Browder started his career in the Eastern European practice of the
Boston Consulting Group in London, then worked for
Robert Maxwell's Maxwell Communication Corporation, and after that managed the Russian proprietary investments desk at
Salomon Brothers. In 1998, Browder became a British citizen and relinquished his U.S. citizenship. He cited that he did so because of "a legacy of bad feeling about the rule of law" as a result of his family having been "viciously persecuted" by U.S. authorities in the 1950s, citing especially his communist grandfather, Earl Browder, who was imprisoned twice during the era of
McCarthyism.
Hermitage Capital Management Browder and
Edmond Safra (1932–1999) founded
Hermitage Capital Management in 1996 for the purpose of investing initial
seed capital of $25 million in Russia during the period of the mass
privatisation after the
fall of the Soviet Union.
Beny Steinmetz was another of the original investors in Hermitage. After the
1998 Russian financial crisis, Browder remained committed to Hermitage's original mission of investing in Russia, despite significant outflows from the fund. Hermitage became a prominent
activist shareholder in the Russian gas giant
Gazprom, the large oil company
Surgutneftegas,
RAO UES,
Sberbank,
Sidanco,
Avisma, and Volzhanka. Browder exposed management corruption and corporate malfeasance in these partly state-owned companies. He has been quoted as saying: "You had to become a shareholder activist if you didn't want everything stolen from you". From 1995 to 2006, Hermitage Capital Management was one of the largest foreign investors in Russia, and Browder amassed millions through his management of the fund. In both 2006 and 2007, he earned an estimated £125–£150 million. In March 2013,
HSBC, a bank that serves as the trustee and manager of Hermitage Capital Management, announced it would end the fund's operations in Russia. The decision was taken amid two legal cases against Browder: a libel court case in London and a trial
in absentia for tax evasion in Moscow. In June 2018, HSBC reached a settlement with the Russian government to pay a £17 million fine to Russian authorities for its part in alleged tax avoidance.
Conflict with Russian government In 2005, after 10 years of business deals in Russia, Browder was
blacklisted by the Russian government as a "threat to national security" and denied entry to the country.
The Economist wrote that the Russian government blacklisted Browder because he interfered with the flow of money to "corrupt bureaucrats and their businessmen accomplices". Browder had earlier supported Russian president
Vladimir Putin. As reported in 2008 by
The New York Times, "over the next two years (according to Browder) several of his associates and lawyers, as well as their relatives, became victims of crimes, including severe beatings and robberies during which documents were taken". In November 2008, one of Hermitage's auditors,
Sergei Magnitsky, was arrested. He was "charged with two counts of aggravated tax evasion committed in conspiracy with Mr. Browder in respect of Dalnyaya Step and Saturn" (ECHR § 35). Magnitsky died on 16 November 2009, in prison, after 11 months in pretrial detention, nearly the limit allowed under the law. On 27 August 2019, the
European Court for Human Rights, in judging a case brought against Russia by the Magnitsky family, ruled that Magnitsky was detained in conditions which amounted to "
inhuman and degrading treatment in breach of Article 3 of the Convention" (§ 193). This, combined with negligence, lack of adequate medical care, and ill-treatment also amounted to a breach of the convention (§ 240). Magnitsky's family was awarded €34,000. In February 2013, Russian officials announced that Browder and Magnitsky would both be tried for evading $16.8 million (~$ in ) in taxes. In March 2013, Russian authorities announced they would be investigating Hermitage's acquisition of
Gazprom shares worth $70 million (~$ in ). The investigation was to focus on whether Browder violated any Russian laws when Hermitage used Russian companies registered in the region of
Kalmykia to buy shares. An investigation by the Council of Europe's Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights cleared Browder of the accusations of improprieties that surfaced at this time. Browder was also charged with trying to gain access to
Gazprom's financial reports. in March 2016 Browder admitted to having sought influence in
Gazprom, but denied any wrongdoing. He said that purchasing Gazprom shares was an investment in the Russian economy, and the desire to influence the Gazprom management was driven by the need to expose a "huge fraud going on at the company". However, at the time it was illegal for foreigners to buy Gazprom shares in Russia, and he did it through shell companies that hid his ownership. He also said the scheme of using Russian-registered subsidiaries entitled to tax advantages was practised by other foreign investors at the time and was not illegal. He also said he believed the trial was a response to the U.S. passing the
Magnitsky Act, which had blacklisted Russian officials involved in Magnitsky's death, preventing them from entering the U.S. The
Financial Times reported that this trial was the first in Russian history that included a dead defendant.
