Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Dual U.S. citizen jailed in Moscow

Returned to Russia, American adoptee facing drug charges

- ROBYN DIXON Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Natalia Abbakumova of The Washington Post.

RIGA, Latvia — Russian authoritie­s have arrested a 32-year-old Russian-U.S. citizen on drug charges, the Moscow court press service reported Tuesday.

The dual citizen, Robert Romanov Woodland, was born in Russia, adopted as a toddler by an American couple and returned to live in Russia in 2020. He was detained Friday, according to a statement by the Ostankinsk­y District Court in Moscow, and ordered jailed until March 5 on charges of “illegal acquisitio­n, storage, transporta­tion, manufactur­e, processing of narcotic drugs.”

Romanov Woodland worked as an English teacher, according to a Facebook profile bearing his name and birth date. He was adopted as an orphan from Perm by the American couple, Marcia and David Woodland, when he was 2 years old in 1993, he told the Moscow newspaper Komsomolsk­aya Pravda in December 2020.

He said his name at birth was Roman Romanov and that his birth date was Dec. 7, 1991. He moved permanentl­y back to Russia in 2020, according to the Facebook profile and the newspaper interview.

“The truth is that I am not an American at all, but a Russian,” the newspaper quoted him as saying.

The U.S. State Department has accused Russian authoritie­s of improperly detaining two Americans in Russia. Evan Gershkovic­h, 33, a Wall Street Journal reporter, was arrested last year and accused of spying. Paul Whelan, 53, a security consultant, was jailed in 2018 and convicted of spying and sentenced to a 16-year prison term in 2020. Both men and the State Department have strongly denied the charges.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said last month that Russian and U.S. officials were engaged in talks over Gershkovic­h but denied reports that Moscow had rejected an offer to free him. White House National Security Council spokesman John Kirby has said talks were underway.

The State Department did not immediatel­y comment on Romanov Woodland’s arrest.

Russian Telegram media outlet MASH, reported that the case against Woodland Romanov is related to illegal drug production, carrying a possible term of up to 20 years in prison.

Romanov Woodland told Komsomolsk­aya Pravda that his parents, American scientists, adopted him after seeing a video of him playing in the orphanage and that they loved him and an adopted sister “very much.” After college, he got a job washing dishes in a hospital kitchen.

He tracked down his birth mother, Galina Romanova, with his adoptive parents’ support and was reunited with her on a Russian state television program. He returned briefly to the United States before moving back to Russia permanentl­y. He told Komsomolsk­aya Pravda that he missed his American family and phoned them often.

In August 2021, according to an Instagram profile in his name linked to the Facebook profile, he received a Russian passport. In 2022, when Russia mobilized more than 300,000 men to fight in Ukraine, Romanov Woodland posted a message to family and friends on Facebook saying that he did not support the war but that if mobilized, “I will not turn away.”

According to the Facebook profile, Romanov Woodland attended Saranac Lake Senior High School in northern New York state and Massanutte­n Military Academy in Virginia and worked as a prep cook at Dillon Dam Brewery in 2020 before moving to Russia.

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