Nataliya Magnitskaya said she was only allowed to visit him once at Butyrskaya during his 11-month imprisonment and found him emaciated and exhausted. On Nov. 17, as she brought him a parcel of food, officials told her he had died 12 hours earlier.
"Living conditions here are worse than anywhere I've been before," read one of Magnitsky's letters, postmarked Aug. 13. The prison is a 30-minute drive from his home, but it took two months to arrive, she said.
Prison censors blotted out a few phrases in some letters -- but they are still legible. In one of those passages, Magnitsky describes prison walks: inmates were taken to a small concrete courtyard with no grass or trees.
She said Magnitsky "wasn't asking for some luxury. ... He was merely asking for what he was entitled to."
"He was so young. I still can't believe he's dead," said the 57-year-old teacher, standing in a frigid Moscow park. She has been living with Magnitsky's wife and sons, ages 8 and 17, during most of his detention.



Thank very much for bringing up this terrible murder. I hope a moment will come to hold the thugs who seized power ftom the Russian people accountable for everything they committed. The more people will be aware of what's nowadays Russia looks like the more hope for better change. That's why I decided to start my own blog about the critical news from Russia and Eurasia.