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  • Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

    Boris Berezovsky is dead

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-21913356

    Suicide?

    or "suicide" ie Polonium scented bath salts?

    With Boris Berezovsky being an Original Oligarch, he would have surely used Cyprus for exporting a good chunk of his plundered wealth, which is the MO of the largest chunk of Russian capital theft/flight on it's journey to and from other banking centres.

    Is the Boris Berezovsky death directly/indirectly related to the crisis in Cyprus?

    It sounds like Berezovsky's wealth was hammered in recent years from lawsuits and such, maybe Cyprus was the straw that broke the Oligarch's back?

    Inquiring minds want to know.

  • #2
    Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

    Rumors of a CBRN (Chemical Biological, Radiological, Nuclear) team searching his home.

    Which isn't a big surprise considering his opposition to Putin and his connection to the Litvenyenko/Polonium poisoning.

    My guess is it's unlikely to get the geiger counter going.....my guess is Berezovsky is up to his eyeballs in insolvency and Cyprus's banking crisis.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

      I'd be frankly shocked if anything as dramatic as an assassination occurred.

      Berezovsky is a non-entity, and has been for many years now. Putin's oligarch control plan worked great - and Berezovsky was much more useful as an object lesson alive than dead.

      He was also a chunky guy that was 67 and was a smoker.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

        He was also a chunky guy that was 67 and was a smoker.

        ?

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

          Originally posted by lakedaemonian View Post
          Boris Berezovsky is dead
          It sounds like Berezovsky's wealth was hammered in recent years from lawsuits and such, maybe Cyprus was the straw that broke the Oligarch's back?

          Inquiring minds want to know.
          I thought cyprus is going to have a 10% tax on cash savings (max). It sucks, but it's far from the end of the world.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

            NY Times Obit:




            By DAVID M. HERSZENHORN

            MOSCOW — Boris A. Berezovsky, once the richest and most powerful of the so-called oligarchs who dominated post-Soviet Russia, and a close ally of Boris N. Yeltsin who helped install Vladimir V. Putin as president but later exiled himself to London after a bitter falling out with the Kremlin, died Saturday.

            He was 67 and lived near London, where last year he lost one of the largest private lawsuits in history — an epic tug-of-war over more than $5 billion with another Russian oligarch, Roman A. Abramovich, in which legal and other costs were estimated to be about $250 million.

            Mr. Berezovsky’s death was first reported in a post on Facebook by his son-in-law Egor Schuppe and was confirmed by Alexander Dobrovinsky, a lawyer who had represented him.

            Mr. Dobrovinsky wrote in Russian on his Facebook page: “Just got a call from London. Boris Berezovsky has committed suicide. The man was complex. An act of desperation? Impossible to live poor? A series of blows? I am afraid that no one will know the truth.”

            The Thames Valley police in Berkshire, an hour from London, said Saturday that they were investigating the “unexplained” death of a 67-year-old man, apparently Mr. Berezovsky, in Ascot.

            The police statement did not name Mr. Berezovsky, but British news reports said an investigation was under way at his home. “Specially trained officers are currently at the scene, including C.B.R.N.-trained officers, who are conducting a number of searches as a precaution,” said a spokeswoman for the Thames Valley police, referring to the force’s chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear team. “This is to enable officers to carry out an investigation into the man’s death. The body of the man is still in the property at this time.”

            In London, Mr. Berezovsky had adopted much the same style as an oligarch in Russia, with chauffeurs and bodyguards. But recent news reports said Mr. Berezovsky had begun to sell personal assets, including a yacht and a painting by Andy Warhol, “Red Lenin,” to pay debts related to the lawsuit.

            The lawsuit, in which Mr. Berezovsky brought a claim against Mr. Abramovich in a dispute over the sale of shares in Sibneft, an oil company, and other assets, ended in a spectacular defeat.

            In her ruling, the judge in the case, Elizabeth Gloster, called Mr. Berezovsky an “unimpressive and inherently unreliable witness” and at times a dishonest one. By contrast, the judge said Mr. Abramovich had been “a truthful, and on the whole reliable, witness.”

            Mr. Berezovsky’s legal troubles worsened recently with a claim by his former girlfriend, Elena Gorbunova, that he owed her about $8 million from the sale of a house they owned in Surrey, England. The judge also ordered him to pay more than $53 million of Mr. Abramovich’s fees.

            A friend of the tycoon, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the press, said Mr. Berezovsky said he had been “extremely depressed” for at least six months since losing his case. “He was a great believer in British justice, and he felt it let him down,” the friend said.

