Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Moscow: Court Sanctions Ex-Senator's Arrest

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Moscow: Court Sanctions Ex-Senator's Arrest

    Moscow Times, Russia
    Feb 2 2007

    Court Sanctions Ex-Senator's Arrest
    By Natalya Krainova
    Staff Writer

    Levon Chakhmakhchyan arriving at Basmanny District Court on Thursday.


    The Basmanny District Court on Thursday issued an arrest warrant for
    former Federation Council member Levon Chakhmakhchyan, who was
    detained Thursday morning on suspicion of accepting a $300,000 bribe
    while in office.

    Chakhmakhchyan was expelled from the upper house and stripped of
    immunity from prosecution last June after security agents claimed to
    have caught him with the bribe during a sting operation.

    The former senator from Kalmykia has consistently maintained his
    innocence.

    Under the ruling, Chakhmakhchyan can be held in police custody for up
    to two months. "Chakhmakhchyan's health and family situation do not
    prohibit his confinement in a pretrial detention facility," the judge
    said, Interfax reported.

    The judge further motivated his decision by saying that if
    Chakhmakhchyan remained at liberty, he "could influence witnesses and
    incline them to testify in his favor."

    The law states that if charges are not filed against Chakhmakhchyan
    within 10 days, he should walk free.

    Police took Chakhmakhchyan into custody at a Moscow hospital where he
    had been undergoing treatment, his lawyer, Boris Kuznetsov, said
    Thursday.

    The judge agreed with prosecutors' contention that Chakhmakhchyan had
    extended his medical treatment in order to avoid facing prosecution,
    Interfax reported.


    The ex-senator called his lawyer at around 8:30 a.m. and passed the
    telephone to Rafail Kmet, a major case investigator from the
    Prosecutor General's Office. Kmet announced that Chakhmakhchyan had
    been detained, Kuznetsov said.

    The lawyer maintained that both the detention of his client and the
    arrest warrant were illegal, and said he would appeal the judge's
    ruling.

    "A person ... against whom a criminal investigation has not been
    opened cannot be detained. It's not that the court should not have
    issued this ruling; it had no right to consider the case," Kuznetsov
    told Interfax.

    Chakhmakhchyan was first detained along with two other suspects at a
    Transaero office in early June 2006, but was released because he then
    enjoyed immunity from prosecution.

    Prosecutors claimed that his two associates -- Igor Arushanov, chief
    accountant of the Association of Russian-Armenian Business
    Partnership, and Armen Oganesyan, an Audit Chamber official --
    received the $300,000 from a businessman in exchange for the promise
    of quashing a negative Audit Chamber report on his company's
    activities.

    Chakhmakhchyan was the president of the association. Oganesyan is his
    son-in-law. Chakhmakhchyan said the incident was a set up.
Working...
X