Amnesty International described the trial as "a whole new chapter in Russia's worsening human rights record" and a "sinister attempt to deflect attention from those who committed the crimes Magnitsky exposed". On 11 July 2013, Browder was convicted
in absentia by a district criminal court in Moscow on charges under article 199 of the
RF Criminal Code (
tax-evasion by organisations), and sentenced to nine years. Magnitsky, according to Browder, was posthumously convicted of fraud. In May 2013 and again in July 2013,
Interpol rejected requests by Russia's
Interior Ministry to put Browder on its search list and locate and arrest him, saying that Russia's case against him was "predominantly political". In April 2014, the
European Parliament unanimously passed a resolution to impose sanctions on more than 30 Russians complicit in the Magnitsky case; the first time in the parliament's history that a vote was held to establish a public sanctions list. However, the vote was only advisory to the European Commission, which did not act on it. In December 2017, Browder was tried
in absentia and convicted of tax evasion and deliberate bankruptcy by a Russian court, receiving a sentence of nine years of imprisonment. On 30 May 2018, Browder was arrested by Spanish police in Madrid on a Russian Interpol arrest warrant. In November 2018, Russian prosecutors announced new charges against Browder, accusing him of organising a "transnational criminal group" and claimed he may have poisoned Sergei Magnitsky. At the
World Economic Forum (WEF) in Davos in May 2022, Browder criticised
Germany for its earlier Russia course: "
Putin is 95 percent to blame for this war, because he is the one who throws the bombs and murders civilians" but "the West is also responsible for five percent and especially Germany to blame for what is happening in Ukraine," Browder told the media. "
Merkel fought hard to make Germany and Europe dependent on Moscow and open to blackmail. Putin's attack on Ukraine is therefore also Merkel's war!", said Browder. Browder has also strongly criticized
Switzerland and the role
Swiss banks played in allegedly aiding the financing of Russia's invasion. Browder called on Switzerland to adopt its own sanctions against Russia and not just those proposed by the
European Union (EU), as it had been doing. Browder also accused the Swiss justice system of being “incapable of dealing with money laundering” after Switzerland’s decision to return $15.9 million to three Russian individuals sanctioned in the U.S. and other Western countries. In July 2023, through Browder's initiative, the Magnitsky Act, the
U.S. Helsinki Commission sanctioned three Swiss citizens, including former Swiss attorney, Michael Lauber. In January 2026, Browder again attended the WEF in Davos. There, he urged chief executives, European leaders, and U.S. senators to impose more financial pain on Putin by sanctioning refineries that buy Russian crude oil, arguing that Putin's fate depends on the war with Ukraine. Browder said, "... [Putin] needs to be at war so that there’s a foreign enemy and not people getting angry with him for a lousy life that he’s created for most Russian people. And so if he were to stop the war, he would lose power."