            A spokesman for Mr. Putin said Mr. Berezovsky had recently sent a letter asking President Putin for forgiveness and permission to return to Russia. “Some time ago, maybe a couple of months, Berezovsky sent Vladimir Putin a letter, written by himself, in which he admitted that he had made a lot of mistakes,” the spokesman, Dmitri S. Peskov, said on the Russia 24 television channel. “He asked Putin for forgiveness for the errors to be able to return home.”

            Mr. Peskov said that he did not know Mr. Putin’s reaction, but that “news of anyone’s death, no matter what kind of person they were, cannot arouse any positive emotions.”

            Mr. Berezovsky was a Soviet mathematician who after the fall of Communism went into business and figured out how to skim profits off what was then Russian’s largest state-owned carmaker. Along with spectacular wealth, he accumulated enormous political influence, becoming a close ally of Mr. Yeltsin’s.

            With Mr. Yeltsin’s political career fading, Mr. Berezovsky helped engineer the rise of Mr. Putin, an obscure former K.G.B. agent and onetime aide to the mayor of St. Petersburg who became president of Russia in 2000 and last May returned to the presidency for a third term.

            After his election, Mr. Putin began a campaign of tax claims against a group of rich and powerful Russians, including Mr. Berezovsky and Mikhail B. Khodorkovsky, an oil tycoon, who remains jailed in Russia.

            Mr. Berezovsky fled to London, where he eventually won political asylum and at one point raised tensions by calling for a coup against Mr. Putin.

            David E. Hoffman, the author of “The Oligarchs: Wealth and Power in the New Russia,” an exploration of the role of such magnates in the era after the breakup of the Soviet Union, said Mr. Berezovsky stood out for seeking not only wealth but political clout.

            “Boris Berezovsky was among that wave of oligarchs who realized that great fortunes were to be made in the massive sell-off of assets in the new Russia,” Mr. Hoffman said by e-mail on Saturday. “While many of his peers also saw the opportunity, Berezovsky was more focused than most on the role that politics would play. He realized the need to co-opt those in power in order to make deals. He did it from the early days with automobiles and later with oil.”

            Mr. Berezovsky had an outsize, if hardly always benevolent, role in post-Soviet Russia.

            George Soros, a financier and a critic of the Russian oligarchs, had likened them to 19th-century American robber barons. But if that was an apt metaphor, the power and influence of these new tycoons was amplified by the legal and political vacuum left by the collapse of the Soviet Union.

            Mr. Berezovsky amassed his fortune at first in automobiles, including a business he formed in 1993 with Aleksandr Voloshin, who would later become Mr. Yeltsin’s chief of staff. But like other oligarchs, Mr. Berezovsky’s interests spread across many sectors of the post-Soviet Russian economy, to oil; media; and Aeroflot, the Russian airline.

            He survived an assassination attempt in 1994, a car bombing in which his driver was killed.

            The assassination attempt connected him to a K.G.B. officer, Alexander V. Litvinenko, who was poisoned by the radioactive isotope polonium 210 in London in November 2006.

            Mr. Litvinenko, then working for the F.S.B., the domestic successor to the K.G.B., was assigned to investigate the blast, and Mr. Berezovsky became his mentor and later his employer.

            Mr. Berezovsky helped Mr. Litvinenko flee Russia in 2000 before he, too, left the country to seek asylum in London.

            On the day he was poisoned, Nov. 1, 2006, Mr. Litvinenko went from a meeting with several Russians at a hotel in central London to Mr. Berezovsky’s nearby office. There he met with a Chechen exile, Akhmed Zakayev, another Berezovsky protégé, and the two drove together to adjacent homes financed by Mr. Berezovsky, in North London.

            After Mr. Litvinenko’s death, and with his wealth dwindling during his time in London, Mr. Berezovsky slowly withdrew his financial support for Mr. Litvinenko’s widow as she pressed for an inquest into the death, now scheduled to begin in May.

            Boris Abramovich Berezovsky was born in Moscow on Jan. 23, 1946, to Abram Berezovsky, a civil engineer who worked in construction, and Anna Gelman, at a time when the Soviet Union was recovering from World War II.

            He studied forestry and mathematics at the Moscow Forestry Engineering Institute. He worked as an engineer and researcher until the late 1980s.

            In the mid-1990s, Mr. Berezovsky served on Russia’s security council, only to be dismissed from that post by Mr. Yeltsin in 1997.
            Mr. Berezovsky and Mr. Putin had been close, and Mr. Berezovsky aided Mr. Putin’s rise to the presidency. But signs came quickly that Mr. Berezovsky had fallen out of favor. In October 2000, just 10 months after Mr. Yeltsin’s resignation, Mr. Berezovsky was ordered to vacate a spacious government country house and to return the government plates on his limousine. He left Russia for Britain that year.

