Austin American-Statesman

Czechs extradite alleged Russian hacker to U.S.

- By Karel Janicek

The Czech Republic extradited a Russian man to the U.S. to face charges of hacking computers at LinkedIn, Dropbox and other American companies, an official said Friday.

Yevgeniy Nikulin was flown to the U.S. overnight, Justice Ministry spokeswoma­n Tereza Schejbalov­a said.

Nikulin denies he’s a hacker. His defense attorney claimed his case is politicall­y motivated in the U.S.

The decision by Justice Minister Robert Pelikan was announced just minutes after the country’s Constituti­onal Court released a statement that it rejected a last-minute appeal from Nikulin as “groundless.”

No further details were immediatel­y available about the decision in a case that pitted the U.S. against Russia.

The Czechs arrested Nikulin in Prague in cooperatio­n with the FBI in October 2016. He is accused by U.S. prosecutor­s of penetratin­g computers at Silicon Valley firms in 2012, and they want him extradited to face trial.

Russia also wanted him extradited on a separate charge of internet theft in 2009.

Both countries submitted their extraditio­n requests on the same date.

The Russian authoritie­s previously had said they would do all they could to prevent Nikulin’s extraditio­n to the U.S.

Czech courts previously ruled both extraditio­n requests meet the necessary legal conditions, leaving the decision to the justice minister.

But after a last-ditch complaint filed by Nikulin with the country’s Constituti­onal Court, the minister had to hold off on a decision until the court ruled.

Earlier this week, U.S. House Speaker Paul Ryan said in Prague that under Czech extraditio­n law, “we have every reason to believe and expect that Mr. Nikulin will be extradited to America.”

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