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Mikhail Khodorkovsky Verdict A Farce, Judge's Assistant Says

LYNN BERRY   02/14/11 12:10 PM ET   AP

Russia Khodorkovsky

MOSCOW — The judge who convicted oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky did not write the verdict and read it against his will in the Moscow courtroom, the judge's assistant said Monday.

The claim, laid out in detail in a lengthy interview, provides a rare look inside Russia's judicial system, where judges are susceptible to political pressure.

Judge Viktor Danilkin found Khodorkovsky guilty in December of stealing oil from his own oil company and extended his prison term through 2017.

The assistant, Natalya Vasilyeva, who is also the spokesperson for the court, said the verdict was imposed upon Danilkin when it became clear his own ruling would not please top Russian officials behind the politically driven case.

"Danilkin began to write the verdict. I suspect that what was in that verdict did not suit his higher ups, and therefore he received another verdict, which he had to read," Vasilyeva said in an interview broadcast on the cable television channel Dozhd and printed in the online news portal Gazeta.ru.

Danilkin issued a brief statement Monday saying he was "convinced that the assertion by Natalya Vasilyeva was nothing more than slander."

Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has been seen as the driving force behind the unrelenting legal attack on Khodorkovsky, who has been imprisoned since 2003. Shortly before the verdict was announced, Putin called Khodorkovsky a thief and said he should stay in prison.

Vasilyeva's claim appeared to be a public acknowledgment of what many observers of the trial had already assumed.

During the 20-month trial, Danilkin had given the impression that he was seriously considering the merits of the case and often joined the defense lawyers and audience in laughing at the prosecutors' gaffes. He treated Khodorkovsky with respect and allowed current and former government officials to testify in his defense.

But when he began reading the verdict – a summary of the trial that took him four days to get through – it was immediately clear that whatever hopes there had been for leniency were gone. He rarely raised his eyes while speed reading through the hundreds of pages.

Khodorkovsky's mother put it bluntly, saying: "They must have tortured him to get him to say what he did."

The defense lawyers said that much of the verdict was copied from the indictment and the prosecutors' final arguments. "The judge is only the nominal author of that verdict," lead defense lawyer Vadim Klyuvgant said at the time.

The defense appealed the ruling to the Moscow City Court, which oversees district courts in the city, including the one where Danilkin presides.

But it was the Moscow City Court that ultimately wrote the Khodorkovsky verdict after issuing directives throughout the trial, according to Danilkin's assistant. Vasilyeva recalled overhearing some of the judge's telephone conversations and said he was visibly disturbed by some of the instructions he received.

The crisis came when Danilkin was called over to the Moscow City Court on Dec. 25, the Saturday before he was to begin reading the verdict, to meet an "important person" and receive a "clear explanation" of what his ruling should say, Vasilyeva said.

She said the judge returned from that meeting looking ill. "He was tense, really tense," she said.

Once cheerful and approachable, Danilkin has withdrawn and even now appears deeply depressed, his assistant said.

Moscow City Court spokeswoman Anna Usachyova denied that the verdict was written by anyone but Danilkin. "I am confident that Natalya Vasilyeva will take back her words," she said.

She added that the Court will not fire Vasilyeva or punish her for her statement.

Usachyova said that Danilkin "has the right" to sue his assistant if he finds her words libelous.

Vasilyeva, who said in the interview that she expected to be fired, could not be reached. The court said she was on vacation for the next month.

She explained her decision to go public by saying she had once hoped to become a judge, but no longer had any interest in a judicial career after seeing how Russian courts work from the inside. "The fairy tale that judges answer only to the law and to no one else has faded away," she said.

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MOSCOW — The judge who convicted oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky did not write the verdict and read it against his will in the Moscow courtroom, the judge's assistant said Monday. The claim, la...
MOSCOW — The judge who convicted oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky did not write the verdict and read it against his will in the Moscow courtroom, the judge's assistant said Monday. The claim, la...
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This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
01:12 PM on 02/15/2011
I am ashamed for my country.

Your honour, I think we all perfectly understand the significance of our trial extends far beyond the fates of Platon [Lebedev] and myself. And even beyond the fates of all those who have innocently suffered in the course of the reprisals against YUKOS that have taken place on such a huge scale, those I found myself unable to protect, but about whom I have not forgotten. I remember every day.

Let’s ask ourselves, what does the entrepreneur, the top class organizer of production, or simply an educated, creative individual, think today looking at our trial and knowing that the result is absolutely predictable?

The obvious conclusion a thinking person would come to is chilling in its simplicity: the bureaucratic and law enforcement machine can do whatever it wants. There is no right of private property. No person who conflicts with the “system” has any rights whatsoever.

Even when enshrined in law, rights are not protected by the courts. Because the courts are either also afraid, or are part of the “system”. Does it come as a surprise that thinking people do not strive to realize themselves here in Russia?

