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Bellingcat investigator: I “set my own boundaries”

Russia’s “most wanted” journalist lays out his rules for when it is acceptable to break privacy law

Christo Grozev of the investigative journalism group Bellingcat has spoken to HARDtalk about the methods he uses to expose government-mandated crimes. Grozev admits to paying “out of my own pocket” for Russian personal data, but insists that “this breach of privacy laws is overridden by the public interest”.

Speaking to Stephen Sackur, Grozev explained that he had set his own “boundaries and rules of when it is acceptable” to pay for data on the Russian black market. He only does so when he believes there is strong evidence of a “government-perpetrated crime” because there is currently a “gap in the legal system” for holding such crimes accountable. His previous investigations have included identifying the assassins behind the poisonings of Alexei Navalny in Russia and Sergei and Yulia Skripal in Salisbury.

Bellingcat’s lead Russia investigator denied that he or the organisation had ever conducted hacking themselves, but acknowledged that “we've used hacked material that has been provided”. He noted that a court in Germany had accepted his evidence, despite infraction of Russian law, because “there's an overriding public interest when we talk about government mandated assassination.”

Having been declared a “wanted” man by Russia in December, Bulgarian journalist Grozev was forced to leave his home in Vienna because of concerns for his safety. He is currently living in the United States where he has been promoting the Oscar-winning documentary Navalny, in which he features heavily. The Kremlin denies involvement in the various crimes which Bellingcat has accused it of.

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3 minutes