NY Times, Feb. 2 2015
To Russia, With Capitalist Ambitions
Bill Browder’s ‘Red Notice,’ About His Russian Misadventures
by William Grimes

RED NOTICE
A True Story of High Finance, Murder, and One Man’s Fight for Justice
By Bill Browder
Illustrated. 396 pages. Simon & Schuster. $28.

In the early 1990s Bill Browder invested $2,000 in a handful of Polish 
companies being privatized after the collapse of Communism. Eastern 
Europe was dipping a toe into the cold bath of free-market capitalism, 
and Mr. Browder, fresh out of Stanford University’s business school, 
wanted to jump in, too.

His small investment quadrupled in value within the year and went on to 
repay him tenfold. “For those who don’t know, the sensation of finding a 
‘ten-bagger’ is the financial equivalent of smoking crack cocaine,” he 
writes in “Red Notice: A True Story of High Finance, Murder, and One 
Man’s Fight for Justice.” “Once you’ve done it, you want to repeat it 
over and over and over as many times as you can.”

Mr. Browder continued to smoke the crack pipe with gusto, shifting his 
action to Russia and creating a wildly successful investment fund, 
Hermitage Capital Management. His freewheeling, snappy book describes 
the meteoric rise, and disastrous fall, of a buccaneer capitalist who 
crossed the wrong people and paid a steep price.

The highs were very high. Mr. Browder excelled at sniffing out 
undervalued companies, rolling the dice and reaping fantastic returns. 
After determining that a little-known oil company called Sidanco was 
actually worth as much as Lukoil, for example, he bought about $11 
million worth of its stock at $4 a share. The gamble was vindicated a 
year later when British Petroleum bought a block of the company’s stock 
at a 600 percent premium over that price.

Within two years after Hermitage’s founding in 1996, its assets had 
swelled from $25 million to more than $1 billion, making Mr. Browder the 
largest foreign investor in the Russian stock market. In 2000, Hermitage 
was named the best-performing emerging-markets fund in the world, having 
generated returns of 1,500 percent to its original investors. Its assets 
would grow to $4.5 billion by 2005.

The lows, however, were very low. A hefty portion of the book describes 
Mr. Browder’s frantic efforts to fight off a wolf pack of oligarchs 
trying to muscle in on Hermitage’s action and strip its assets.

The cut and thrust, and the high stakes, make for a zesty tale. Mr. 
Browder and his Russian team became adept at amassing scandalous 
information about their foes and then presenting the findings, tied up 
in a neat package, to Western journalists who could inflict maximum damage.

Mr. Browder admits to a fatal miscalculation. He assumed that his 
American citizenship made him untouchable. In fact, he was living on 
borrowed time. When Vladimir V. Putin was intent on reining in the 
oligarchs, his interests and Mr. Browder’s coincided. But at a certain 
point, they did not.

In 2005, deemed a “threat to national security,” Mr. Browder was kicked 
out of Russia, and his companies were seized. Later the Russian 
government asked Interpol to issue an all-points bulletin, or red 
notice, for his arrest on tax evasion charges. Interpol rejected the 
request, calling it politically motivated. Mr. Browder was then 
convicted by a Russian court in absentia. “When the Russian government 
turns on you, it doesn’t do so mildly — it does so with extreme 
prejudice,” Mr. Browder notes ruefully.

Worse, the Interior Ministry arrested Sergei L. Magnitsky, Hermitage’s 
tax lawyer. After being held in custody for more than a year, Magnitsky 
was found dead on a prison floor in Moscow after being beaten and tortured.

Mr. Browder began a relentless campaign to expose and punish Mr. 
Magnitsky’s persecutors, turning his case into an international cause 
célèbre. His efforts helped pressure Congress to pass a law in late 
2012, commonly known as the Magnitsky Act, that barred 18 Russian 
officials connected with Magnitsky’s death from entering the United 
States or using its banking system, and set a precedent for future visa 
sanctions and asset freezes. Last spring the European Parliament passed 
its own version of the act.

It’s a Hollywood ending, right down to the standing ovation given by 
more than 700 European members of Parliament after passing the legislation.

Mr. Browder makes an unlikely hero and even more unlikely capitalist. 
His grandfather was the head of the American Communist Party and 
featured on the cover of Time magazine in 1938 as “Comrade Earl 
Browder.” Felix Browder, Earl’s son, became a mathematics professor at 
the University of Chicago. Bill Browder’s brother, Thomas, is an eminent 
particle physicist. “In my family, if you weren’t a prodigy, you had no 
place on earth,” he writes.

Mr. Browder, by contrast, was a slacker. He goofed off at boarding 
school and barely made it into the University of Colorado, Boulder, 
where he spent his freshman year reliving “Animal House.”

In the ultimate act of rebellion, he set his sights on a business 
career, a decision that straightened him out academically and no doubt 
would come as a shock to his grandfather. Adding insult to injury, Mr. 
Browder turned his gaze eastward, toward the former Communist heartland, 
with plunder on his mind.

“The dominoes were falling: soon all of Eastern Europe would be free,” 
he writes of the tumultuous weeks after the Berlin Wall came down. “My 
grandfather had been the biggest Communist in America, and as I watched 
these events unfold, I decided that I wanted to become the biggest 
capitalist in Eastern Europe.”

For a while, he was. But as Mr. Magnitsky warned him, Russian stories 
never have happy endings.

Mr. Browder concludes on a grim note. “I have to assume that there is a 
very real chance that Putin or members of his regime will have me killed 
someday,” he writes. For good measure, he adds, “If I’m killed, you will 
know who did it.”

If this sounds histrionic, there is more than one dead body littering 
Mr. Browder’s pages. Alexander Litvinenko probably felt safe in London 
until he drank a cup of radioactive tea. As Mr. Browder discovered on 
more than one occasion, Russians are not always known for their light touch.

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