Mikhail Khodorkovsky
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Rude Monk
No God can stop a hungry man
11:11 AM on 02/15/2011
He was warned not to go in politics.
When someone is mega rich he thinks he can make his own rules and become an aristocrat.
Khodorksvky made one fatal error-he thought he lives in good old USA.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mik McAllister
09:32 PM on 02/15/2011
In what way did he make his own rules? He was the only Russian executive who actively worked to reform accounting practices to conform to Western standards, to bring in Western investors. He did this well, he got investors, and he made the companies profitable and ran them well.

Putin just doesn't like anyone else to look competent. It raises the possibility that other person might do better in *his* position, and challenge Putin.

When Arnold got into politics, everybody made fun of the "action hero" trying to gain political office. Putin is a politician trying to act like the "action hero", and nobody says a peep.
09:26 AM on 02/15/2011
One hopes Putin goes the way of Mubarak...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mik McAllister
09:33 PM on 02/15/2011
Retired, living elsewhere off everyone else's money?
11:58 PM on 02/15/2011
Sadly, more than likely...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dennis Yuen
09:24 AM on 02/15/2011
I'm starting to think that this trial wasn't entirely the showing of the lack of freedom allowed in Russia (although of course it still plays a big part), but a personal vendetta between Putin and Khodorkovsky. Khodorkovsky must have really ticked off Putin, because only the PM, or somebody high on the government ladder and is close to him, can toss Mr. K back into jail without any repercussions. And I'm guessingPresident Medvedev wants nothing to do with the issue, seeing as he has been silent so far.
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CoronaDischarge
Fired Up! Ready to go!
09:11 AM on 02/15/2011
So having ideologues as Judges, funded by powerful interests, looks better than a system where the judges are forced to read verdicts imposed by a despot?
10:24 AM on 02/15/2011
Your statement is sounding a little familiar and a little too close to home. Change the last word to rightwinger and voila !! America.
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me again
I'm not wrong....
08:33 AM on 02/15/2011
Truly sad nearly 30 years later, real freedom did not come to Russia.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mik McAllister
09:34 PM on 02/15/2011
230 years later, freedom has fled America, hoping for political asylum.

Russia seems to have accelerated the process a bit.
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
04:47 AM on 02/15/2011
I'm shocked! Shocked!

Fortunately the usual suspects are safely rounded up in the kremlin.
Bernique
Solar is clean, cheap and plentiful
10:33 PM on 02/14/2011
"Russia's judicial system, where judges are susceptible to political pressure". Not that we are a beacon of democracy ourselves.

Look up the Don Siegelman, Governor of Alabama, case

His offense? Running for another term, that the "powers that be" wouldn't and didn't allow him to have, in our gracious democracy. Under Dubya.
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Yank in France
Thomas Paine, expat in France 1792-1802
04:10 AM on 02/15/2011
Bernique, it is absurd to compare the justice system of the United States with that of Russia under Putin!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mik McAllister
09:35 PM on 02/15/2011
You're right, the US might look bad by comparison.
09:58 PM on 02/14/2011
Now here's a place, Russia, that ripe for some Egypt-style revolt.

The way it is now, the country is run as like it's one big racket which benefits top politicians and their cronies.
04:29 AM on 02/15/2011
true enough and they seemed as pleased as we do.
09:49 PM on 02/14/2011
Russia is a joke. Putin is no better than Mubarak.
Bernique
Solar is clean, cheap and plentiful
10:39 PM on 02/14/2011
We have to watch carefully what happens in Egypt after the "Liberation". It's six months away. Six months is a very long time, especially when Generals are in charge.
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Yank in France
Thomas Paine, expat in France 1792-1802
04:11 AM on 02/15/2011
Mubarak was infinitely better than Putin and, in today's Russia, Stalin is considered the most popular historical figure!
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
RumiSouth
Caerbannog!
09:27 PM on 02/14/2011
"But when he began reading the verdict – a summary of the trial that took him four days to get through – it was immediately clear that whatever hopes there had been for leniency were gone. He rarely raised his eyes while speed reading through the hundreds of pages."

Oh, that is a show trial to make Stalin proud.
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Wozzeck
Pearl Bay, Australia
09:08 PM on 02/14/2011
This story must have been paid for by the oligarch himself. The source of the allegation somehow is a spokesman for the court and yet she is also an AP correspondent who collaborates on the author's articles. Google "Natalya Vasilyeva + Lynn Berry"
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11:17 AM on 02/15/2011
In plain sight....nice work...faved
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Mik McAllister
09:41 PM on 02/15/2011
May not be the same person, actually. The Google results correct the name to Nataliya Vasilyeva, and all the results are the same article from January 24, 2011 about the attack on the Moscow airport.

Which was a month after the verdict was read.
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Wozzeck
Pearl Bay, Australia
12:39 AM on 02/16/2011
Looks like you are correct. I owe Lynn Berry an apology.
08:48 PM on 02/14/2011
Brave woman.
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harmonikasavingsbonds
Standard?Nonsense! I DEMAND an automatic poodle!
08:43 PM on 02/14/2011
That's the kind of government republicans want here in America.
12:29 AM on 02/15/2011
too true