FSB Asks to Keep Whelan Detained

News  |  Feb 20, 2019

Paul Whelan, the American ex-Marine accused by Russia of espionage, could remain in Russian prison for at least another three months. 

NPR:

A court in Moscow had wanted to hold Whelan until Feb. 28, but Russia's Foreign Security Service, or FSB, wants Whelan detained through May 28, the Interfax news agency said, according to Reuters.

The Russian government announced on New Year's Eve that it had detained Whelan on suspicion of receiving classified information in a Moscow hotel. His first public appearance came Jan. 22, when he stood inside a glass-enclosed defendants' cage during a court hearing in Moscow. The judge declined to release him on bail, and he was sent back to his prison cell, NPR's Moscow Correspondent Lucian Kim reported.

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Former CIA officer Dan Hoffman, who once served as Moscow station chief, told NPR's Greg Myre that the Russians are known to plant false evidence. "This has all the hallmarks of a Russian KGB-style setup," he said.

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"He was expecting to see on the flash drive some personal information like pictures or videos, something like that, about that person's previous trips around Russia," Vladimir Zherebenkov told reporters, including The Associated Press. "We don't know how the materials that contain state secrets ended up there."

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Whelan, who was born in Canada to British parents, holds citizenship in the U.S., Britain, Ireland and Canada. Consular officials from each country have visited Whelan in prison. U.S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said in early January that "if the detention is not appropriate, we will demand his immediate return."

But Whelan's family has accused the U.S. government of not doing enough to secure his release. Whelan's brother David told USA Today that the State Department is neglecting Whelan's case and leaving him to "languish" in prison. 

"I'm not aware that the State Department has taken any action to find out information about Paul's arrest nor whether, if they have, they've received anything," he said.

A State Department spokesman told reporters this month that officials were in contact with the Whelan family, and that U.S. embassy personnel in Russia had visited Whelan twice in prison and attended the Jan. 22 court hearing.

Russia Intelligence Seeks To Extend Detention Of Ex-U.S. Marine Accused Of Spying (NPR)