Las Vegas Review-Journal

Russians to meet with accused spy

Embassy officials blast arrest as overreacti­on

- By Angela Charlton The Associated Press

MOSCOW — Russian Embassy officials were to meet Thursday with a Siberian gun rights activist jailed in Washington on charges of spying on the United States, as Moscow blasted the arrest as “anti-russian hysteria.”

The embassy said in a Facebook post that consular officials will meet with Maria Butina for the first time since her Sunday arrest, and will provide her “all necessary help.”

Butina, 29, denies wrongdoing, and the Russian government claims the arrest was driven by U.S. domestic politics and an overall anti-russian mood.

U.S. federal prosecutor­s accuse Butina of being a covert Russian agent, having contacts with the KGB successor agency FSB, and using sex and deception to forge influentia­l U.S. connection­s.

Court documents released at her hearing Wednesday outlined ways Butina allegedly worked covertly to establish back-channel lines of communicat­ion to the Kremlin and infiltrate U.S. political organizati­ons, including the National Rifle Associatio­n.

Her father, Valery Butin, said the family has been unable to speak to Butina since her arrest, according to the TASS news agency.

Butina grew up in a modest apartment building in the Siberian city of Barnaul, closer to the Mongolian and Kazakh borders than Moscow.

One of her former teachers told The Associated Press that Butina initially thought she would follow her father’s footsteps as an entreprene­ur, and opened a string of furniture stores.

But she developed an appetite for high-level politics after going to a special camp for young political hopefuls run by the pro-kremlin United Russia party, said Konstantin Emeshin, founder of the School of Real Politics in Barnaul, where Butina got her first degree.

“She came back inspired, having met lots of people,” he said.

Butina later moved to Moscow, started a gun-rights group, and then moved to the United States where she got a graduate degree in May from American University. U.S. prosecutor­s say her studies were a cover for her covert activities.

Emeshin said that Butina was considerin­g a job in Silicon Valley after graduation, and told him she felt herself “at a crossroads.”

 ?? Dana Verkoutere­n ?? The Associated Press This courtroom sketch depicts Maria Butina, a 29-year-old gun-rights activist suspected of being a covert Russian agent, listening to Assistant U.S. AttorneyEr­ik Kenerson as he speaks to Judge Deborah Robinson, left, during a hearing Wednesday in federal court in Washington.
Dana Verkoutere­n The Associated Press This courtroom sketch depicts Maria Butina, a 29-year-old gun-rights activist suspected of being a covert Russian agent, listening to Assistant U.S. AttorneyEr­ik Kenerson as he speaks to Judge Deborah Robinson, left, during a hearing Wednesday in federal court in Washington.

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