WSJ reporter Evan Gershkovich and ex-Marine Paul Whelan are dramatically RELEASED by Russia as part of major prisoner swap with US
Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich and former U.S. marine Paul Whelan have been dramatically released from jail in Russia.
The men were let go as part of a major inmate swap with Moscow, said to involve around 20 to 30 prisoners.
Gershkovich, 32, was detained in March 2023 on espionage charges that the United States says are illegitimate. He was sentenced to 16 years in prison in July.
Whelan, 54, has been imprisoned in Russia since 2018 and was sentenced to 16 years in jail in 2020 on spying charges.
The US has denied he was ever involved in espionage operations.
Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich has been released from prison in Russia
Former US marine Paul Whelan has also been released as part of the major prisoner swap
Vladimir Kara-Murza, a Russian-British dissident journalist also jailed in Russia, was also reported to have disappeared from view, prompting speculation he is among those released.
Kara-Murza, 42, was arrested in April 2022 just hours after a CNN interview was broadcast in which he stated Russia was run by a ‘regime of murderers’.
He was sentenced to 25 years in a Siberian jail in a tiny punishment cell just ten feet long and five feet wide.
Four Russians detained in the US on charges including cyber crime, smuggling and money laundering were thought to possibly be part of the exchange – although their names have not yet been made public.
The Moscow Times reported the individuals recently disappeared from the federal inmates’ database in America.
The Kremlin has previously pushed for the release of convicted assassin Vadim Krasikov in previous prisoner swaps, raising speculation that he could be among those freed.
It comes after Slovenian broadcaster, N1 Slovenia, reported on a possible deal being struck earlier this week.
The reports cited an exchange including the US, Germany, Russia and Belarus.
Gershkovich, seen during happier times, was detained in March 2023 on espionage charges that the United States says are illegitimate. He was sentenced to 16 years in prison in July
Whelan, a corporate security executive from Michigan, was arrested in 2018 in Moscow, where he was attending a friend’s wedding
If the claims of up to 30 prisoners being exchanged are true, it would be the largest prisoner swap between the United States and Russia since the end of the Cold War.
According to the anonymous source cited by the Moscow Times, Russian authorities have made ‘great efforts to keep the information inside Russia as much a secret as possible until the last moment.’
The developments came as recently as Wednesday, when Kremlin military aircraft reportedly flew to isolated regions in Russia where political prisoners are being held.
The US government has repeatedly stated its commitment to freeing both men, who they say were wrongfully detained.
The son of Soviet emigres who settled in New Jersey, Gershkovich was fluent in Russian and moved to Russia in 2017 to work for The Moscow Times newspaper before being hired by the WSJ in 2022.
He was the first US journalist arrested on spying charges in Russia since the Cold War.
Russian prosecutors alleged that Gershkovich had gathered secret information on the orders of the US Central Intelligence Agency about a company that manufactures tanks for Moscow’s war in Ukraine, which he and his employer denied.
Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich stands listening to the verdict in a glass cage of a courtroom inside the building of ‘Palace of justice,’ in Yekaterinburg, Russia, on Friday, July 19, 2024
To mark the one-year anniversary of his arrest, the Wall Street Journal published a powerful blank page with the headline: ‘His Story Should Be Here’
Officers of the FSB security service arrested him on March 29, 2023, at a steakhouse in Yekaterinburg, 900 miles east of Moscow. He had since been held in Moscow’s Lefortovo prison.
Whelan, a corporate security executive from Michigan, was arrested in 2018 in Moscow, where he was attending a friend’s wedding.
He maintains his innocence, saying the charges were fabricated.
Details about the conditions both men have been facing behind bars are scant and in recent days, Whelan’s lawyer said she had lost track of where he was being housed.
His family previously told how he had been attacked in prison at the remote IK-17 camp in Mordovia by an inmate who allegedly punched him in his face and broke his glasses.
US officials have repeatedly accused Russia of using Gershkovich and Whelan as bargaining chips for a possible prisoner exchange.
Vladimir Kara-Murza, a Russian-British dissident journalist also jailed in Russia, was also reported to have disappeared from view, prompting speculation he is among those released
Russia previously pushed for the release of former Federal Security Service (FSB) colonel Krasikov in prisoner negotiations around the release of US basketball star Brittney Griner, who was detained on drug possession charges.
Krasikov was convicted of gunning down a Georgia-born Chechen separatist in broad daylight in a central Berlin park in June 2019.
He rode up to his victim on a bicycle and executed him in Berlin’s Kleine Tiergarten park in December 2021. A German court called it a ‘state-contracted killing.’
Griner was ultimately released in exchange for arms dealer Viktor Bout.