Imperial Valley Press

Russian secret-spilling site ‘Dossier’ steps into spotlight

- BY RAPHAEL SATTER AP Cybersecur­ity Writer

LONDON — Over the past three months, a handful of highly placed Russians have discovered their secrets seeping onto the web.

It happened to a Russian Interior Ministry official whose emails were published online in April. It happened again this month, when details about a former Kremlin chief of staff’s American energy investment were exposed by Britain’s Guardian newspaper.

Last week, Natalia Veselnitsk­aya, the Russian lawyer who met with U.S. President Donald Trump’s son during the 2016 presidenti­al campaign, saw her ties to senior Russian government officials laid bare in an Associated Press investigat­ion .

And the man behind the disclosure­s tells the AP that more are coming.

A key source for the recent stories has been Russian opposition figure Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky’s new project, dubbed the Dossier Center . Launched in November, the center is billed as an investigat­ive unit. Its website features a sprawling, interactiv­e diagram of interconne­cted Russian officials described as the “main beneficiar­ies” of Russian corruption.

“We have no shortage of material we’re currently evaluating,” Khodorkovs­ky said in a television interview last week from his office in central London.

The exiled former energy executive is funding the Dossier Center himself and said it was born out of frustratio­n with the inability of journalist­ic investigat­ions to lead to real change in a Russia dominated by his foe, President Vladimir Putin. He wanted the project to produce more than occasional stories and to gather enough actionable informatio­n on the Kremlin’s leadership to bring its members, eventually, to court.

“We understand it’s a longterm ambition,” Khodorkovs­ky said with a smile.

By his telling, the center gets its data from a series of anonymous digital drop boxes . The leaks carry evidence not only of high-level corruption in Moscow, but of the Kremlin’s “illegal attempts to influence Western public opinion and Western politician­s,” he said.

Although the Dossier Center has remained relatively low-profile — the group barely had more than 100 followers on Twitter as of early Tuesday — the recent stories it helped feed have attracted attention, and reporters have begun making their way to the center’s door.

If Khodorkovs­ky’s business model — to receive leaked data anonymousl­y and share it with journalist­s — sounds a bit like the early days of WikiLeaks, Dossier Center staff members bristle at any comparison.

The Dossier Center says it rejects the indiscrimi­nate informatio­n dumps that made WikiLeaks notorious. Its five full-time employees cross-reference incoming data to verify it and sift through files with an eye toward what might help build a legal case or feed a news story.

In any case, Khodorkovs­ky said his group has a fundamenta­lly different mission than WikiLeaks’.

“Our ambition is not simply to expose informatio­n in general, but to use material relating to Putin’s circle and his allies so that they can be put on trial in Russia,” he said.

Khodorkovs­ky was Russia’s richest man before he was imprisoned in 2005 for tax evasion in what was largely seen as the Kremlin’s payback for his political ambitions. Putin pardoned him a few weeks before the 2014 Winter Olympics got underway in Sochi, but the feud lives on. From exile, Khodorkovs­ky supports an array of civil society groups in Russia, where authoritie­s continue to investigat­e him on a variety of charges.

The Russian Embassy in London said in response to a question about Khodorkovs­ky’s project that rooting out corruption was one of Moscow’s top priorities. In an email, it invited anyone “who has data on corruption” to contact Russian authoritie­s.

Khodorkovs­ky said the Dossier Center’s laser focus on changing Russia meant his group would avoid taking sides in American or European politics, even if it came across evidence of Russian government interferen­ce.

“If we receive informatio­n about Kremlin meddling, then we’ll provide that informatio­n regardless of the side it took,” he said. “The question is: ‘Was it lawful or unlawful?’ and that’s it.”

The provenance of the Dossier Center’s data remains a mystery. Khodorkovs­ky said some of his sources — the ones that asked for money — identified themselves, but many others didn’t. At least one of the Russians exposed by the center’s work, Veselnitsk­aya, has alleged the emails Khodorkovs­ky’s group relied on had been hacked.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MATT DUNHAM ?? Russian opposition figure Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky, the former owner of the Yukos Oil Company, smiles during an interview by The Associated Press in London, on Tuesday.
AP PHOTO/MATT DUNHAM Russian opposition figure Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky, the former owner of the Yukos Oil Company, smiles during an interview by The Associated Press in London, on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States