Vladimir Kara-Murza
Russian-British opposition activist who survived two FSB poisoning attempts in 2015 and 2017, was sentenced to 25 years in a Russian prison, and was released in a prisoner exchange in August 2024.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Full Name | Vladimir Vladimirovich Kara-Murza |
| Born | September 7, 1981, Moscow, USSR |
| Status | ALIVE — Released in August 2024 prisoner exchange |
| Current Location | Living in the West following release |
| Cause of Injury | Poisoning (twice) — suspected Novichok or similar nerve agent |
| Official Ruling | Russian authorities refused to investigate either poisoning |
| Alleged Intelligence Connection | FSB — confirmed by Bellingcat/Insider/Der Spiegel investigation showing FSB surveillance teams tracked him before both poisonings |
| Category | Dissident / Political Figure |
Assessment: CONFIRMED (Attempted Assassination)
Bellingcat, The Insider, and Der Spiegel jointly confirmed that FSB surveillance teams — including members of the same poisoning squad implicated in the Navalny attack — tracked Kara-Murza for months before both of his near-fatal poisoning incidents. This is one of the most thoroughly documented cases of FSB assassination attempts against a political dissident, with travel data, phone records, and pattern analysis confirming intelligence service involvement.
The Poisoning Attempts
First Poisoning — May 2015: Kara-Murza suddenly fell critically ill, suffering multiple organ failure. He fell into a coma and nearly died. Russian authorities refused to open a criminal investigation.
Second Poisoning — February 2017: Kara-Murza again suffered sudden multiple organ failure and fell into a coma. Doctors said he had a 5% chance of survival. He was kept alive on life support. Again, Russian authorities refused to investigate.
In both cases, Kara-Murza maintained there was "no other possible reason" for his illness than a politically motivated attack. He has claimed the agent used was the Soviet-era nerve agent Novichok.
Background
Kara-Murza is a Russian-British political activist, journalist, author, and filmmaker. A protege of murdered Russian dissident Boris Nemtsov, he served as vice-chairman of Open Russia, an NGO founded by exiled businessman Mikhail Khodorkovsky to promote civil society and democracy in Russia.
He frequently traveled abroad to advocate for Magnitsky Act-style sanctions against Russian human rights abusers, speaking before the US Congress, European Parliament, and Canadian Parliament. He was awarded the Civil Courage Prize in 2018, the Vaclav Havel Human Rights Prize in 2022, and the Pulitzer Prize for commentary in 2024.
Imprisonment
On April 11, 2022, Kara-Murza was detained in Moscow near his home. He was charged with treason, spreading "false information" about the Russian army, and association with an "undesirable organization." In April 2023, he was sentenced to 25 years in prison — one of the harshest sentences given to any opposition figure. He spent two and a half years in various prison colonies, including 11 months in solitary confinement.
On August 1, 2024, Kara-Murza was released as part of a historic prisoner exchange involving 24 individuals from seven countries. He and other released prisoners were flown to Ankara, Turkey.
Intelligence Connections
- Bellingcat confirmed FSB surveillance teams tailed Kara-Murza for months before both poisoning incidents
- The FSB teams included a mix of operatives from the FSB's political unit and members of the poisoning squad from the Criminalistics Institute — the same unit implicated in the Navalny poisoning
- Travel data analysis showed FSB agents following Kara-Murza to multiple cities in the lead-up to each poisoning
- The Kremlin has denied any involvement in his illness
- Russian authorities refused to initiate criminal proceedings into either case despite overwhelming evidence
Why This Case Raises Questions
- FSB surveillance confirmed by open-source intelligence investigation using phone metadata and travel records
- The same FSB poisoning squad was later confirmed to have poisoned Alexei Navalny with Novichok in 2020
- Russian authorities' refusal to investigate either poisoning strongly suggests state involvement
- His 25-year prison sentence was widely viewed as political retaliation for his advocacy of sanctions against Russian officials
- He survived two assassination attempts that should have been fatal — doctors gave him a 5% survival chance after the second poisoning
Key Quotes
"There was no other possible reason for it than a politically motivated attack." — Vladimir Kara-Murza on his poisonings
Bellingcat reported that "FSB operatives tailed Kara-Murza for months before both of his near-fatal poisoning incidents."
Upon release, Kara-Murza said he had been told he was being taken to be executed when guards came to move him for the prisoner exchange.
See Also
-
Alexei Navalny — opposition leader poisoned by same FSB unit, died in prison in 2024
-
Boris Nemtsov — Kara-Murza's mentor, assassinated near the Kremlin in 2015
-
Alexander Litvinenko — FSB defector poisoned in London
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Sergei Skripal — GRU double agent poisoned with Novichok in 2018
-
Sergei Magnitsky — Russian whistleblower who died in prison
Other Shocking Stories
- Paul Wellstone: The Senate's loudest Iraq War opponent died in a plane crash eleven days before his election.
- Judi Bari: FBI accused her of bombing her own car. A jury saw through it and awarded $4.4 million.
- Yuri Shchekochikhin: Russian journalist died days before meeting the FBI. Symptoms matched poisoning. Medical records sealed.
- Fred Hampton: FBI gave police his floor plan. They drugged him, then shot him in bed while he slept.
Sources
- Wikipedia — Vladimir Kara-Murza
- Bellingcat — Vladimir Kara-Murza Tailed by Members of FSB Squad Prior to Suspected Poisonings
- CNN — Vladimir Kara-Murza Interview: Russian Prison
- NPR — Russian Opposition Figure Vladimir Kara-Murza Released in Prisoner Swap
- Meduza — Tailing Kara-Murza
This information was built by Grok and Claude AI research.