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Shortly after the Swiss Supreme Court ordered the confiscation of funds tied to the notorious Magnitsky tax fraud, the money quietly vanished. In April, Europe’s top human rights watchdog sounded the alarm, revealing that millions of dollars had been drained from Swiss accounts and redirected into financial institutions in Armenia and Israel.
But despite the explicit warning from the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), authorities in Yerevan took no visible action.
Now, new transaction records have revealed exactly where a portion of that money landed in the Armenian financial system—and the apparent regulatory paralysis that allowed it to sit there untouched. The inaction has forced Hermitage Capital Management, the primary victim of the underlying $230 million fraud, to intervene directly and demand that Armenian prosecutors finally step in.
The story of Hermitage Capital Management sits at the center of one of the most consequential human rights and corruption scandals in modern Russian history. It is a saga defined by a brazen, state-backed $230 million tax fraud, the death of the whistleblower who exposed it, and a relentless global crusade to track down the stolen wealth and punish those responsible.
The origins of the scandal date to 2007, when corrupt Russian officials raided the Moscow offices of Hermitage, an investment fund managed by the American-born British financier Bill Browder. During the raid, officers seized corporate documents, using them to illegally hijack the fund's holding companies. The perpetrators then fabricated massive financial losses under these stolen corporate identities, allowing them to extract a fraudulent $230 million tax rebate from the Russian treasury.
To unravel the theft of his companies, Browder hired Sergei Magnitsky, a Russian tax lawyer. Magnitsky successfully exposed the labyrinthine scheme and courageously testified against the corrupt officials who orchestrated it.
Retaliation was swift. The very officials Magnitsky implicated orchestrated his arrest on fabricated charges. In 2009, after enduring nearly a year of severe abuse and deliberate medical neglect in a Moscow detention center, he died in his cell.
In the wake of Magnitsky’s death, investigators began tracing the stolen $230 million across the globe and eventually discovered that the Russian businessman Denis Katsyv had used a portion of the laundered money to buy luxury real estate in Manhattan through his company, Prevezon Holdings.
The revelation prompted a high-profile money laundering lawsuit by the United States government, which Prevezon settled for nearly $6 million in 2017.
Ultimately, the exposure of this vast financial web and the tragedy of Magnitsky’s death catalyzed a profound shift in international law. It spurred the creation of the Magnitsky Act, a landmark legal framework now deployed by Western nations to freeze the assets of corrupt officials and human rights abusers worldwide.
According to documents cited by the Armenian investigative outlet Hetq, a partner of OCCRP, 523,569 Swiss francs (about $592,000) were transferred on Feb. 12 from the Katsyv’s UBS account to Landmark Capital, an Armenian investment firm. The funds were processed through Switzerland’s Incore Bank AG before being directed to the Yerevan-based Evocabank.
The PACE report sounded the alarm just weeks later, expressing "serious concern" that Swiss authorities had permitted Katsyv to withdraw approximately 6.5 million Swiss francs ahead of a pending confiscation order, noting explicitly that the capital was dispersed to Armenia and Israel.
Instead of launching a probe into the flagged funds, Armenian financial institutions and regulators have retreated behind confidentiality laws, effectively shielding the transaction from public accountability.
Evocabank declined to answer specific questions from Hetq regarding the transfer, citing banking secrecy, though it maintained that it strictly adheres to Armenia’s anti-money laundering laws. Landmark Capital similarly refused to confirm whether Katsyv was a client, pointing to securities-market confidentiality rules.
More striking is the apparent lack of internal communication among Armenia's state authorities. The country's Central Bank stated that its Financial Monitoring Center is prohibited from disclosing information about specific transfers. As a result, the Prosecutor General’s Office confirmed to Hetq that it had received no information from the Central Bank regarding transfers involving Katsyv or his affiliated companies in 2025 or 2026.
Prosecutors also noted they had received no requests for legal assistance from Swiss authorities, effectively leaving the money in a regulatory blind spot.
Frustrated by the inertia, Hermitage Capital has moved to force Yerevan's hand.
According to Hetq, Hermitage recently dispatched formal complaints to Armenia’s Prosecutor General, Anna Vardapetyan, and the head of the Central Bank’s Financial Monitoring Center, Astghik Karamanukyan. The letters demand that authorities freeze or preserve the funds, investigate alleged money laundering, and review the role of Armenian financial institutions under anti-money laundering regulations