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Russian President Vladimir Putin (right) with Mikhail Lesin in 2002 www.kremlin.ru

Former Putin press secretary died of 'blunt force trauma' in Washington hotel

Russian state media had said Mikhail Lesin died of a heart attack.

A RUSSIAN MEDIA mogul and former Kremlin aide, found lifeless in a Washington hotel last year, died of blunt force trauma to the head, reports said yesterday.

Mikhail Lesin also suffered injuries to his neck, torso and upper and lower extremities, the Washington Post reported, citing the US capital’s medical examiner’s office.

Lesin, who helped launch the Russian English-language television network RT, was found dead in the Irish-owned Dupont Circle Hotel in November at the age of 57.

The findings contradict Russian state media reports, which said the former minister of media affairs died of a heart attack.

The Post quoted Washington police spokesman Dustin Sternbeck as saying that the case remains under investigation.

He declined to say whether the medical examiner’s findings indicate that a crime may have been committed, it said.

Sternbeck and the medical examiner’s office could not immediately be reached for comment.

Controversial

A controversial figure, Lesin had been accused of limiting press freedom in Russia.

He was Russia’s minister of press, television and radio between 1999 and 2004, and later served as a Kremlin aide.

In 2013, he became head of Gazprom-Media Holding, the media arm of state energy giant Gazprom, and oversaw the work of Russia’s top liberal radio station Echo of Moscow.

Lesin resigned a year later, citing family reasons.

Obit Mikhail Lesin Dupont Circle Hotel Andrew Harnik / AP/Press Association Images Andrew Harnik / AP/Press Association Images / AP/Press Association Images

In Moscow, foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Facebook today that the Russian embassy in Washington had repeatedly inquired about the probe into Lesin’s death but had never received a reply.

“We are waiting for Washington to give us the relevant information and official data about the investigation,” Zakharova wrote.

She added that Russia would send the US a request for “international legal assistance” if the information circulating in the media turned out to be true.

An unnamed representative of the Russian embassy in Washington was quoted by the RIA Novosti state news agency as saying: “We intend to make requests (to the US) in order to receive answers to the questions that are worrying the Russian side.”

In 2014, Republican Senator Roger Wicker of Mississippi called for a probe into Lesin on suspicion of money laundering and corruption.

He allegedly amassed millions of dollars in assets in Europe and the United States while working for the government, including $28 million (€25 million) in real estate in Los Angeles.

“That a Russian public servant could have amassed the considerable funds required to acquire and maintain these assets in Europe and the United States raises serious questions,” Wicker wrote.

© – AFP 2016

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