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

Controversial Russian media mogul found dead in Irish-owned Washington hotel

Russian state media said the former minister of media affairs died of a heart attack.

CONTROVERSIAL RUSSIAN MEDIA mogul Mikhail Lesin, who helped found the RT English-language television network, has been found dead at an Irish-owned hotel in Washington.

He was 57.

RT, formerly known as Russia Today, said the former minister of media affairs died of a heart attack.

“Lesin died. It’s impossible to believe this,” tweeted Margarita Simonyan, editor-in-chief of RT, which is state funded.

ACB News, quoting a Russian and a US official, reported late last night that Lesin had been found in Washington’s Dupont Circle Hotel the day before.

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

Russian President Vladimir Putin’s spokesperson told reporters last night that the “president highly values the enormous contribution Mikhail Lesin made helping establish Russian media”.

Washington police would not confirm his death, saying only that they were investigating the death of someone on the block where the hotel is located in a fashionable area of Washington.

US officials notified the Russian embassy of Lesin’s death and authorities from both countries are trying to determine the circumstances in which he died.

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

Allegations

Republican Senator Robin Wicker of Mississippi called for a probe into Lesin last year on suspicion of money laundering and corruption, ABC said.

He allegedly amassed millions of dollars in assets in Europe and the United States while working for the government, including $28 million (€26 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, according to ABC.

It said it was unclear whether the FBI had actually opened an investigation.

In 2014, Lesin told Forbes he thought it was okay that most television channels in Russia were state-controlled.

“I am a state man,” he said.

© – AFP 2015

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