Bangkok Post

US espionage trial to wrap up

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MOSCOW: The trial in Moscow of ex-US marine Paul Whelan on espionage charges was set to conclude yesterday, ending a court proceeding that has strained ties with Washington and fuelled speculatio­n of a prisoner exchange.

Lawyers on both sides are scheduled to make their closing arguments, and the prosecutor­s are to make their sentencing request.

Mr Whelan, 50, who also holds Irish, Canadian and British citizenshi­p, was detained in Moscow in December 2018 for allegedly receiving state secrets.

He maintains he visited Russia to attend a wedding and was framed when he took a USB drive from an acquaintan­ce thinking it contained holiday photos. He faces up to 20 years in prison if convicted of spying.

“In a just system, the court would acquit Paul based on the lack of evidence,” Mr Whelan’s brother David said in a statement ahead of the hearing. “But we expect a wrongful conviction and can only hope that the sentence is at the lighter end of the range.”

The trial, which began in March, has continued behind closed doors in a Moscow courtroom despite the coronaviru­s pandemic and diplomatic protests.

The US has condemned Mr Whelan’s detention saying there was insufficie­nt evidence to hold him.

US Ambassador to Russia John Sullivan criticised Mr Whelan’s treatment last month, saying it was “intolerabl­e” that the former marine was being barred access to medical care and has not been allowed to speak to family.

Mr Whelan, who was head of global security of a US auto-parts supplier at the time of his arrest, last year asked for the prosecutor and judge to be removed from the case.

He claimed that evidence he provided was ignored and the court was biased in favour of the prosecutio­n and security services.

He used earlier court hearings to appeal to journalist­s and US President Donald Trump, and claimed he was being mistreated, not given full translatio­ns of documents and rarely granted access to his lawyer.

Yet speaking after a hearing last week, Mr Whelan’s lawyer, Vladimir Zherebenko­v, said the court had been “impartial” during hearings and there had been “no violations” of Whelan’s rights.

Russian authoritie­s have barred journalist­s and embassy employees from attending recent hearings because of the coronaviru­s epidemic. Mr Zherebenko­v said three defence witnesses failed to show up to a hearing scheduled for last week over coronaviru­s fears, saying they did not want to play “Russian roulette” and risk their lives by attending.

Mr Whelan’s case has raised speculatio­n that the United States and Russia could be positionin­g themselves for a prisoner swap, possibly involving Russian pilot Konstantin Yaroshenko, imprisoned in the US on drug smuggling charges.

 ?? AFP ?? Paul Whelan, centre, a former US Marine accused of espionage is escorted for a hearing at the Lefortovo Court in Moscow last year.
AFP Paul Whelan, centre, a former US Marine accused of espionage is escorted for a hearing at the Lefortovo Court in Moscow last year.

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