Open Book with Anthony Scaramucci - Russia Expert: Putin Destroyed Democracy And Trump's Doing It Too - Jamison Firestone

Episode Date: July 9, 2026

Putin weaponized the justice system; he went after the media, the universities, and even pulled a comedy show off the air because it made fun of him. On this episode of Open Book, I sit down with Jami...son Firestone, a guy who survived mobsters, bugged the Russian police, and watched his friend Sergei Magnitsky get tortured and killed for exposing the truth. We talk Yeltsin, Putin, Navalny, and yes, I ask him what Putin actually has on Trump. His answer might surprise you. Jamison Firestone established the first independent foreign law firm in Russia, where he lived for eighteen years. He was a member of the board of Directors of the American Chamber of Commerce in Russia for the last six of those. He is a co-founder, along with Sir William Browder, of the Global Magnitsky Justice Campaign, which created the Magnitsky human rights and anti-corruption sanctions regimes. He also ran the Navalny 35 campaign promoting the sanctioning of corrupt oligarchs and officials identified by Alexei Navalny. He currently works to seize Russian state assets for the benefit of Ukraine and has been featured on the BBC, Bloomberg, and CBC, as well as in several documentaries. Get your copy of this truly brilliant book, Rule of Lies: My Wild Ride Through Chaos, Corruption, and Murder in Putin's Russia Anthony Scaramucci is the founder and managing partner of SkyBridge, a global alternative investment firm, and founder and chairman of SALT, a global thought leadership forum and venture studio. Pre-order my next book, All the Wrong Moves: How Three Catastrophic Decisions Led to the Rise of Trump, out on the 17th of September in the UK and the 22nd of September in the US: ⁠https://www.scaramucci.net/allthewrongmoves Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:22 free of charge. BetMGM operates pursuant to an operating agreement with Eye Gaming, Ontario. Putin weaponized the justice system and used the justice system to attack his enemies. Putin went after the media. Putin went after the universities. Putin pulled the Russia's most popular comedy show off the air because it was making fun of him. And Putin spun this myth that without me, the country would be in the garbage can. Now, all of that sounds very much like what Trump is doing right now.
Starting point is 00:00:50 And what concerns me is this. Look, there's politics and then there's the system. So as an American, I believe very strongly in this. system. Politics is secondary. Whether you want your guns or you're against your guns or you're up for gay rights or against gay rights or abortion, that's what we vote on. But when you start pulling apart the system, you lose everything, you lose rule of law and you will lose democracy. And that was what was done in Russia. And that seems to be what Trump is doing in America. And it makes me very nervous. It makes me very frightening.
Starting point is 00:01:20 Welcome to Open Book. I am your host, Anthony Scaramucci. Joining us today is Jameson Firestone. The title of the new book is Rule of Lies, and James is an attorney. He's an entrepreneur and founder of one of Russia's first independent foreign law firms. And so you probably know my good friend, Sir Bill Browder. I'm assuming you know him. Let's start with my wild ride through chaos, corruption, and murder in Putin's Russia. You know, listen, what a life story that you've had, okay? let's start with your dad. I want to go there first, if you don't mind. Tell us about your family of origin.
