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Rise and fall of Mikhail Khodorkovsky (Factbox)

© RIA Novosti . Ilya Pitalev / Go to the mediabankMikhail Khodorkovsky
Mikhail Khodorkovsky - Sputnik International
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Former oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky and his business partner Platon Lebedev were declared guilty by a judge at the culmination of their second new trial in a Moscow district court on Monday.

Former oil tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky and his business partner Platon Lebedev were declared guilty by a judge at the culmination of their second new trial in a Moscow district court on Monday.

Khodorkovsky and Lebedev, who have already spent seven years behind bars for tax evasion, are facing new charges of embezzling 218 tons of oil from Khodorkovsky's former oil firm Yukos and laundering over 3 billion rubles ($97.5 million) in revenues.

Khodorkovsky's background

Mikhail Khodorkovsky was born June 26, 1963, in Moscow, studied at the Mendeleev Moscow Institute of Chemical Technology, where he started building a career as a communist functionary, becoming deputy head of the Komsomol (the Communist Youth League) organization at his university.

Later, using his Komsomol connections, Khodorkovsky opened his first business in 1986, a private cafe, and then in 1987, the Center for Scientific and Technical Creativity of the Youth. The center imported and resold computers, as well as a range of other products.

By 1988, he had built an import-export business with a turnover of $10 million a year.

In 1989, Khodorkovsky and his business partners established the Menatep Bank.

In December 1995, as a result of the so-called shares-for-loans auctions, Khodorkovsky's Menatep Group took control of the Yukos oil company.

In April 2003, Khodorkovsky announced Yukos's merger with Sibneft, creating an empire that at its height produced more oil than OPEC member Qatar.

Prosecution

Khodorkovsky was arrested in October 2003 on fraud and tax evasion charges in what Kremlin critics say marked a turning point in Vladimir Putin's presidency by giving hardliners the upper hand.

In 2005, Khodorkovsky was sentenced to nine years in a medium security prison, which was later reduced to eight years.

In February 2007, new charges of embezzlement and money laundering were brought against both Khodorkovsky and Lebedev just months before they were to become eligible for parole.

Khodorkovsky ridiculed the charges of stealing 350 million metric tons of oil worth $30 billion from a company that he controlled.

The charges were also questioned by Trade Minister Viktor Khristenko, former trade minister and current Head of Sberbank German Gref, and former Central Bank Chief Viktor Gerashchenko.

In May 2010, former primer minister and current opposition leader Kasyanov said the new charges against Khodorkovsky were ludicrous and politically motivated.

He said that Putin, while president, had been angered by Khodorkovsky's financial support for the Communist Party, liberal Yabloko and the Union of Right Forces.

Russian officials have consistently denied any political motivation behind their convictions.

New verdict

The Khamovniki District Court said on Monday Khodorkovsky and Lebedev had headed an organized group committing financial crimes in Russia's oil business via their oil company Yukos.

The court also ruled that Yukos had signed fake agreements with its subsidiaries Yuganskneftegaz, Samaraneftegaz and Tomskneft on the purchase of oil and buying oil products from them at prices that were half or a quarter of the average.

The court said it dropped some of the charges against the former Yukos head and his business partner because the statute of limitations had expired, but did not provide details.

Khodorkovsky and Lebedev's defense earlier said prosecutors could press a third set of charges against the ex-Yukos executives in the near future.

When asked about the Khodorkovsky case during his question-and-answer session on December 16, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said: "I think that a thief belongs in jail."

MOSCOW, December 27 (RIA Novosti)

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