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Prominent Russian journalist charged with drug dealing; colleagues claim persecution

Police officers detain a man protesting the arrest of journalist Ivan Golunov outside the headquarters of the Moscow branch of the Russian Interior Ministry in Moscow on June 7.
(Alexander Nemenov / AFP/Getty Images)
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A prominent Russian investigative journalist has been charged with drug dealing after 4 grams of a synthetic drug called mephedrone were found in his backpack, Moscow police said Friday.

Ivan Golunov, who works for the independent website Meduza, was stopped by police in central Moscow on Thursday afternoon. Police also said that more drugs were found at his home.

Meduza’s director general Galina Timchenko told the Associated Press that Golunov, one of the most prominent investigative journalists in Russia, was beaten while in detention and denied medical tests that would show he has not handled drugs. Timchenko said she has photos that show the impact on the left side of his face.

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In this handout photo taken on June 6 and released by the website Meduza, Ivan Golunov stands at a police station in Moscow.
(Dmitry Dzhulay / AP)

Moscow police denied the accusations of beating.

Golunov was due to appear in court Friday evening. His lawyer said that his client was not allowed to contact his family or lawyer for 12 hours after he was detained.

Golunov, 36, has recently received threats linked to a story he was pursuing, Timchenko said.

“We are convinced that Ivan Golunov is innocent,” Meduza said in a statement.

“What’s more, we have reasons to believe that Golunov is being persecuted for his journalism. We know that Vanya [Golunov] has been receiving threats in recent months, and we know which particular unfinished story they relate to.”

Meduza was founded in 2014 by a group of journalists who left a popular Russian news website after their editor was fired. The website is based in Riga, Latvia, as the journalists fear that an increasing wave of media censorship and restrictive internet laws in Russia make any editorial office there vulnerable to government pressure. While most of Meduza’s staff is based in Riga, special correspondents like Golunov are working in Russia.

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Moscow police attached nine photos to its statement about Golunov’s detention, some of which showed bags with white substance and big empty bottles suggestive of a makeshift drugs lab at his home.

The journalist’s friend Alexander Urzhanov told the AP that he had been to Golunov’s place and that the pictures could not have been taken at his tiny apartment.

“What has been published doesn’t look like an apartment: there’s a cement floor, wood on the walls,” he said.

“Vanya’s apartment had white walls. I can’t imagine all of the stuff in those pictures can be fitted in the apartment that I have been to so that no one would notice.”

Golunov rose to prominence in recent years with his corruption investigations into Moscow’s city government and the crime-ridden funeral market.

Peers described Golunov as one of Russia’s most dogged investigative reporters and expressed dismay at the circumstances of the case.

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“This is totally incredible and is not in his character that he would give up what he’s been doing and start making money in this way,” Alexander Baunov of the Moscow Carnegie Center told the AP. Baunov has known Golunov since 2004 when they worked at the same publishing house.

The allegations of a thriving drugs business run by an investigative reporter stunned Russia’s journalist community, long accustomed to arbitrary detentions and violence, and raised concerns about police actions.

“Golunov’s detention is not so much about the crackdown on journalists,” prominent TV journalist Alexei Pivovarov tweeted.

“It’s about the fact that they can come after anyone. Because it’s dead easy to find a drugs lab at youre place.”

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