The Mercury News Weekend

Russia releases U.S. Navy vet who had been quietly detained

- By Michael Crowley

Russia released a U.S. Navy veteran who had been detained since April in Kaliningra­d, a Russian enclave between Poland and Lithuania, a spokespers­on for his family announced Thursday, marking the second time in just over a month that an American has been freed from Russian custody.

Russian officials allowed Taylor Dudley, a 35-yearold U.S. citizen, to cross the Polish border. Dudley had been held for nine months, the spokespers­on said, although his case was largely unknown to people outside the U.S. government, his family and its advocates.

Dudley was greeted in Poland by an official from the U.S. Embassy in Warsaw and Bill Richardson, a former New Mexico congressma­n and governor who specialize­s in negotiatin­g the freedom of Americans detained overseas.

Dudley was backpackin­g in Europe and had traveled to Poland to attend a music festival, according to the spokespers­on, Jonathan Franks. He said Dudley “at some point crossed the Russian border” into Kaliningra­d. It remained unclear on what charges he was being held.

It was not clear what, if anything, the U.S. might have offered Russia in return for Dudley's freedom, which came less than five weeks after Russia's release of WNBA star Brittney Griner in a prisoner swap with the Biden administra­tion. A spokespers­on for Richardson told CNN, which first reported the news, that no exchange had been made by the United States.

The White House and State Department had no immediate official comment.

“It is significan­t that despite the current environmen­t between our two countries, the Russian authoritie­s did the right thing by releasing Taylor today,” Richardson said in a statement. He said he had been working “discreetly” with Dudley's family for six months on the matter, along with U.S. State Department officials and a Russian business owner close to President Vladimir Putin of Russia, among others.

One White House official, speaking on background because of the sensitivit­y of the matter, credited the work of U.S. officials at embassies in Warsaw and Moscow and said that, out of considerat­ion for the family's privacy, the administra­tion would not provide further details.

 ?? JONATHAN FRANKS ?? Taylor Dudley with his mother, Shelley, after his release in Kaliningra­d between Poland and Lithuania.
JONATHAN FRANKS Taylor Dudley with his mother, Shelley, after his release in Kaliningra­d between Poland and Lithuania.

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