Starting point is 00:02:02 You grew up in New York with an extraordinary family, obviously. And then how did it lead you into the former Soviet Union? Sure. So I was kind of a rich kid in New York. I mean, my mom had 11 rooms on Park Avenue. My dad had a six-floor brownstone. We kept the yacht with a crew past Montauk on the island. And all this came crashing to an end one day when I was 15 years old. and the police showed up to the door to arrest my father and take him to his indictment. And it turned out that he was a con artist, that he had been defrauding investors in the IRS of tens of millions of dollars. And so while awaiting trial, my dad sent me to a five-day boarding school and started to go
Starting point is 00:02:45 a little nuts. And he became a drug addict. He started doing Coke, switched to crack. And he bought Manhattan's most expensive brothel. And he filled our house with bruntz. prostitutes, and then he started hanging around with loan sharks and contract killers. So every weekend, I was coming home to this mixture of risky business and pulp fiction. And it was really hanging around with the contract killers and their kids that turned out to be good prep for Russia
Starting point is 00:03:13 because a lot of these people saw me as a kid was going to go to college and they had plans for me. They were going to like, they were telling me they were going to open a dry cleaning business. And a few of my boys, they're going to be working at your dry cleaning business. I mean, they're not really going to be working there, but you're going to be paying them, see? And I, of course, didn't want to do these things. I didn't want to be the front for a mafia operation. And so I learned how to say no to contract killers. I learned to show them respect, to make them laugh, to make them think I was useless and hopeless,
Starting point is 00:03:45 and to say no without being killed. And that was a really big skill for going to Russia in the 90s. I mean, you know, it's a fascinating story, but why Russia? So you're coming out of law school. You're an accompli, I mean, you, you know, in many ways, you're a tale of survivorship because obviously, you know, I listen, there's a, there's a motto in the Scaramucci family, let's keep the word fun and the word dysfunctional. Okay. So I get that a lot of families are dysfunctional. And I applaud you for surviving your family situation. But why Russia? Why go to Russia? So first of all, strangely enough, my father had forced me to study Russian in high school. He thought that the Soviet Union would fall apart. and I would go there and make money. And I thought it was ridiculous, but he was paying the bill. But then when I was in, I kind of forgot about Russia while I was in undergrad,
Starting point is 00:04:33 but when I was in law school, it was Gorbachev, and he was changing the whole world. There was Paras Troika and Glossnosed, and he was trying to modernize the system and make it more transparent and allow business and McDonald's was going over there. And I was like, wow. And then I read this article by this tech investor, Esther Dyson, about her time there. And she talked about how the most brilliant people in the current, were available for like $10 a month, right? You could hire physicists and programmers. I thought, I've got to be there. How exciting. And so I went there to take part in the Gorbache of Miracle.
Starting point is 00:05:05 And of course, as soon as I got off the plane, the hardliners rolled the tanks in and tried to stop the Gorbachev Miracle. Is your dad still alive, Jameson? No, he lived till 91, but he died about five years back. Okay. Did he get to see your success, I hope? He did get to see my success. he didn't get to see the book, which is unfortunate. I think he would have liked it. All right. So you arrive in 91. The Soviet Union is collapsing.
Starting point is 00:05:32 I want you to take us through the chaos. This is a moment now where we don't know where things are going. Of course, we're smug here in the West. We think, oh, okay, we won and we are going to go right into democratic capitalism. That's what we all think. But it doesn't really happen that way, right? So take us through the chaos, take us through the uncertainty, take us through the middle and lower class uncertainty, right? Because they were used to a certain structure for, you know, seven, eight decades.
Starting point is 00:06:02 And now you have no structure. Right. So we had kind of two revolutions, almost one after another. So when I got off the plane, it was still the Soviet Union. And a lot of people didn't like what a lot of people in the government didn't like what Gorbachev was doing. So they kidnapped him and they rolled in the tanks and they said, this is over. and all of a sudden all these people came out on the streets. And they kind of surrounded the tanks and they surrounded the Yeltsin's office building.
Starting point is 00:06:32 And they were yelling at these 20-year-old kids in the tanks. I mean, it was like grandmothers, Babushki, right, yelling at them, we're your mothers, we're your grandmothers, you're not going to kill us, are you? And these like 19, 20-year-old kids in the tanks, they were miserable. And they were like, no. And so that, and if Yeltsin stood up against on top of the tank, and he demanded Gorbachev's return. and the coup fell apart.
