Who is Ihor Kolomoisky?
The city of Cleveland, Ohio, is hardly considered the most
cosmopolitan or globalised city in the U.S. If anything, the Rust Belt city –
whose population is less than half of what it was a century ago – is a symbol
of industrial decline across America’s heartland, for a region whose best days
are clearly behind it.
Which is why, as other major American cities like New York
or Miami opened their doors to all kinds of oligarchic money out of places like
Russia or Ukraine, Cleveland hardly got any attention as a destination for the
kinds of illicit wealth spilling out of the former Soviet Union. Investigators
searched out ill-gotten gains in Manhattan and Malibu. They ignored Cleveland,
assuming globe-trotting oligarchs would never bother with a Midwestern city in
clear decline.
As investigators and authorities now know, one of the most
notorious oligarchs out of the former Soviet space oversaw a trans-national
money laundering scheme of historic proportions – and used places like
Cleveland, in addition to a number of other small towns across the American
Midwest, to hide and launder hundreds of millions of dollars.
With no one paying attention, this oligarch, a Ukrainian
national named Ihor Kolomoisky, steered one of the biggest Ponzi schemes in
world history, and ended up becoming one of the biggest real estate landlords
in mid-west America.
Kolomoisky may not be a household name, even with the recent
uptick in interest in oligarchs and kleptocracy. But just because he’s perhaps
less known than oligarchs like Roman Abramovich doesn’t make Kolomoisky any
less important – or, for those in Ukraine, any less dangerous.
Born in Soviet Ukraine in 1963, Kolomoisky scrambled to make
a living during the Soviet collapse of the early 1990s. Emerging in newly
independent Ukraine, Kolomoisky followed a range of other oligarchs around the
region, pocketing formerly state-owned enterprises like steel plants to gas
wells at fire-sale prices.
Kolomoisky had two advantages over other nascent oligarchs,
though. First, he had a background in metallurgy – in the science of making and
moulding metals and alloys in demand. Secondly, Kolomoisky displayed a
ruthlessness that made even other oligarchs, no strangers to violent crime,
blanch.
Engaging in reiderstvo, or outright raiding, Kolomoisky
seized asset after asset across Ukraine, reportedly paying off local judges and
magistrates in the process.
One instance, as Forbes reported, saw 'hundreds of hired
rowdies armed with baseball bats, iron bars, gas and rubber bullet pistols and
chainsaws forcibly [take] over' a steel plant that Kolomoisky eyed.
Elsewhere, Kolomoisky once lined the lobby of a Russian oil
company he wanted to push out with a series of coffins. For the full
Bond villain effect, he even maintained a shark tank in his
office, which he would fill with bloody chumwhenever he wanted to intimidate a
visitor.
For the public, though, Kolomoisky tried to maintain a
jovial persona. Chubby, often seen chuckling, Kolomoisky earned the nickname
'Benya', after the cuddly, eponymous Soviet-era cartoon lion. He 'tries to
create an image that he’s a kind grandpa, this kind, funny old man,' Daria Kalenyuk,
one of Ukraine’s leading anticorruption advocates, told me.
But in reality, Kolomoisky is tied to alleged contract
killings and armed militias and jaw-dropping bribery. And all of those tools
made Kolomoisky, by the mid-2010s, one of the most powerful figures in Ukraine.
The oligarch even grew his portfolio to oversee one of
Ukraine’s biggest banks, PrivatBank, refashioning himself as a steward of
Ukraine’s finance sector. In the aftermath of Ukraine’s 2014 EuroMaidan
Revolution, when Russian troops first began pushing into Ukraine, the oligarch
then refashioned himself into a supporter of Ukrainian statehood.
Bankrolling a new militia in central Ukraine, the oligarch
said in the third person, 'A large number of people think Kolomoisky’s great –
and the only patriot in the country.'
Others saw something different: an oligarch turned into a
warlord, building his own power base in the middle of the country. 'I think
Kolomoisky is super-dangerous,' one American diplomat later said. 'He was one
of the first oligarchs who began to act like a warlord.'
When a new government rose in Kyiv, and new reformers swept
into power, they had questions about how it was that Kolomoisky could afford
his empire. And when they began looking into PrivatBank’s books, they came away
shocked. Billions were missing. The cupboards were, in essence, bare – no one
knew where the money had gone.
Immediately, the government rushed a $5.5-billion bailout to
PrivatBank, trying to patch this gaping hole in one of the country’s biggest
banks. And then they began looking for the disappeared funds – and discovering
the money buried in places they never expected, like Cleveland.
As both Ukrainian investigators and American authorities
have detailed, Kolomoisky allegedly oversaw a multi-year, multi-national money
laundering scheme meant to loot billions from unsuspecting Ukrainian
depositors. On paper, PrivatBank made it seem that a wide range of loans were
being fully repaid. In reality, though, those loans never came back to the bank
– but instead ended up in entities overseen directly by Kolomoisky. Using shell
companies and offshore accounts, much of that money ended up in the US.
But instead of going to places like San Francisco or Los
Angeles, that money went places few suspected. The funds ended up in office
buildings in Cleveland and Texas. It ended up in steel mills in Kentucky and
West Virginia. It ended up in manufacturing plants in Michigan and Illinois.
Small towns, steel towns, factory towns – the money Kolomoisky allegedly
pilfered ended up drenching blue-collar America.
According to those on the receiving end of the funds,
Kolomoisky’s network pledged the money would be used for new investments, for
the kinds of economic revitalization the region had long needed. Years later,
it was clear that revitalization would never come.
As the Ukrainians and Americans allege, Kolomoisky was never
interested in actual investment or profit, but in just getting his money out of
Ukraine. And because places like the U.S. offer all the financial secrecy tools
these oligarchs need – from anonymous shell companies to anonymous real estate
purchases to the lack of basic anti-money laundering policies across the board
– Kolomoisky found it all too easy to hide his money for years. The U.S. directly
sanctioned Kolomoisky in early 2021, announcing his 'involvement in significant
corruption.'
Volodymyr Zelensky, Ukraine’s now President, would not be
where he is today without Kolomoisky. As an actor and entertainer, Zelensky had
worked for Kolomoisky’s media network — which then gave him form support when
he stood as a candidate. Zelensky was seen as the Kolomoisky candidate: he
appointed one of Kolomoisky’s lawyers as an adviser, and held meetings with the
controversial oligarch even as he campaigned as the ‘anti-oligarch’. In early
2021, Zelensky reportedly breached his own Covid lockdown rules to have a
birthday party in Kolomoisky’s Kyiv apartment.
Today, Zelensky and Kolomoisky appear to have grown apart.
Whereas the oligarch once claimed to be a patriot, in recent years he’s begun
calling for a new partnership between Ukraine and Russia.
When that happens, Kolomoisky said, 'NATO will be soiling
its pants and buying Pampers.'
That’s not a remark that will appeal to the many Ukrainians
now suffering from Russia’s bloody invasion, and whose country’s wealth has
been endlessly plundered by a string of greedy oligarchs.
It’s also little comfort to those in places like Cleveland,
who watched a post-Soviet oligarch sweep in and add their city to his trans-national
money laundering network – and watched his promises of revitalisation collapse,
leaving nothing but empty husks in his wake.
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