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Russian Court Delays Verdicts In Case Against U.S. Investor Calvey And Associates


Michael Calvey arrives to attend a court hearing in Moscow earlier this year.
Michael Calvey arrives to attend a court hearing in Moscow earlier this year.

A court in Moscow has announced a three-day postponement of the verdicts and possible sentencing of U.S. investor Michael Calvey and his associates in a high-profile embezzlement case.

Judge Anna Sokova of the Meshchansky district court last month said that the court's decisions -- on a case that threatens to deal another blow to Russia's investment reputation -- would be given on August 2.

But the court instead offered a new date of August 5, without giving any reason for the change.

In his final testimony in a trial that is being watched closely by the international business community, Calvey said on July 19 that he and his co-defendants had acted "solely within the law."

He said he believes the case is aimed at pressuring him and his associates from the Baring Vostok private equity group as part of a business dispute over control of Russia's Vostochny Bank.

The case has rattled the investment community in Russia and internationally and prompted several prominent officials and businessmen to voice concerns about the treatment of the executives.

Calvey is a founder of Baring Vostok, and has been charged along with his associate Philippe Delpal, who is a French national, and five others -- Russian citizens Vagan Abgaryan, Ivan Zyuzin, Maksim Vladimirov, Aleksei Kordichev, and Aleksandr Tsakunov.

The case went to trial on February 2, almost two years after their arrests.

The charges stem from a long-running dispute between Baring Vostok and Vostochny Bank shareholders.

Baring Vostok owned a 52.5 percent in the bank, and prosecutors accuse the defendants of embezzling 2.5 billion rubles ($37.5 million) by persuading Vostochny Bank shareholders to approve a share deal at an unrealistically low price.

The prosecution has asked the court to find Calvey guilty and give him a six-year suspended prison term, adding that Delpal should receive a five-year suspended prison sentence. The others, the prosecution said, should be given suspended prison terms of between four and five years.

Baring Vostok is one of the largest and oldest private-equity firms operating in Russia. It was founded in the early 1990s and manages more than $3.7 billion in assets. It was an early major investor in Yandex, Russia's dominant search engine.

Calvey is one of several Americans currently being held in Russia on charges they and their supporters say are groundless.

Paul Whelan, a former U.S. Marine, was sentenced in June 2020 to 16 years on espionage charges that he has vehemently rejected.

Another former U.S. Marine, Trevor Reed, was sentenced to nine years in prison in July 2020 after a Moscow court found him guilty of assaulting two police officers.

With reporting by Interfax and TASS
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