State investigators in Moscow have summoned Anti-Corruption Foundation (FBK) employees for questioning en masse, in connection with a fraud case against jailed opposition politician Alexey Navalny, FBK director Ivan Zhdanov wrote on Telegram.
According to Zhdanov, police served Navalny’s associates with summons in the early hours of May 19. Apparently, the officers “tried to slip the documents under [their] doors.” Those who spoke with the police were informed that approximately 70 FBK employees were being called in for questioning.
Zhdanov also published a photo of one of the documents on Twitter — it orders the recipient to appear before the Investigative Committee on May 19 for questioning as a witness.
Russian investigators launched a criminal case for large-scale fraud against Navalny on December 29, 2020. According to the investigation, Navalny embezzled hundreds of millions of rubles worth of donations from the FBK and other non-profit organizations.
In February, a Moscow court revoked Navalny’s probation in the Yves Rocher case and imprisoned him under a reinstated sentence. He is currently serving 2.5 years in a prison colony in Russia’s Vladimir region.
In mid-April, prosecutors in Moscow filed a lawsuit asking the city to add three organizations affiliated with Navalny to Russia’s list of illegal extremist groups: the FBK, the Citizens’ Rights Protection Foundation, and his network of regional campaign offices. The court hearing on the claim is scheduled for June 9.
Backstory
- The latest case against Mr. Navalny Meduza breaks down the evidence, or lack thereof, presented by federal investigators against Russia’s top oppositionist
- ‘Rebranding will not help’ Navalny and his top aides face new criminal charges as his political movement officially disbands ahead of extremism ruling
- Notes from tomorrow’s underground Navalny’s activists batten down the hatches ahead of new protests and a likely ‘extremism’ designation, moving to remote work and fleeing Russian social networks
- What comes next The Russian authorities want to designate Alexey Navalny’s political and anti-corruption network as ‘extremist.’ This would be the legal fallout.