Royal Bank of Scotland VP arrested in Moscow on $10mn fraud charge
Edited time: April 12, 2013 18:26
AFP Photo / Warren Allott
RBS Vice President Vsevolod Glukhovtsev has been charged with fraud
in a Moscow court after being arrested at his home the day before. The
banker allegedly hoodwinked investors to finance fake construction
projects in Montenegro. "Glukhovtsev has been charged with fraud," The Russian
Interior Ministry’s Department for the Central Federal District
told Interfax. The investigators claim as soon as money was transferred to
accounts of Montenegrin companies controlled by Glukhovtsev he then
took the money, and provided clients with fake reports saying they
owned business or property abroad. Investors did not receive
promised dividends and the assets they supposedly owned did not
exist or were registered for a third party, according to the
Interior Ministry. Glukhovtsev allegedly provided his investors with fake business
reports which led them to believe they owned business or property
abroad. Investigators say they have evidence Glukhovtsev spent the
investment dollars on real estate, luxury sports cars, art and
jewelry. "According to the preliminary information alone,
investigators suspect V. Glukhovtsev has received over 300 million
roubles from private citizens and companies to purchase property
and invest in construction in Montenegro," Interfax
reported. Interfax first reported RBS, one of the world’s top five banks,
as Glukhovtsev’s employer, and said the fraud charges are “in no
way” connected to the bank’s operations. Currently five people in Moscow have been identified as victims
of the fraud scheme, and likely more will surface as the
investigation unfolds. Russian news source tvc.ru has identified one of the victims as
Sergey Kardashev, the president of ABN AMRO Bank. Kardashev lost
earnings on his intellectual property, an Interior Ministry
employee said. “I spoke to him, reassigned patents to the project. I
received and initial payment, and then, somewhere around two years
ago, these royalties stopped coming. When I found out about it, it
turned out that he was going to renew the patents in his name. The
process was already under way and due to law enforcement, it was
suspended, and to date I have not lost the patents at all,”
Kardashev told tvc.ru. Glukhovtsev’s activities may not be limited to Russia and
Montenegro. Police have reported he also has a Ukrainian passport
in his name. “It’s possible he committed illegal acts in this
country,” said a Ukrainian police source. Glukhovtsev is a jack of many trades- banker, investor, hotel
magnate with property on the Adriatic coast, a casino owner, and
even a writer.
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