2017 testimony to the U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee On 27 July 2017, Browder testified to the
U.S. Senate Judiciary Committee on Russia's alleged interference in the 2016 U.S. presidential election in regards to the
Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) and
Fusion GPS. The latter is the
opposition research firm based in
Washington D.C. that commissioned former
MI6 staffer
Christopher Steele to collect information on
Donald Trump's ties with Russia. The hearing was set up to examine the firm's separate work on a legal case involving the Magnitsky Act. He directly discussed the President of Russia Vladimir Putin. Browder testified that President Putin is "the biggest oligarch in Russia and the richest man in the world", building a fortune by threatening Russian oligarchs and getting a 50% cut of their profits: "I estimate that he has accumulated $200 billion of ill-gotten gains from these types of operations over his 17 years in power. He keeps his money in the West and all of his money in the West is potentially exposed to asset freezes and confiscation. Therefore, he has a significant and very personal interest in finding a way to get rid of the Magnitsky sanctions." Browder concluded his statement by reviewing the circumstances that led to the U.S.'s passage of the Magnitsky Act: "I hope that my story will help you understand the methods of Russian operatives in Washington and how they use U.S. enablers to achieve major foreign policy goals without disclosing those interests. I also hope that this story and others like it may lead to a change in the FARA enforcement regime in the future."
Books about experiences in Russia In February 2015, Browder published a book about his career, ''
Red Notice: A True Story of High Finance, Murder, and One Man's Fight for Justice'', focusing on his years spent in Russia and the Russian government's attacks on Hermitage Capital Management. Browder's responses to Russian corruption and his support of the investigation into the death of his attorney
Sergei Magnitsky are at the heart of the book. In 2015, a film adaptation written by
William Nicholson was reportedly in the works. In 2022, it was reported that director
Doug Liman had signed on to helm an eight-part series adaptation of Browder’s book. A new book by Browder was published on 12 April 2022: ''Freezing Order: A True Story of Money Laundering, Murder and Surviving Vladimir Putin's Wrath''.
Prevezon civil asset forfeiture case In 2013, the U.S. Attorney's Office for New York's Southern District filed a civil asset forfeiture case against Prevezon Holdings Limited, a real estate holding company belonging to Russian businessman
Denis Katsyv, based on information from Browder. Prevezon and the Department of Justice settled the case in May 2017 for $5.9 million (~$ in ). Pursuant to a
subpoena, Browder gave
deposition testimony in the case.
Awards and recognition Browder has been the recipient of dozens of awards and recognitions. Some of the most significant are listed below. In 2017,
GQ magazine named Browder one of its Men of the Year for standing up to Vladimir Putin. In 2018, Browder was named the 67th most powerful person in the world by
Worth magazine. The magazine noted, "Browder has become one of the biggest thorns in Putin's side—and appears to be a key reason Russia interfered in the 2016 U.S. presidential election." Browder's interview with
Preet Bharara on the
Stay Tuned with Preet podcast received the People's Choice Webby Award for Best Individual Podcast. In 2018, Browder received the Aspen Institute Henry Crown Leadership Award, a prize honouring "an outstanding leader whose achievements reflect the high standards of honor, integrity, industry, and philanthropy." In October 2018, Browder received the Coalition for Integrity's Integrity Award for "his courageous fight to expose state-sponsored corruption and shine a light on individuals whose wealth is built on wrongdoing, so that they are denied safe havens anywhere in the world." In June 2019, Browder was presented with the American Spirit Award for Citizen Activism at The Common Good Forum & American Spirit Awards. The committee noted Browder's "relentless fight against human rights abuses, corruption, and his work spearheading the Magnitsky Act." In September 2019, Browder received the Trinity College (Dublin) SMF award for outstanding contributions to finance. In 2019, Browder received the Lantos Human Rights Prize from the
Lantos Foundation for his work as the "driving force behind the Magnitsky Sanctions, the most consequential enforcement mechanism of the modern human rights movement." In the
2024 King's Birthday Honours (on 14 June 2024), he was appointed
Knight Commander of the Order of St Michael and St George (KCMG) "for services to human rights, anti-corruption, and international affairs". In May 2024, he received the honorary degree doctor of letters from
Colgate University and delivered the commencement address, urging the graduates to "surround yourself with people, friends, and loved ones who share your values and visions." ==Counterclaims==