            In March 2003, the British authorities arrested Mr. Berezovsky and said they were beginning a process that could lead to his extradition. But he was granted political asylum later that year apparently after the British determined that Russia sought him solely on political grounds.

            In 2007, he was convicted of fraud charges by a Russian court in absentia and sentenced to six years in prison, and had potentially faced prosecution in at least 10 other cases.

            The sharpest blow to his wealth came from the failed lawsuit against Mr. Abramovich.

            On the day last August when the court ruled against him, Mr. Berezovsky attempted an air of nonchalance. “Life is life,” he said, flanked by bodyguards, before driving off in a Mercedes.

            Andrew E. Kramer contributed reporting from Moscow, Alan Cowell from Venice, and Ravi Somaiya from New York.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

              Originally posted by don
              He was also a chunky guy that was 67 and was a smoker.

              ?
              Men, especially Russian men who are overweight and are heavy smokers have a much shorter expected lifespan.

              A heart attack wouldn't surprise me in the least - and one not polonium related.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

                Originally posted by c1ue View Post
                Men, especially Russian men who are overweight and are heavy smokers have a much shorter expected lifespan.

                A heart attack wouldn't surprise me in the least - and one not polonium related.
                A friend made the (idiotic) choice to search online for Russian and Ukrainian potential wives. Many were in their late 20s/early 30s, with one child, and an ex-husband who was either a drunk or had drank himself to death. (In addition to this oft-repeated story, most had advanced degress, ran restaurants, etc. all of which seemed to vanish when they landed in the USA. )

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

                  Originally posted by don View Post
                  A friend made the (idiotic) choice to search online for Russian and Ukrainian potential wives. Many were in their late 20s/early 30s, with one child, and an ex-husband who was either a drunk or had drank himself to death. (In addition to this oft-repeated story, most had advanced degress, ran restaurants, etc. all of which seemed to vanish when they landed in the USA. )
                  Many of them do have advanced degrees because education is free. But then we know wealth is more to do with division of labor not education for one and all. I also assure you the stories are exaggerated especially considering the domestic success rate of 50% or worse. A good rule of thumb though is to meet them, that is to say meet any girl before marriage, and do try to keep it under a 30 year age gap. In that case I suggest a rental. There is a never a free lunch, even though fat Americans appear to belie it , but you can get more for you money if beauty is what you like out side the expanding fast food zones. The usual nightmare story is a 60 year old and the 22 year old Philippine. But uh, was that what men are looking for in a woman these days? Just advanced degrees?

                  Russia needs to do something about that drinking....

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

                    Originally posted by gwynedd1 View Post
                    Russia needs to do something about that drinking....
                    I'll drink to that!

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

                      Originally posted by don View Post
                      He was also a chunky guy that was 67 and was a smoker.

                      ?
                      You can take the Russian out of the country, but you can't take...

                      Looks to me he beat the statistics by a little bit.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

                        Originally posted by c1ue View Post
                        Men, especially Russian men who are overweight and are heavy smokers have a much shorter expected lifespan.

                        A heart attack wouldn't surprise me in the least - and one not polonium related.

                        Not as exciting as polonium, but more interesting than a heart attack...

                        Mon Mar 25, 2013 7:26pm EDT


                        LONDON, March 25 (Reuters) - Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky, whose body was found in the locked bathroom of his luxury mansion near London over the weekend, died by hanging, British police said on Monday.

                        Police, who had earlier removed his body from his home to conduct an autopsy, said there were no signs of a violent struggle, adding that further tests would be carried out, including toxicology and histology examinations...

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

                          Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
                          You can take the Russian out of the country, but you can't take...

                          Looks to me he beat the statistics by a little bit.

                          I recall seeing that before....the collapse in life expectancy for men in the former SU was shocking......on another forum I asked what we might see in the US and elsewhere in the decade ahead.

                          But even though the SU had OK life expectancy....as I understand it Russian alcohol and tobacco consumption was/is exceptionally high.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

                            Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
                            Not as exciting as polonium, but more interesting than a heart attack...

                            Mon Mar 25, 2013 7:26pm EDT


                            LONDON, March 25 (Reuters) - Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky, whose body was found in the locked bathroom of his luxury mansion near London over the weekend, died by hanging, British police said on Monday.

                            Police, who had earlier removed his body from his home to conduct an autopsy, said there were no signs of a violent struggle, adding that further tests would be carried out, including toxicology and histology examinations...

                            you had to bring sex into it, didn't you

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Boris Berezovsky, Russian Oligarch, dead

                              worth a look...

                              http://nplusonemag.com/boris-berezovsky-1946-2013

                              Comment

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