Russian tycoon close to Vladimir Putin arrested in London
A Russian businessman arrested on December 3 in London was identified by Russian state media as Mikhail Fridman, the founder of one of the country’s largest banks and an Israeli citizen.
A statement from the UK’s National Crime Agency — which didn’t name Fridman — said he is suspected of money laundering, conspiracy to defraud the Home Office and conspiracy to commit perjury, per The Times of Israel.
Officers confiscated “a number of digital devices and a significant quantity of cash” from the “multi-million-pound residence” where he was arrested.
Two other people were also arrested in connection to the case. All three have since been freed on bail after being questioned.
Russia’s TASS quoted a source close to Fridman saying he “was detained on suspicion of violating sanctions imposed on him,” without elaborating.
Born into a Jewish family in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv in 1964, Fridman studied in Moscow and went on to build a vast business empire encompassing everything from oil and gas to banking, telecoms and distribution. He is best known as a founder of Alfa Bank, the largest private financial institution in Russia.
Fridman, along with other Kremlin-linked Russian oligarchs, was hit with Western sanctions after Russia invaded Ukraine in February.
Although Fridman has cultivated strong ties to Putin’s administration, he has never become part of the president’s inner circle. A day after the invasion, he spoke out against the bloodshed in Ukraine, calling it a “tragedy” for both sides.