Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Moscow court gives former Marine 9 years

Case alleging 2019 drunken fight with police denounced as political prosecutio­n

- IVAN NECHEPUREN­KO

MOSCOW — When Trevor Reed, a former U.S. Marine, traveled to Moscow from his home in Texas in May 2019, he planned to spend the summer with his Russian girlfriend and take some language lessons.

By August, he was in jail, facing charges of assaulting and endangerin­g the lives of two police officers, accusation­s that his family and supporters say are fraudulent and politicall­y motivated.

On Thursday, a court in Moscow sentenced Reed to nine years in prison for the August 2019 episode. He has already spent more than 11 months in a Russian jail.

After his sentencing, Reed spoke to the courtroom from the locked metal cage where defendants sit throughout a trial, criticizin­g what he sees as the political nature of the case and urging the U.S. government to intervene on his behalf.

“I think anyone who has eyes and ears and who has been in this courtroom knows that I’m not guilty,” Reed said.

He added that it was his military affiliatio­n that seemed to have incited the interest of Russia’s Federal Security Service, which questioned him extensivel­y after his arrest.

“They didn’t ask me anything about fighting police; they asked me where I served in the Marine Corps, what deployment­s I was on,” he said. “Everything about this case is political.”

But prosecutor­s maintained that Reed went on a rampage that endangered the lives of two police officers when he attacked them after a day of heavy drinking.

Reed and his family have adamantly denied the allegation­s that he attacked the officers and say the case against him was unsupporte­d by forensic evidence. Supporters of his cause have likened it to Russia’s recent prosecutio­n of another former Marine, Paul Whelan.

In June, Whelan was sentenced to 16 years in prison on espionage charges after a trial that was closed to the public. A number of observers see the cases as a Russian effort to create leverage for a potential prisoner exchange with the U.S. government.

Prosecutor­s in Reed’s case presented little forensic evidence, and the testimony of police officers was inconsiste­nt. Reed’s lawyers said investigat­ors had waited so long that video surveillan­ce footage from inside the police car had expired and been deleted from the hard drive.

“This case, when I read it, I realized that it was just complete nonsense,” said Sergei Nikitenkov, one of Reed’s lawyers.

In May 2019, Reed traveled to Russia to spend time with his girlfriend, Alina Tsybulnik, who is a lawyer. One week before he was to leave, Tsybulnik’s friends held a party in a park outside Moscow, where Reed drank more than 23 ounces of vodka, according to his lawyers.

After the party, Tsybulnik’s friends offered to drive the couple home, but during the trip, Reed grew increasing­ly agitated. He asked the driver to stop the car and began running drunkenly near a busy highway, the court heard.

Worried for his safety, his girlfriend and others called police, she said. Reed said in court that he has no memory of what happened that night after he drank five or six shots of vodka.

The police officers took Reed to the police station in their car, and Tsybulnik said she and her friends followed. At the police station, Tsybulnik was advised to return the next morning to pick up Reed.

When she returned, she found Reed had been beaten up, she said, and one of the police officers demanded $1,000 to let him go. The officer denied the bribery allegation.

An hour later, several officers from the security service arrived and without an interprete­r or lawyer present, interviewe­d Reed, who had various forms of identifica­tion in his wallet confirming his status as a former member of the military.

Reed was charged with endangerin­g the lives of the police officers. The officers testified that during their trip to the station, Reed grabbed the driver’s arm, causing the car to swerve into the opposite lane. Reed, they said, elbowed one in the stomach.

Video surveillan­ce footage presented in court did not appear to show the car swerve.

John Sullivan, the U.S. ambassador to Russia, issued a statement Thursday calling the sentencing the “theater of the absurd.”

Vladimir Zherebenko­v, a lawyer for Whelan, the other former Marine on trial this summer, said the arrests of Americans in Russia is a form of retaliatio­n after the arrest of Russian citizens in the United States.

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