A judge ruled Russian Mikhail Khodorkovsky and his associate Platon guilty to embezzlement on Monday at the end of the jailed former oil tycoon impeachment Lebedev second.
The judge said the two men were also convicted of money laundering stolen oil. Sentencing was not scheduled until later.
Allegedly stealing his oil company Yukos, the deceased was the main accusation and trial of Khodorkovsky as the Kremlin's evidence should be placed in the rule of law.
Prosecutors asked the judge to consider Khodorkovsky to six years in prison on top in the eight years he is currently serving.
The reading of the verdict in the impeachment trial accused of a chief enemy of the Kremlin, Viktor Danilkin judge said the court has established that Khodorkovsky and Lebedev "made the diversion of the assets entrusted to the accused."
Locked in a room of glass and steel cage, Khodorkovsky and Lebedev has ignored the judge read the guilty verdict was expected, whispering and reading other books and documents.
A crowd of several hundred supporters outside the courthouse chanting "Freedom!".
Khodorkovsky, Russia's richest man and head of its largest oil producer, is approaching the end of the eight-year sentence imposed on fraud and tax evasion trial, in the form of Vladimir Putin 2000-2008 Bureau.
In the new study, prosecutors argued that he had 27 billion U.S. dollars to subsidiaries of the Yukos oil pricing. His attorney filed charges absurd, politically motivated excuse to keep him behind bars.
For critics of the government, the conviction and long sentence is a sign that the Kremlin's long-term authorization to renew the justice system marred by corruption and political influence is disingenuous.
Dressed in black, Khodorkovsky, 47, was taken to the cage in Moscow shortly before Danilkin and began reading the sentence. Dressed in black, pale but composed, Khodorkovsky agitated and threw a smile at the crowded room.
The sentence, which many believe will be decided in the Kremlin, will be widely seen as a sign of whether President Dmitry Medvedev - and influence - to free a man whose incarceration is a symbol of the Putin regime.
It is unclear when the judge read the verdict and notify the sentence.
Putin, Russia's most powerful politician, is dominated by what officials call the Court alongside Medvedev as prime minister even though he is subject to the protégé, directs the presidency in 2008.
Both men say they will decide together who will be running for president in 2012, the Kremlin shoo-in candidate countries, but many Russians who suspect that Putin's choice.
The judge said the two men were also convicted of money laundering stolen oil. Sentencing was not scheduled until later.
Allegedly stealing his oil company Yukos, the deceased was the main accusation and trial of Khodorkovsky as the Kremlin's evidence should be placed in the rule of law.
Prosecutors asked the judge to consider Khodorkovsky to six years in prison on top in the eight years he is currently serving.
The reading of the verdict in the impeachment trial accused of a chief enemy of the Kremlin, Viktor Danilkin judge said the court has established that Khodorkovsky and Lebedev "made the diversion of the assets entrusted to the accused."
Locked in a room of glass and steel cage, Khodorkovsky and Lebedev has ignored the judge read the guilty verdict was expected, whispering and reading other books and documents.
A crowd of several hundred supporters outside the courthouse chanting "Freedom!".
Khodorkovsky, Russia's richest man and head of its largest oil producer, is approaching the end of the eight-year sentence imposed on fraud and tax evasion trial, in the form of Vladimir Putin 2000-2008 Bureau.
In the new study, prosecutors argued that he had 27 billion U.S. dollars to subsidiaries of the Yukos oil pricing. His attorney filed charges absurd, politically motivated excuse to keep him behind bars.
For critics of the government, the conviction and long sentence is a sign that the Kremlin's long-term authorization to renew the justice system marred by corruption and political influence is disingenuous.
Dressed in black, Khodorkovsky, 47, was taken to the cage in Moscow shortly before Danilkin and began reading the sentence. Dressed in black, pale but composed, Khodorkovsky agitated and threw a smile at the crowded room.
The sentence, which many believe will be decided in the Kremlin, will be widely seen as a sign of whether President Dmitry Medvedev - and influence - to free a man whose incarceration is a symbol of the Putin regime.
It is unclear when the judge read the verdict and notify the sentence.
Putin, Russia's most powerful politician, is dominated by what officials call the Court alongside Medvedev as prime minister even though he is subject to the protégé, directs the presidency in 2008.
Both men say they will decide together who will be running for president in 2012, the Kremlin shoo-in candidate countries, but many Russians who suspect that Putin's choice.

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