Starting point is 00:06:52 Tanks rolled out of town, and people felt this euphoria. They couldn't believe that Soviet tanks had backed down to them. I mean, even to the point where people were painting, forgive me, on statues of Karl Marx. And Yeltsin became the hero at that point. Everybody kind of forgot about Gorbachev and the Soviet Union voted itself out of existence within months. But what happened at that point was the Russians were so, the Russians in control were so afraid that things could go back to communism, that they decided, they decided literally to privatize
Starting point is 00:07:25 and give away everything in the country. And so there was this rapid system of let's sell everything in the country to the people. But most of the people didn't understand how privatization worked. They lived in this cocoon all their life. They didn't understand capitalism. And so what ended up happening was only a very few bought the resources of Russia. And everything and everybody else was was completely broke. There was massive inflation and you had people out on the street putting blankets down with their with their prized possessions and selling them on the streets. And most of the country, I mean, something like 99% of the country was bankrupt. And that created this huge social unrest. And so in 1993, two years after the coup, there was a standoff between the
Starting point is 00:08:13 Congress and the president. And the Congress rightfully, I mean, not rightfully, but lawfully impeached the president who refused to leave office. And the president illegally dissolved Congress, who also refused to leave office. And then we have this thing that nobody could conceive of. You may find it hard to believe as an American that something like this could happen. But the president of the country attacked his own Congress. And he rolled tanks up to the Congress and shelved the Congress. And many people like myself and the government of the United States and pretty much every government of every democracy on earth stood by Yeltsin saying that this was what was necessary to save the reforms.
Starting point is 00:08:56 But we all forgot about democracy at the time. And that set Russia on the path to where it is today. Well, I mean, listen, I mean, you've got quite a book here. I mean, obviously, you know, if you get a Netflix, producer to read this book. I mean, it'll get, you know, you'll be in a huge mini-series. You're the founder of an independent foreign law firm. You're trying to help people with this new legal system. But you're getting hit up, right? I mean, this almost sounds fictional, but let me just go over a couple things. Mafia threats, armed raids on your office, corrupt officials.
Starting point is 00:09:35 You're getting your office secretly bugged, you know, and they're even bugging police offices. I mean, this is crazy. And you're saying to yourself, I'm going to get killed here. I'm probably not going to get out of here alive. So set that scene for us. And tell us the turning point where you're like, okay, I got to get my ass out of here now. This is not the right place for me to be. Thank you for tuning in an open book.
Starting point is 00:09:58 And if you haven't already, please hit the subscribe button below so that you're the first to know when our new episodes drop each week. We've got a lot more coming. And now back to the show. So first of all, yeah, in the 1990s, things really broke down. When everybody got poor, except for a few people getting rich, you had all these mafia groups running around protection rackets, and they were shaking down everybody, and they tried to shake me down. And criminality was so rife. We even had criminality where my partners, in my own firm, went insane, and I had to hire a private SWAT team and
Starting point is 00:10:31 raid my office like the A team to get rid of them, right? And then they they bribed the police to caused me problems, and I flew back to New York, and I went to Madison Avenue, the shop called the spy shop, and I bought all these hidden cameras, and then I bugged the offices of the Russian police to catch them in the act. And all this craziness kind of went on, and Yeltsin was getting sicker and sicker. He was an alcoholic, and it was clear, with all these people so poor, and with Yeltsin and his family so corrupt, that Yeltsin wasn't going to win the next presidential election. And so in 1999, Yeltsin did something crazy and unexpected. He got on TV to wish everybody a happy new year. And he said, happy new year. And by the way, I'm residing. And here's your
Starting point is 00:11:13 new president, President Putin. And so he gave the whole country to Putin for a pardon. And the first thing that Putin did was pardon Yeltsin and allow him to keep all his stuff. So that was the deal. And when Putin came to power, it just so happened that the price of oil went through the roof. And Russia is one of the biggest oil exporters. So all of a sudden, huge amounts of money started falling on bankrupt Russia. And all of a sudden the country was rich. And so Putin put in some laws that were good at first. And everybody was concentrating again on the money, not the democracy thing. And then what Putin did, the turning point where it really started getting bad, was he decided to put the richest oligarch in the country had embarrassed
Starting point is 00:12:00 Putin at a televised meeting and Putin decides to put him in prison. So he creates, he weaponizes the justice system and he goes after this guy and he puts him in prison and he takes all his stuff. And at that moment, all of the sudden, the justice system was weaponized for the taking. Any government official could use it. Anybody with money could use it. And so in America, you have ambulance chases, right? If you've been injured or you know somebody who's been injured, call, you know, call Johnny. Well, in Russia, they had other lawyers who said, if you're, you know, if you're in the middle of what they call the corporate raid, somebody using the courts to steal from you, call attorney Vladimir, you had posters all over the place. And they didn't work
Starting point is 00:12:39 because what happened was somebody was paying the whole system to put you in prison. They were buying a case from investigation to indictment to conviction. And so the only way you could fix that case was to make a deal with them. So people like me, lawyers, our jobs changed. Our job was to create the argument that would allow you to get out of jail if you could cut a deal. So you had a cut a deal first. And if you didn't cut the deal, I would give my argument and you'd go to prison. And if I did cut, and if you did cut your deal, I'd give the exact same article and you'd get out. And so that was the state of what happened until you mentioned Bill Browder. Bill Browder was a client of mine. He made a huge amount of money investing in Russia.
