The Providence Journal

RI fugitive is believed to have joined Russian troops

- Mark Reynolds Providence Journal USA TODAY NETWORK

WARWICK − The case of a former Massachuse­tts city councilor who was accused of fleeing the country to escape prosecutio­n in Rhode Island has taken a wild turn amid media reports that he went to Russia and helped Vladimir Putin’s invading forces capture a key Ukrainian stronghold in eastern Ukraine.

The path of Wilmer Puello-Mota, a 28-year-old who had served in the U.S. Air Force, has been the focus of internatio­nal news reports over the past week.

The Guardian reported that it appeared Puello-Mota fought as a volunteer alongside Russian troops during their capture of a Ukrainian town, Avdiivka, in February.

Blurry footage circulated on the internet that month by Russian pro-war channels showed a man in fatigues, planting a U.S. flag in the city’s ruins, says the April 5 report.

On Wednesday, the Associated Press reported a similar scene.

The AP also quoted a former colleague, David K. Bartley, who was on the Holyoke City Council with Puello-Mota.

Bartley told the AP a person in another video from Russia, which is clearer and was posted more recently, looks and sounds like Puello-Mota.

He confirmed the report in an interview.

The AP verified a particular Russian town as the location of the video that appears to show Puello-Mota entering a building, according to the AP report, which also says a plaque identifies the building as a military recruitmen­t center under the Russian Defense Ministry.

The same report attributes some quotes to Puello-Mota: “Obviously it’s a difficult situation. It’s war. It’s a special military operation.”

“I definitely would do it again,” is another quote.

“That’s Will,” said Bartley who acknowledg­ed that the situation is” shocking” and unexpected based on his own past experience­s with the former councilor.

“No question,” he said.

In Superior Court, Warwick, last month, Special Assistant Attorney General John C. Malloy filed a motion that says prosecutor­s received photos and videos “purporting” to be the defendant in Russia and Ukraine.

Prosecutor­s could not verify that Puello-Mota is the man in the photos and videos, says Malloy’s motion.

But if the imagery is accurate, it says, Puello-Mota is “well beyond the jurisdicti­on of this court.”

“… if false,” it says, “the defendant is engaged in an elaborate ruse to conceal his whereabout­s.”

Warwick police encounter Holyoke councilor

The origins of the case date back to May 2020, when Puello-Mota called Warwick dispatcher­s, according to police reports.

Puello-Mota told the dispatcher­s that some people had barged into his room at the Radisson Hotel on Post Road and stolen a safe that contained his Beretta 9mm pistol.

During their response to the hotel, Warwick police learned that Puello-Mota, a member of the U.S. Air Force, had been in the presence of a 17-year-old girl in the hotel room, according to police reports.

The teen told police she had met Puello-Mota on a website months before, and he had told her he was willing to be her “sugar daddy,” according to her hand-written statement.

She told police that Puello-Mota had offered her money for videos and pictures, the report says, adding that she mentioned that she and Puella-Mota had met on two previous occasions.

She went on to tell police that on this visit, they had argued, police say. Her friends heard the argument and came into the room.

She also told police that Puello-Mota had offered her money in exchange for sexually explicit images, says the report.

Puello-Mota, it says, denied asking for or possessing such images.

He told police that the safe, which contained his wallet, the gun, ammunition and $1,000 in cash, was missing after the intrusion of the young men.

An examinatio­n of Puello-Mota’s phone found sexually explicit images of the girl in a trash folder, the report says.

At that point in 2020, Puello-Mota was a member of the Massachuse­tts Air National Guard.

He had joined the Air Force in 2003, and he served in Afghanista­n at one point.

In 2019, he had joined the Guard. He worked as a Security Forces airman with the 104th Fighter Wing.

The Warwick police investigat­ion continued into September 2020, when Puello-Mota was arrested and charged with possession of child pornograph­y.

In 2022, Puello-Mota was accused of obstructio­n of the judicial system as well as forgery and counterfei­ting.

Puello-Mota held the rank of technical sergeant when the charges against him ended his Guard service in 2022, according to a spokesman for the Guard, Donald Veitch, who called the charges “very serious” on Friday.

The defendant had been expected to plea in the cases on Jan. 5, according to a bail violation drafted by prosecutor­s.

He asked for an extension to Jan. 9, it says.

On Jan. 7, he boarded a Turkish Airlines flight in Washington, D.C., and flew to Istanbul.

“His whereabout­s from that location are unknown,” the violation says. “The defendant did not have permission from this court to travel.”

John M. Cicilline is Puello-Mota’s lawyer.

 ?? GENYA SAVILOV/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES ?? A Ukrainian serviceman of the 47th Mechanized Brigade prepares for combat in a Bradley fighting vehicle, not far from Avdiivka, in the Donetsk region, on Feb. 11, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
GENYA SAVILOV/AFP VIA GETTY IMAGES A Ukrainian serviceman of the 47th Mechanized Brigade prepares for combat in a Bradley fighting vehicle, not far from Avdiivka, in the Donetsk region, on Feb. 11, amid the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States