Russian 'higher ups' orchestrated trial of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, says court assistant
During the trial of former oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the judge's original decision 'didn't suit higher ups, so he received a different verdict which he had to deliver,' a court assistant told Russian media.
(Page 2 of 2)
Khodorkovsky's second trial was orchestrated from above and "higher ups" didn't like Danilkin's original verdict, so it was scrapped and replaced with a new one that he was forced to read aloud in court, Vasilyeva said in an interview published Monday (in Russian) in the independent online newspaper Gazeta.ru.
Skip to next paragraphSubscribe Today to the Monitor
"Danilkin started to write the verdict. But what was in that verdict didn't suit higher ups, so he received a different verdict, which he had to deliver," she said.
She added that new verdict was probably written by judges at the higher Moscow City Court – the very place where Khodorkovsky's upcoming appeal is set to be heard.
“[Danilkin] had to communicate with the Moscow City Court on all disputatious matters that occurred during the trial," she said. "Whenever anything went wrong, or was not as it should be, he had to inform the City Court and got instructions on what to do next. "
Moscow court denies interference
In a reaction Tuesday, Anna Usacheva, a spokesperson for the Moscow City Court, cast doubt on Vasilyeva's competence and suggested she may not be acting on her own.
"This is a provocation. It's clear that Vasilyeva isn't aware of the basics of legal procedure," Ms. Usacheva told local reporters. "This is not merely an attempt to pressure the court, it's a well-prepared PR action."
But Vasilyeva said that Danilkin hated being under pressure but felt he had no choice but to bow to it. "He was nervous, worried, and he was indignant about it," she said in the Russian interview. "What he did was the result of coercion upon him."
Russian leaders 'will just ignore it'
Many supporters of Khodorkovsky are applauding Vasilyeva as a brave whistleblower, but some worry that she may not be able to withstand the inevitable pressure to recant.
"She was very brave, but this won't give her anything but trouble," says Lyudmilla Alexeyeva, a veteran Russian human rights campaigner. "We can only hope that she will remain a decent person."
Vera Chelishcheva, who reported on the Khodorkovsky trial for the opposition weekly Novaya Gazeta, says that in the absence of mainstream media coverage or any legal mechanisms for pursuing Vasilyeva's allegations, they are likely to be smothered in official silence.
"Without political will to follow up and verify what she's saying, nothing will come of this," she says. "If there were political will [at the top], that would be something completely new. Otherwise, they will just ignore it, and that will be that."
RELATED: The 5 richest men in Russia



Previous

These comments are not screened before publication. Constructive debate about the above story is welcome, but personal attacks are not. Please do not post comments that are commercial in nature or that violate any copyright[s]. Comments that we regard as obscene, defamatory, or intended to incite violence will be removed. If you find a comment offensive, you may flag it.