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Putin Corruption Network Revealed

Corruption by Russian President Vladimir Putin and his administration in Moscow has produced tens of billions of dollars worth of illicit funds for the Russian leader and his top aides, according to U.S. officials.

Putin is estimated to have amassed a fortune worth at least an estimated $28 billion through kickbacks from projects like construction at the Sochi Winter Olympic games, holdings in Russian real estate and energy conglomerates, and kickbacks from deals with associates going back to the late 1990s.

Corruption by Putin and his inner circle is said to be pervasive and a normal part of business under his authoritarian regime. For the first time in at least a decade, Putin is beginning to come under fire from the West after the military annexation of Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula.

In the past, the Obama administration had imposed a strict political ban on critical reporting within policy, intelligence, and law enforcement circles as part of the failed "reset" policy designed to win closer ties to Russia.

Following the Crimea annexation and facing new threats of military action against Ukraine, the administration last month launched a limited campaign of financial sanctions aimed at the Putin regime.

The Treasury Department on March 20 imposed financial sanctions on 16 Russian officials associated with Putin’s corrupt financial network, as well as Bank Rossiya, the financial institution used by Putin and his cronies to both launder funds and conduct deals.

The Putin corruption network is centered in a network of associates, many of whom are former KGB political police and intelligence officials like Putin.

The corruption network vastly expanded once Putin became president in 2012.

"Corruption has ceased being a problem in Russia; it has become a system," says a 2011 report by Russian opposition figures. "Its metastases have paralyzed the country’s social and economic life. The annual turnover of corruption in Russia now stands at $300 billion."

Former Deputy Prime Minister Boris Nemtsov, one of the report author’s told Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty that key figures linking Putin to billions of dollars worth of corruption are largely unknown to most Russians.

What the Russian public does not know is that these friends of Putin "got rich not because they created Facebook or Google, or something else, but did so absolutely at the expense of the state and state property," Nemtsov said.

U.S. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity provided an outline of official corruption under Putin, including several officials among the 16 sanctioned by Treasury, and additional associates that were not targeted by the administration’s financial sanctions:

Russia’s Foreign Ministry this week threatened unspecified retaliation against JP Morgan Chase after the bank, in seeking to comply with U.S. financial sanctions, temporarily blocked a funds transfer from the Russian embassy in Astana, Kazakhstan to SOGAZ.

A Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman called the action "absolutely unacceptable, illegal and absurd" in a statement issued this week. "Washington must understand: Any hostile actions against the Russian diplomatic mission not only constitute a flagrant violation of international law but are also fraught with retaliatory measures that will inevitably affect the work of the U.S. Embassy and the U.S. consulate general offices in Russia," the statement said.

JP Morgan Russia said through a spokeswoman that after consulting regulators "we are processing this transaction."