An exiled investment banker who became a fierce critic of Vladimir Putin after leaving Russia has died in Washington DC, police have confirmed.
Latvian-American Dan Rapoport, 52, was found in front of the upmarket 2400 M Apartment building in Georgetown shortly before 6pm on Sunday by officers responding to reports of a jumper, the Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) told The Independent in a statement.
Mr Rapoport was given first aid at the scene by ambulance staff and taken to hospital where he was later pronounced dead.
MPD spokesperson Brianna Burch said Mr Rapoport’s death remained under active investigation.
“We do not suspect foul play at this time,” she said.
A police report provided to The Independent showed Mr Rapoport had a cracked mobile phone, eye glasses, a Florida driver’s license and $2620 (£2,200) in cash on him when he died.
News of his death was revealed in a post on Telegram by the former editor of Russian Tatler magazine.
Yuniya Pugacheva claimed that Mr Rapoport’s dog was found in park near his Washington DC home with a suicide note and money.
However his widow Alena Rapoport has reportedly denied her husband took his own life.
She told Russian news service RBC that an investigation was underway into his death, and there were “no notes, no suicide”.
“To our great regret, the husband and father of our daughter is no longer with us,” she was quoted as telling RBC.
Ms Rapoport, a Ukrainian virologist, also refuted other claims made by Ms Pugacheva that she had split from her husband and he had been in London “in the company of young girls”.
After leaving Russia in 2012 over his support for pro-democracy activist Alexei Navalny, Mr Rapoport purchased a property in the Kalorama district of Washington DC.
He later sold the property to Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump when they moved to the US capital to take up senior adviser positions in Donald Trump’s administration in January 2017.
Mr Rapoport moved to Kyiv, Ukraine, after selling the property, where he met his wife Alena.
“Dan evacuated us from Kyiv and returned there himself to help my country,” Alena Rapoport reportedly told RBC. “Then we were supposed to meet in the USA.”
Bill Browder, a prominent Putin critic, wrote on Twitter that his death was “very upsetting news”.
“He was one of the first Moscow-based financiers I knew who publicly supported Alexei Navalny. RIP Dan.”
Mr Rapoport was born in Latvia when it was still part of the Soviet Union and in 1980 his family were granted political asylum in the US.
He studied at the University of Houston before moving to Russia in the 1990s to work in the finance and gas industries.
He co-owned a popular Moscow night club The Soho Rooms for a period.
Mr Rapoport left Russia in 2012 reportedly due to his support for Mr Navalny, who is serving a nine-year prison term after returning to his home country in January 2021.