

But the venture left his foundation in debt, and in his efforts to plug the hole, the heir to the
throne went on a fundraising drive. Vardanyan raised a further £1.5m, from a group of
Russian businessmen, and the prince thanked them with a black-tie dinner in 2014.

The files show funds from Quantus also covered the €2m cost of flying the late rock star
Prince to Moscow for a Troika corporate gala in 2007. A further €20,000 was spent on
Vardanyan’s attendance at the world leaders’ conference at Davos.

The data suggests Quantus sent nearly $500,000 to American Express to cover Vardanyan’s
credit card bills.

His wife received €935,000 in payments over three years at an account in Spain, and his
mother-in-law, Emilia Zonabend, a further €900,000.

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Banking leak exposes Russian network with link to Prince Charles | World news | The Guardian 4/3/19 16(32

Vardanyan described the network as an independent arm of his main investment bank,
helping wealthy private clients manage their money. It is understood he was never involved
in its operations or management, did not personally oversee transactions or client accounts,
and had no day-to-day involvement in its activities. However, he did not deny benefiting
from funds held there.

The data suggests many of the Troika-managed companies, including Quantus, were not
created for particular clients, but contained pooled funds. Money entered from multiple
legitimate sources and was then used to fund the lifestyle spending of dozens of
individuals.

The leak ties some of the funds passing through the Laundromat companies to three major
frauds, the most notorious of which was the Magnitsky scandal.

Sergei Magnitsky was a lawyer working for Browder who died in a Moscow prison after
discovering the head of the city’s tax office had conspired to issue fraudulent tax refunds.

Hub companies in the Troika structure received a combined $130m from six shell vehicles,
which prosecutors say were used in the Magnitsky fraud, the data indicates.

Two more cases suggest criminal funds flowed through the network: Companies named in
the prosecution of a fuel price fixing scam at Moscow’s state-owned Sheremetyevo airport
appear to have paid $37m into the Troika network.

A further $17m in transfers connects Troika-managed companies to a Moscow resident


accused of laundering 50bn roubles using schemes that helped businesses evade tax and
send money abroad.

A key component of the scheme using Troika companies was a Lithuanian bank, Ukio,
which was shut down by regulators in February 2013 after being declared insolvent.

The bank is under investigation by Lithuanian prosecutors tasked with investigating the
laundering of the Magnitsky money. Ukio accounts were also named by the US Department
of Justice in documents tracing the Magnitsky proceeds.

Documents show money moved in and out of the bank in deals made by apparently
fictitious businesses, tax haven-registered entities with no offices, no staff, and no presence
online or in the world of commerce.

“You have to ask yourself, why is money being moved in this way, through multiple
companies?” said Tom Keatinge, a money laundering expert at the Royal United Services
Institute thinktank. “It’s a way of obfuscating source and ownership.”

There appear to have been a number of others unwittingly caught up in the network. Troika-
linked entities were used to pay for expenses that open a window into the world of the
super-rich.

One Troika shareholder, Valentin Zavadnikov, apparently drew on €70m from Troika

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Banking leak exposes Russian network with link to Prince Charles | World news | The Guardian 4/3/19 16(32

network accounts to fit out and run his two luxury motor yachts – Celestial Hope and Quinta
Essentia.

An invoice for the Quinta, whose rooms were perfumed with scent made from wine
produced at the family’s Italian vineyard, itemises €6,000 on electric sliding doors for the
bathrooms, €60,000 for installing a hamam (Turkish bath), and €15,000 on “water toys”.

Troika Laundromat companies loaned just under €15m to the mother-in-law of the then
governor of Samara, an administrative region east of Moscow.

The woman was at the time 80 years old and had no apparent means of repaying the loan,
which appeared to be unsecured. Data suggests the money was used to buy land and build a
holiday home in Spain, just north of Barcelona.

Stamford Bridge, London, home of Chelsea FC. Panama-


registered Airship Universal paid £126,000 for a corporate box at
the stadium. Photograph: Peter Nicholls/Reuters

Panama-registered firm Airship Universal Inc – also managed by Troika – sent £126,000 to
Chelsea football club in August 2012 for a corporate executive box at its Stamford Bridge
ground. The club said the purchase was arm’s length, at full market value, and that it
complies with all relevant legislation in dealings with clients.

In May 2011, Airship paid £100,000 to the dealership Rolls-Royce Motor Cars London,
apparently on behalf of a Russian businessman. Had the showroom Googled their client,
they would have found articles describing him as a former agent of the Russian security
service the FSB.

“It’s deeply concerning to us, and we take this situation extremely seriously,” the dealership
said in a statement. They added the sale took place under a different owner, that new
management had introduced “exacting” standards and that an investigation was under way.

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Airship paid £100,000 to the Rolls-Royce dealership in London


in May 2011. Photograph: Sam Panthaky/AFP/Getty Images

A Quantus-funded offshore firm called Flashback Services Limited spent heavily on private
jets. It paid more than $42m to the Canadian manufacturer Bombardier, and millions more
to cover the crewing and maintenance of two jets listed on the UK aircraft registry, and
operated from Farnborough airfield. Bombardier said it had a robust due diligence proess,
and that its checks on Flashback “did not reveal any anomalies”.

Vardanyan sold Troika in 2012 to the giant Russian state-controlled Sberbank, for a reported
$1bn. But he remains in the business: he is the controlling shareholder in Armenia’s
Ameriabank, and his partner there is the European Bank for Reconstruction and
Development, which holds 18% of the shares. Headquartered in London, the EBRD is owned
by nation states including the UK and the US.

Vardanyandescribes himself as a philanthropist and social entrepreneur who has made a


commitment to invest the vast majority of his wealth in charitable endeavours.

It is understood Troika Dialog was never fined by any regulatory body or law enforcement
agency and at all times observed international standards of transparency and compliance.

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Topics
Banking
Troika Laundromat
Vladimir Putin
Russia
Lithuania
Europe
Financial sector
Armenia
news

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