Ukraine detains man wanted for 2004 murder of Forbes editor | iNFOnews | Thompson-Okanagan's News Source
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Ukraine detains man wanted for 2004 murder of Forbes editor

FILE - In this Thursday, May 13, 2004 file photo, the editor of Forbes Magazine's Russian edition Paul Klebnikov speaks at a news conference to mark the edition of the Forbes magazine issue "The Golden Hundred of the Richest Businessmen of Russia," in Moscow. Ukraine’s intelligence agency says it has detained a man wanted for the high-profile murder of an American journalist in Russia 13 years ago. Paul Klebnikov, the editor of Forbes magazine’s Russian edition, was gunned down outside his Moscow office in 2004. Ukraine’s State Security Service said on Saturday, Nov. 18, 2017 it has detained an unidentified Russian man who was wanted for several slayings, including Klebnikov’s. (AP Photo/Misha Japaridze, file)
Original Publication Date November 18, 2017 - 9:21 AM

MOSCOW - Ukraine's intelligence agency said Saturday it has detained a man wanted for the high-profile murder of an American journalist in Russia 13 years ago.

Paul Klebnikov, the U.S.-born editor of Forbes magazine's Russian edition, was gunned down outside his Moscow office in July 2004.

Many people believed the killing was connected to the 41-year-old Klebnikov's work investigating corruption in Russia and the country's shadowy business world.

Ukraine's State Security Service said in a statement Saturday that it has detained a Russian man who was wanted for several slayings, including Klebnikov's. The Ukrainian agency did not identify the suspect.

Three people were charged with the journalist's murder in 2006 and later acquitted. A higher court ordered a retrial for the main suspect, but he absconded before the proceedings could be held.

Prosecutors have alleged Klebnikov's killing was contracted by a Chechen warlord who was the subject of Klebnikov's 2003 book "Conversations With a Barbarian."

Klebnikov, a New Yorker of Russian descent, investigated corruption and sought to shed light on the closed, sometimes violent world of Russian business. His family said after the 2006 acquittals they were distressed that Klebnikov's killers remained at large.

News from © The Associated Press, 2017
The Associated Press

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