Absolutely.
First of all, I agree with your point entirely about the business climate in Russia, and with any chance I have I'm telling people that it's essentially Russian roulette; that there might be six chambers that are empty, but with the seventh one you'll blow your head off, if you've crossed the wrong people or you have something they want.
So I would encourage everybody I come across not to invest in Russia, because of the level of danger—not just financial danger, but physical danger—which is untenable for any civilized person to be involved with. People try to cover it up and people try to make it as if there aren't these problems.
And most people don't talk about it; people are afraid to talk about it. I've been threatened on eight different occasions with death for doing what I'm doing, but it's important that I talk about it. The fact that other people don't talk about it doesn't mean it doesn't exist.
Coming to the specifics of the law, I have spoken with Professor Cotler and have asked him whether we can take what's being done in the U.S. and modify it, based on whatever the circumstances are of your legislative process, and put in place something that is the same or similar, which makes this point: they may choose not to prosecute evil wrongdoers in Russia who have done this thing, but there's no reason why we should grant them the luxury of entering our civilized countries, spending their money in our countries.
The way the Justice for Sergei Magnitsky Act of 2010 works is very simply that it will be a law that will require the State Department to come up with a list of the people for whom they believe there's evidence of involvement in the fraud that Sergei Magnitsky exposed and in his false arrest, his torture, and his death.
Because there's so much documentary evidence in this case—we have the signatures of the doctors who refused him medical treatment, the signature of the investigator who moved him before his operation, the signature of other officials who were involved in raiding the offices—these lists are pretty easy to create. Once the list has been created, then it would be a requirement for the Secretary of State to make a list of these people and for their visas to be permanently cancelled, and all of their relatives and dependants would also have their visas cancelled. So you can't be a torturer and murderer and send your kid to boarding school in Canada or the United States in an ideal world.