Mr Khodorkovsky has behind bars since his arrest in October 2003
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A Russian judge has adjourned midway in her verdict in the trial of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, with his lawyers admitting a guilty verdict was likely.
Earlier, Reuters news agency reported that the ex-Yukos boss had been found guilty on four out of seven charges of tax evasion and fraud.
But lawyers insisted the judge had only reiterated the indictments, a process that could take days.
The hearing, the end of an 11-month trial, is due to resume on Tuesday.
"In the hour that the judge has been talking, it is clear that the verdict is guilty," said defence lawyer Yuri Schmidt outside the court on Monday.
He said the judge was "completely following the conclusions of the prosecution".
'Political trial'
Mr Khodorkovsky, who faces up to 10 years in jail, has branded the charges as trumped up to "plunder" Yukos.
Mr Khodorkovsky has always proclaimed his innocence and has refused to ask the court for leniency.
Whatever the eventual verdicts in this case, Mr Khodorkovsky can expect to fight another legal battle soon.
Prosecutors said on Friday that he would face new charges of money laundering "to the tune of billions of roubles".
The new charges will also be brought against Platon Lebedev, who is Mr Khodorkovsky's business associate and co-accused in the tax fraud case.
Many analysts say the current trial is politically motivated and that Mr Khodorkovsky is being punished for his political ambition.
Before he was arrested by Russian authorities in October 2003, he had angered the Kremlin by starting to fund opposition political parties.
"Essentially the trial itself was not a trial, the investigation was not an investigation. This is state-sanctioned theft," said another member of his defence team, Robert Amsterdam, speaking on BBC Radio's Today Programme on Monday.
He said Mr Khodorkovsky's lawyers are planning to appeal and may look outside Russia to "other courts and other jurisdictions".
Kremlin push
President Putin recently tried to reassure foreign investors who were unnerved by Mr Khodorkovsky's arrest, and by the forced auction of Yukos' main production unit to settle tax bills in a string of separate cases against his former company.
Mr Putin's annual state-of-the-nation speech defended state ownership in sensitive sectors of the economy, whilst promising clearer ground rules for investors.
Mr Khodorkovsky has been in prison since October 2003 and during that time, the state has pursued Yukos for $27.5bn (£15bn) in back taxes.
When Yukos could not pay this last year, its main oil producing subsidiary Yuganskneftegas was forcibly sold off, ending up in the hands of Russian state oil firm Rosneft.
Rosneft is now suing Yukos - on behalf of Yugansk - for a total of $13bn in unpaid taxes, unpaid oil supplies and lost profits.
On Friday, a Moscow court upheld a $2.2bn claim by Rosneft against Yukos for not paying Yugansk for certain oil supplies.
Some commentators believe Rosneft may push for Yukos to go into bankruptcy as a precursor to enabling the Kremlin to take control of Yukos' remaining assets.
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