Sergei Magnitsky. Remember that name any time you’re considering doing business in Russia or any other country in which the “rule of law” is a meaningless masquerade for the uncontrolled whims of the powerful.
Magnitsky was a young Russian accountant working for the Hermitage Capital Management firm created by Bill Browder to invest in Russia. When Browder stepped on the toes of some of the Russian business oligarchs, Magnitsky was thrown into prison, beaten, refused essential medical care, and basically murdered.
I learned Magnitsky’s story in a new book by Bill Browder, Red Notice: A True Story of High Finance, Murder, and One Man’s Fight for Justice. Browder created Hermitage Capital shortly after the breakup of the Soviet Union. The book details Hermitage’s dramatic rise and, when Browder publicly fought the attempts by the Russian oligarchs to dilute his minority investments, Hermitage’s eventual fall. Browder and almost everyone else associated with Hermitage managed to flee Russia, some after being detained, but Magnitsky, the firm’s young accountant, refused to leave. When he was imprisoned and questioned, he refused to tell his captors the lies they wanted to hear, and his refusal eventually resulted in his death.
The story is captivating; the book reads like a novel. It’s also enlightening. I didn’t really understand the economic side of Putin’s Russia until I read this book. The word “corruption” only begins to describe what’s going on.
Red Notice has something for everyone. If you’re interested in the investment management business, if you’re interested in the rule of law, if you’re interested in investor rights, if you’re interested in modern Russia, or if you’re just interested in a well-told story, you will enjoy Browder’s book. I highly recommend it.