Starting point is 00:13:21 He went after corrupt people and got chased out of the country. And he said, close my companies. And so he sold everything he'll. He paid half a billion dollars in taxes. And all. he had were empty companies. And I was closing the empty companies. And one day, 30 guys from the Interior Ministry raid my office with a search warrant looking for companies that have paid a lot of tax. That's a head scratcher because normally the police are looking for companies that haven't paid their tax. But they wanted companies that paid a lot of tax. They ripped my office apart, beat up one of my attorneys and put him in the hospital for three weeks, and took all these documents. And the next thing we knew, Bill Browder's companies were being sued for a billion dollars. And we found out
Starting point is 00:14:08 that, and not only that, we found out that there had already been a lawsuit. And we're like, wait a minute, how can there be a lawsuit? Because you need lawyers, we're the lawyers. And it turned out that all the police had done when they raided my office, they rated it for a special reason. They wanted to grab the documents that would allow them to hijack control of three of this guy's Browder's companies. And we couldn't figure out why. We were like, Bill left Russia. He sold everything, paid his taxes. Those companies are empty. Why would anybody sue them for a billion dollars? And Sergei Magnitsky, this guy working for me, said, you know what? A billion dollars is what they declared in profit. And so if you sue them for a billion dollars, they have no profit,
Starting point is 00:14:52 which means they could go, the new people in control, could go to the government and ask for a fraudulent refund of the taxes you paid, which was a quarter billion dollars. So Sergei discovered that Russian officials ripped off their own government for a quarter billion dollars. He turned them in. He was arrested. He was tortured. He was killed. And that's when I decided, I got to get out. Right. What a terrible story. Tell us about Navalny. So once I got out, Bill Browder, the man whose companies were stolen, and myself and some other people decided to go after these guys. And so we decided to make YouTube videos showing each Russian official. And these people were making $6,000 a year or $15,000 a year.
Starting point is 00:15:35 And we were showing them with millions of dollars of property and partying all over Moscow and traveling. And then we showed how they railroaded Sergei and how they killed him and how they stole the money. And so these movies, I needed to distribute them in Russia. And so I found this blogger who was popular, but not a household name, Alexei Navalny, this young kid. And I showed him my videos. He's like, these are so cool. Like, somebody's finally going to get these bastards, right? And I want to be your distributor. They're going to sue me so bad, but I want to distribute these videos on the internet. So he started distributing my videos. And then he started making his own anti-corruption videos. And, you know, if I got a million
Starting point is 00:16:14 and a half viewers that was big for me, Navalny was getting 115 million viewers. So that's how I met Alexei Navalny. Another tragic ending, obviously. So Putin, And where is it, what's your prediction on Russia? What's your prediction on the situation, Ukraine? What is your prediction on how Vladimir Putin is, you know, does this, what's his successor look like when he has a successor? Obviously, we all die, so eventually we'll have one. Give me your thoughts on Russia today.
