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Russia's Supreme Court Upholds Charges Against Ex-Lawmaker

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  • Russia's Supreme Court Upholds Charges Against Ex-Lawmaker

    RUSSIA'S SUPREME COURT UPHOLDS CHARGES AGAINST EX-LAWMAKER

    RIA Novosti, Russia
    March 06, 2007

    MOSCOW, March 6 (RIA Novosti) - The Russian Supreme Court has upheld
    embezzlement charges against the former member of the upper house of
    parliament Tuesday.

    Levon Chakhmakhchyan, 54, an ex-senator from the Kalmykia Region in
    southern Russia, is accused of being part of an organized group that
    was involved in extorting funds from companies, including Russia's
    major airline Transaero, and "misappropriating property" worth $1.5
    million, the Prosecutor General's Office earlier said.

    In June, Federal security agents found $300,000 in cash, which had
    earlier been marked with a special ink, in the office of the chief
    accountant of the non-governmental organization, the Association of
    Russian-Armenian Business Cooperation, where Chakhmakhchyan presided.

    Prosecutors said Chakhmakhchyan's "criminal group" also involved
    his son-in-law, Armen Oganesyan, who was an assistant auditor in the
    Russian Audit Chamber, and the chief accountant at the Association
    of the Russian-Armenian Business Cooperation.

    After being allegedly caught up in the bribery scandal Chakhmakhchyan
    was dismissed from his post.

    Moscow's Basmanny Court remanded the ex-senator in custody for
    two-months, adding that he could face up to 10 years in prison if
    found guilty. The judge allowed Chakhmakhchyan to remain in custody
    until February 1 for health reasons.

    In December last year the Supreme Court agreed to launch criminal
    proceedings in absentia against the ex-senator. The former senator's
    defense Boris Kuznetsov appealed the decision, and the court convened
    Tuesday to review the case.

    Recently Russia has been plagued by a series of corruption scandals
    involving senior governmental officials.

    One of the most publicized scandals was the criminal case against
    Vladivostok mayor Vladimir Nikolayev, who has been allegedly involved
    in the illegal sale of land.

    The former mayor of Tomsk in Siberia, Alexander Makarov, was one
    of the latest targets in a series of corruption probes. He suffered
    a heart attack at a meeting with law-enforcement officials, and is
    suspected, together with a relative, of extorting $114,000 from local
    residents by threatening to destroy their real estate and prevent
    them from rebuilding.
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