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5 Aug, 2024 12:24

WATCH ex-US Marine accept secret data before arrest in Russia

Recently released American Paul Whelan was accused of gathering data on FSB operatives

RT has obtained an exclusive video of the arrest of ex-US Marine Paul Whelan in a sting operation several years ago, in which he is seen illegally acquiring what appears to be a flash drive containing classified data.

The clip, which was released on Monday and dates back to December 2018, was filmed at Moscow’s Metropol Hotel, where Whelan met with an undercover agent from Russia’s Federal Security Service (FSB). The video shows the two meeting in a bathroom, with the man handing a USB stick to Whelan.

He is then placed under guard by law enforcement officers and later escorted into custody. At the time, the FSB accused Whelan of trying to obtain dossiers on the agency’s agents. He later denied any wrongdoing, insisting that he thought the USB drive contained church pictures and that he was being persecuted because his acquaintance in the FSB had been reluctant to return a loan of around $1,100.

While US officials declared Whelan “wrongfully detained,” the ex-Marine was convicted in 2020 and sentenced to 16 years in prison on espionage charges. Last week, he was released as part of the biggest prisoner swap deal between Russia and the West since the end of the Cold War. A total of 26 prisoners were released, with Russia retrieving ten people in exchange for 16 people sent to the West – 12 to Germany and four to the US.

Apart from Whelan and several Russian opposition figures, another prominent prisoner who was freed was Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich. He was also sentenced to 16 years on espionage charges.

Russia secured the release of Vadim Krasikov, an intelligence operative who was sentenced by a German court for allegedly killing Zelimkhan Khangoshvili, a Chechen separatist with Georgian citizenship, in a Berlin park in 2019. Some of the evidence against Krasikov was provided by German magazine Der Spiegel, US government-funded website Bellingcat, and Russian opposition outlet The Insider.

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