Starting point is 00:16:46 So everything in Russia today depends on what the West does right now. because really Vladimir Putin single-handedly made this war. Nobody knew this war was coming. His whole security council didn't know it was coming three days before it happened. He made this decision. And this decision has been pretty disastrous for Russia. Putin thought he'd win the war in days. Instead, we're year five. And not only that, the Ukrainians are now blowing up things in Moscow and St. Petersburg. And the Russians are sanctioned left, right, and center. So what we've done is we've brought the, by supporting Ukraine the way we have, we've allowed the war to come to Russia and we've also starved Russia for money. So Vladimir Putin has a huge decision to make right now.
Starting point is 00:17:33 Does he put in a draft? And the Russian people are not up for that. That's not what they signed up for. And if he drafts people, he's got political problems. So if we keep the sanctions on, then we keep the pressure on. I think he's going to have to make a settlement that the West can live with. And if we don't, he's going to pull this one off. You mean he'll defeat Ukraine? Well, sure. If the money stops flowing, he wins immediately. And America, and I think mistakenly, has ceased to provide funding. I mean, Trump, there are a lot of things about Trump's policies I disagree with, but getting Europe to pay for their own way wasn't one of them. That was actually
Starting point is 00:18:14 a good thing. And the Europeans have stepped up. They're not only investing a trillion dollars in their own military now, but they've put in 90 billion for Ukraine. And it's a pity that the U.S. isn't helping anymore in this. Well, I mean, what does Putin have on Trump? It's not a pee-p-tap. We both know that. It's something way worse than that. So what is it? So, you know, I mean, I don't know if there's anything out there. I mean, Fiona Hill and Michael Bolton don't think the Russians have anything special on him. I mean, look, really, if you think about this, there's so much that people could say they have on Trump. I mean, how much money did he just making crypto at a moment, right? So I don't think the Russians necessarily have anything on Trump.
Starting point is 00:19:01 I think Trump dislikes Zelensky. A phone call with Zelenskyy led to his first impeachment, and he likes Putin. And he thinks this war is Europe's problem and doesn't see why we should be involved. And all of those things are tremendously helpful to Vladimir Putin in Russia. But I don't think that Trump is, I don't think there's some secret compromise and that Trump is a, is a Russian tool. Okay. All right. I don't know what it is, but I think it's way worse than that because I know Trump's personality. He definitely is kissing Putin's ass for absolutely no reason. Okay. Everything you've experienced, okay, the optimism of the 90s,
Starting point is 00:19:38 the realities of Putin's Russia, are you hopeful? Will it one day return to a more open society? Or is this a permanent suppression of the Russian people for the next century? I don't know how long it'll last, but I don't think it's permanent. There are people who remember that magic moment when the Soviet tanks stood down and that they did that. There are people who remember Navalny and the crowds of hundreds of thousands. And again, it's easy to take people's rights away and to creep into authoritarianism and destroy rule of law when everybody's getting rich, right? As soon as lifenomic times aren't good and then people ask something of you like go serve on the Ukrainian front, right? That's a different matter. So I do think that sooner or later
Starting point is 00:20:29 things will change. But for us, as an American and as a Brit and as a member of the Western world, mostly what I want right now is Russia stopped on the battlefield. And I think that if we if we do that, it will bring Putin down. What comes next? I don't know, but Russia will be out of the war and Putin will be down and that's the first step. Okay. I guess I'm worried about a few things because your book is, it's Trump's playbook in some ways, right? And before we started, you said to me, hey, I was speaking to a group of people in Las Vegas,
Starting point is 00:21:09 and you can toggle from Trump to Putin pretty quickly. So tell me what's happening here in the United States that's being pulled right out of the book, Rule of Lies. So let me tell you a few things that Putin did. Putin weaponized the justice system and used the justice system to attack his enemies. Putin went after the media. Putin went after the universities. Putin pulled the Russia's most popular comedy show off the air because it was making fun of him.
Starting point is 00:21:41 And Putin spun this myth that without me, the country would be in the garbage can. Now, all of that sounds very much like what Trump is doing right now. And what concerns me is this. Look, there's politics and then there's the system. So as an American, I believe very strongly in the system. Politics is secondary, whether you want your guns or you're against your guns or you're for gay rights or against gay rights or abortion, that's what we vote on. But when you start pulling apart the system, you lose everything.
