Mark Hollingsworth

Londongrad: From Russia with Cash; The Inside Story of the Oligarchs


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       MARK HOLLINGSWORTH AND STEWART LANSLEY

      LONDON GRAD

      FROM RUSSIA WITH CASH

       THE INSIDE STORY OF THE OLIGARCHS

      ‘There are no barriers to a rich man

      - Russian proverb

      Table of Contents

       Cover Page

       Title Page

       Epigraph

       CHAPTER 5 The Russians Have Landed

       CHAPTER 6 Boys with Toys

       CHAPTER 7 The Big Game Hunters

       CHAPTER 8 The Curse of Yukos

       CHAPTER 9 Plotting Revolution

       CHAPTER 10 Murder Inc.

       CHAPTER 11 Showdown

       CHAPTER 12 Paint the Town Red

       BIBLIOGRAPHY

       NOTES

       INDEX

       ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

       Photo Insert

       Also by Mark Hollingsworth and Stewart Lansley

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

      Roman Abramovich and Daria Zhukova © Big Pictures

      Chelsea win the Premier League © Reuters

      Mikhail Khodorkovsky © Camera Press

      Vladimir Putin and Oleg Deripaska © PA

      Boris Yeltsin and Boris Berezovsky © PA

      Boris Berezovsky in Surrey © Camera Press

      Alexander Lebedev, Mikhail Gorbachev and Bono © Getty Images

      Evgeny Lebedev, Mikhail Gorbachev and Geordie Greig © Getty Images

      Naomi Campbell and Vladimir Doronin © Big Pictures

      Pelorus in St Petersburg © PA

      Helicopter in Sardinia © Big Pictures

      Roman Abramovich’s Boeing 767 © Rex Features

      Natalia Vodianova and Justin Portman © PA

      Damien Hirst and Daria Zhukova © Getty Images

      Christian Candy and Nick Candy © Getty Images

      Prince Michael of Kent © Camera Press

      Lord Bell © Camera Press

      Nat Rothschild © Getty Images

      George Osborne © PA

      Queen K © Getty Images

      Lord Mandelson © Camera Press

      Stephen Curtis © PA

      Pennsylvania Castle © Rex Features

      Helicopter crash site © Rex Features

      Alexander Litvinenko’s FSB credentials © Litvinenko/PA

      Alexander Litvinenko © PA

      Alexander Litvinenko in hospital © Getty Images

      Anna Politkovskaya © PA

      Paul Klebnikov © PA

      Andrei Lugovoi © Corbis

      Badri Patarkatsishvili and Boris Berezovsky © PA

      Fyning Hill estate © Getty Images

      Oleg Deripaska’s London home © Rex Features

      Russian women in London © Aleksei Kudikov/Eventica

      Russian gathering in Trafalgar Square © Aleksei Kudikov/Eventica

      Ksenia Sobchak © Landov

      Polina Deripaska, Tatyana Dyachenko, Valentin Yumashev © Landov

      Dmitri Medvedev © Nikas Safronov

      Vladimir Putin © Nikas Safronov

      Chocolate heads © Getty

       CHAPTER 1 The Man Who Knew Too Much

      ‘I have dug myself into a hole and I am in too deep. I am not sure that I can dig myself out’

      - STEPHEN CURTIS, January 2004

      6.56 P.M., WEDNESDAY, 3 MARCH 2004. A brand-new white six-seater £.5-million Agusta A109E helicopter lands under an overcast sky at Battersea heliport in south-west London. Waiting impatiently on the tarmac and clutching his two unregistered mobile phones is a broad-shouldered 45-year-old British lawyer named Stephen Curtis. He is not in the best of moods. Three minutes earlier he had called Nigel Brown, Managing Director of ISC Global Ltd, which provided security for him, regarding disputed invoices sent to a Russian client. ‘This is causing problems!’ he shouted and then paused. ‘Look, I have to go now. The helicopter is here.’

      Curtis climbs aboard the helicopter and manoeuvres his bulky frame into the passenger cabin’s left rear seat. A member of the ground staff