FBI agents and Homeland Security Investigations personnel searched properties linked to Viktor Vekselberg, a close ally of Russian President Vladimir Putin. There was no immediate response to a request for comment sent to lawyers who have represented Vekselberg.
Somebody
familiar with the matter confirmed that Vekselberg was the target of the
searches. The person was not authorized to speak publicly and did so on
condition of anonymity.
Last week
on Thursday U.S S. federal agents simultaneously searched properties in
Manhattan, the posh beach community of Southampton, New York, and on an
exclusive Miami island that have been linked to a billionaire Russian oligarch
whose $120 million yacht was seized in April.
The FBI
confirmed it was at a Park Avenue high-rise and a Southampton estate on
Thursday, although it would not provide more information. Dozens of federal
agents could be seen carrying boxes out of the Park Avenue property.
A similar
search occurred in Fisher Island, a stone's thrown from Miami Beach, where
dozens of agents from the FBI and other federal agencies could be seen on
properties linked to Vekselberg and his associates.
A federal
task force has been looking into Russian oligarchs and the money trail that
helps fuel Putin's invasion of Ukraine, and the task force is working to
enforce U.S. financial restrictions imposed on Russia and its billionaires. A
spokesperson for the task force declined to comment.
Vekselberg,
a Ukrainian-born businessman, built a fortune by investing in the aluminum and
oil industries in the post-Soviet era. According to U.S. Treasury Department
documents, Vekselberg heads the Moscow-based Renova Group, a conglomerate
encompassing metals, mining, tech and other assets.
He was one
of the first Putin allies sanctioned in April 2018 by the U.S. Treasury
Department in response to Russia's 2014 annexation of Ukraine's Crimean
Peninsula. Vekselberg's assets in the U.S. are frozen, and American companies
are barred from doing business with him and his entities.
In April,
the U.S. government seized a 254-foot yacht owned by Vekselberg at a port in
Spain. At the time, the U.S. Justice Department asserted that the yacht could
be forfeited for violations of U.S. bank fraud, money laundering and sanctions
laws.
All the
properties searched Thursday are owned by Vekselberg's childhood friend
Vladimir Voronchenko or companies tied to Voronchenko's family and associates.
Voronchenko was the founding director of a St. Petersburg museum built to house
the oligarch’s Faberge egg collection.
Among the
properties were four luxury condominiums on Fisher Island. Three were purchased
for a combined $42 million but are worth considerably more today, property
records show. Two are owned by The Medallion Inc., a Panama-registered company
that lists Voronchenko's wife, Olesya Kharlamova, as a director.
Kharlamova,
who like her husband was born and raised in Ukraine, is also an officer of a
condominium association for two luxury high rises on Fisher Island, which is so
favored by jet-setting Russians that they've been dubbed the “Red Zone” by
other residents. Amenities include infinity-edge pools, a state-of-the-art
theater and a fur coat storage facility to protect garments from Miami’s
humidity.
In New
York, Medallion Inc. in 2008 paid nearly $11 million for a penthouse unit at
515 Park Avenue in Manhattan and $11.4 million for the Southampton home. Both
were searched Thursday.
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