Starting point is 00:22:16 You lose rule of law and you will lose democracy. And that was what was done in Russia. And that seems to be what Trump is doing in America. and it makes me very nervous. It makes me very frightened. We're going to stop Trump. They couldn't stop Putin. We're going to stop Trump. You're a lawyer. We have a rule of law and we have a rule of lies. What happens here? This one's up to the American people. Look, Trump still loses court cases, right? That wouldn't happen in Russia. That wouldn't happen in Turkey.
Starting point is 00:22:47 So, I mean, America has a democracy that is under huge strain right now. People are fighting back. My real wish is for the Republicans to realize, look, Republicans and Democrats are not supposed to be enemies. We have different policies. We're supposed to be neighbors, right? The Great American Compromise and all that. And I wish that the Republican voters start to realize that the system is more important than the policies. If you keep breaking the system to get your policies, God help us all when that system is gone. That's very well said. All right, we're down to the five words. If you watch my podcast,
Starting point is 00:23:30 I come up with five words from the book, me and my producer. I'm going to say the word, and then you're going to give me a one or two sentences on the word, your first reaction to it. You ready? Okay. All right. I'm going to say the word corruption. You think of what? Putin, robbing a country blind. Okay. Magninsky. Somebody who believed in the system and whose principles couldn't be broken. You think the Magninsky law here in the United States. You think the Magninsky law here in the United States holds up or it gets hollowed out eventually by Trump. Already being hollowed out. Already being hollowed out.
Starting point is 00:24:01 Yeah, that's what that's what's happening. Okay. Yeltsin. Unfortunately, not really a Democrat and somewhat corrupt. Right. So, I mean, all roads in Russia lead to some level of corruption, unfortunately, right? Yes, at the moment, almost. Or death or a prison cell or exile.
Starting point is 00:24:17 Putin. A man who destroyed the democratic future of his country. Yeah. And made himself, what? a couple hundred billion doing it? Limitless money. He has an unlimited call on the resources of the Russian Federation. It's uncountable.
Starting point is 00:24:32 And for what, though? I mean, is he a popular figure in Russia? It's hard to tell. I think right, he was certainly reasonably popular before the war came home. Now that the effects of the war are being felt. But you have to remember, when you say popular figure, it's 24-7 on every channel, Putin, Putin, Putin, Putin, and nothing. else. So people are just brainwashed. I mean, in America, you know, even it, you can turn the
Starting point is 00:25:00 channel. You don't have to hear about Trump all the time. Right. Interesting. Okay. Mother Russia. Let's talk about Russia itself. I love Russia. And I love the Russian people. And I look at Russia the way I look at Germany when Hitler came to power. And I'm terrified at watching the way Russian people are falling for this and becoming brutish. Yeah, I mean, I love the Russian people, too. It breaks my heart to watch this happen. But your book is phenomenal. I give you a lot of credit.
Starting point is 00:25:32 You're a survivor Firestone, okay? You managed to, maybe that name Firestone, there's a reason for that name. You can survive fire and stoning. Okay. God bless you. I guess I would, you're going to write another book? Is this true? What's your next thing you're going to do before we walk out of here?
Starting point is 00:25:51 I do want to write another book. One not so centered on Russia, one centered on the, the crazy childhood, the mobsters, and the stories in Russia that were amazing, but just didn't move this particular narrative along. Oh, and I do intend to take $300 billion from Russia and give it to Ukraine. Okay, well, look, we hope that happens. But you're still practicing law, right? I am practicing law, yes. And you're back here in New York? No, actually, now I'm in London. London. Okay, well, good. Hopefully we'll have a beer someday. The title of this book is Rule of Lies. It's written by Jameson Firestone.
Starting point is 00:26:26 It's a bestseller and you've got to pick it up and read it. And I'm going to watch the Netflix or you tell me HBO Mac special. It's coming out for sure. The book is that good. Thank you so much for joining us today on Open Book. Thank you so much.

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