San Diego Union-Tribune

WNBA STAR GRINER GOES ON TRIAL IN RUSSIA

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American basketball star Brittney Griner went on trial in Russia on Friday, in a case that supporters say has turned one of her sport’s most decorated players into a wartime hostage of the Kremlin — a symbolical­ly potent pawn as Russia looks for ways to push back against U.S. support for Ukraine.

Griner, 31, arrived in court in Khimki, outside Moscow, in a Jimi Hendrix T-shirt, more than four months after being detained in a Moscow airport for carrying what Russian officials said were vape cartridges bearing traces of hash oil in her luggage. The trial was quickly adjourned to Thursday after some witnesses failed to show up.

Griner — a seven-time WNBA All-Star, two-time Olympic gold medalist and the first openly gay athlete signed to an endorsemen­t contract by Nike — had come to Russia to play for a profession­al basketball team in the Urals, a way to supplement her income in the U.S. league’s off-season. But her arrest Feb. 17 — a week before the start of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — pulled her into the maw of geopolitic­s as President Vladimir Putin faced down a determined American-led Western effort to help Ukraine fight back against the Russian assault.

After attending the court session, Elizabeth Rood, the chargé d’affaires at the U.S. Embassy in Moscow, told reporters that she had spoken with Griner.

“She is doing as well as can be expected in these difficult circumstan­ces and asked me to convey that she is in good spirits and is keeping up the faith,” Rood said.

“The Russian Federation has wrongfully detained Ms. Griner,” she said, adding, “the U.S. government at the very highest levels is working very hard to bring Ms. Griner as well as all wrongfully detained U.S. citizens safely home.”

Secretary of State Antony Blinken wrote on Twitter that he and the department “have no higher priority than bringing her and other wrongfully detained Americans” back home.

The Kremlin on Friday denied that the drug charges against Griner were politicall­y motivated. Dmitri S. Peskov, the Kremlin’s spokespers­on, told a news conference that “the famous athlete was detained with illegal drugs that contained narcotic substances.”

“Only the court can pass a verdict,” he said, insisting the Kremlin had nothing to do with the case.

 ?? ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO AP ?? WNBA star Brittney Griner is escorted to a courtroom for a hearing in Khimki, Russia, on Friday.
ALEXANDER ZEMLIANICH­ENKO AP WNBA star Brittney Griner is escorted to a courtroom for a hearing in Khimki, Russia, on Friday.

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