Miami Herald

U.S. files war-crime charges against Russians accused of torturing an American in Ukraine

- BY LINDSAY WHITEHURST AND ERIC TUCKER Associated Press

WASHINGTON

Four Russian men accused of torturing an American during the invasion of Ukraine have been charged with war crimes in a first-of-its-kind case, the Justice Department announced on Wednesday.

It is the first prosecutio­n against members of the Russian armed forces in connection with atrocities during Moscow’s war against Ukraine and it is the first time the Justice Department has brought charges under a nearly 30-year-old statute that makes it a crime to subject an American to torture or inhumane treatment during a war.

The charges are largely symbolic for now, given the unlikely prospects of the department bringing any of the four defendants, who are fugitives, into custody. But U.S. officials described the case as a history-making moment in their investigat­ion into Russian war crimes. More charges could be coming.

“This is our first, and you should expect more,” Attorney General General Merrick Garland said at a news conference.

He said the American people and their government have a long memory. “We will not forget the atrocities in Ukraine. And we will never stop working to bring those responsibl­e to justice,” the nation’s top law enforcemen­t official said.

The four Russians are identified as members of the Russian armed forces or its proxy units. Two are described as commanding officers.

The Russians are accused of kidnapping an American man from his home in a Ukrainian village in 2022. The American was beaten and interrogat­ed while being held for 10 days at a Russian military compound, before eventually being evacuated with his wife, who’s Ukrainian, U.S. authoritie­s said.

The American told federal agents who had traveled to Ukraine last year as part of an investigat­ion that the Russian soldiers had abducted him, stripped him naked, pointed a gun at his head and badly beaten him, Homeland Security Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas said.

He was also subjected to harsh interrogat­ion methods, threatened with sexual assault and forced to participat­e in his own mock execution, according to a fivecount indictment unsealed Wednesday in the Eastern District of Virginia.

“The evidence gathered by our agents speaks to the brutality, criminalit­y, and depravity of Russia’s invasion,” Mayorkas said.

 ?? MARK SCHIEFELBE­IN AP ?? Attorney General Merrick Garland said Wednesday in Washington: ‘We will not forget the atrocities in Ukraine. And we will never stop working to bring those responsibl­e to justice.’
MARK SCHIEFELBE­IN AP Attorney General Merrick Garland said Wednesday in Washington: ‘We will not forget the atrocities in Ukraine. And we will never stop working to bring those responsibl­e to justice.’

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