Fallen Tycoon Boris Berezovsky Died From Hanging, Coroner Says
Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky, whose body was found in the locked bathroom of his luxury mansion near London over the weekend, died by hanging, British police said on Monday.
Police, who had earlier removed his body from his home to conduct an autopsy, said there were no signs of a violent struggle, adding that further tests would be carried out, including toxicology and histology examinations.
Once known as the grey cardinal of Kremlin politics, the former billionaire power broker helped Vladimir Putin come to power before fleeing in 2000 for Britain where he became one of the Russian government’s fiercest critics.
The 67-year-old Berezovsky’s body was found in his sprawling property in Ascot, an affluent town a few miles (kms) from Queen Elizabeth’s Windsor Castle, on Saturday.
Some of his associates earlier had hinted Berezovsky might have killed himself because he had been severely depressed after losing a bruising $6 billion court battle last year against another Russian tycoon, Roman Abramovich.
“The results of the post-mortem examination, carried out by a Home Office pathologist, have found the cause of death is consistent with hanging,” police said in a statement. “The pathologist has found nothing to indicate a violent struggle.”
Detectives earlier had searched Berezovsky’s house for traces of radiation and chemicals but found none, and said there was no evidence anyone else was involved in his death.
One of the most powerful of Russia’s so-called oligarchs, Berezovsky also had been known as the “godfather of the Kremlin” and wielded immense influence in politics and business during a turbulent decade that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Always surrounded by controversy and conspiracy theories, he survived several assassination attempts, including a bombing that decapitated his driver.
In exile, he often said he feared for his life, particularly after his friend and former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko died from radioactive polonium poisoning in 2006.
In Russia, Kremlin allies and pro-government media pressed ahead with portrayals of Berezovsky as a beaten man who had begged Putin’s forgiveness in a last-ditch effort to return to his homeland. Berezovsky’s friends in London have denied this.
Nationalist lawmaker Vladimir Zhirinovsky said he had met Berezovsky by chance in the Israeli resort of Eilat in January, and that Berezovsky had said he would do “anything Moscow and the Kremlin told him” in order to return to Russia.
“The only condition (Berezovsky named) was a decree pardoning him” for the crimes he has been convicted of in Russia, Zhirinovsky told the daily Izvestia in an interview published on Monday.
A former mathematician, Berezovsky made millions running post-Soviet car dealerships and expanded his business empire massively throughout the 1990s.
He was one of a handful of well-connected businessmen who became instant billionaires under former president Boris Yeltsin when the state arranged for them to buy giant oil companies for what quickly proved to be a fraction of their value.
As one of the central figures in Yeltsin’s inner circle, he helped forge the career of Yeltsin’s hand-picked successor Putin, a little-known official named prime minister in 1999 and acting president when Yeltsin resigned on millennium eve.
After Putin was confirmed in the presidency in an election in 2000, Berezovsky quickly fell out with him and left for Britain where he denounced his former ally as a corrupt “bandit” surrounded by former KGB agents.
A message from our Publisher & CEO Rachel Fishman Feddersen
I hope you appreciated this article. Before you go, I’d like to ask you to please support the Forward’s award-winning, nonprofit journalism during this critical time.
We’ve set a goal to raise $260,000 by December 31. That’s an ambitious goal, but one that will give us the resources we need to invest in the high quality news, opinion, analysis and cultural coverage that isn’t available anywhere else.
If you feel inspired to make an impact, now is the time to give something back. Join us as a member at your most generous level.
— Rachel Fishman Feddersen, Publisher and CEO