US prosecutors are seeking a 17-year prison sentence for Peter Debbins, the former US Army Green Beret who's pleaded guilty to divulging military secrets to Russia. Debbins “thought that Russia needed to be built up and that America needed to be ‘cut down to size.’”
According to U.S. prosecutors: "Debbins was all-in on the espionage conspiracy before his military career
even began. He signed a statement attesting that he wanted to 'serve Russia' months prior to
starting his active-duty service."
Debbins' defense lawyers, meanwhile, are asking the court for leniency in sentencing. They're also making some unusually (?) prosaic arguments in their memo to the court.
Debbins himself appears to be partly attributing his willingness to work for/with the GRU to ... being gay. 👀
meanwhile, the USG is having nothing of Debbins' pleas for leniency, all but accusing him of lying or being disingenuous, esp. w/r/t/ to his sex proclivities. (i think it's unusual to have another FBI affidavit filed at this late stage).
And the U.S. judge today gives Debbins 15 years in prison for spying for Russia. During today's hearing, Debbins again pleaded for leniency, saying he had been blackmailed: "I have suffered in lonely silence for 25 years...the GRU does not make threats; they keep promises."
full @TheJusticeDept press statement on Debbins' sentencing:
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Vladimir Gusinsky was once one of Russia’s most influential oligarchs. In recent years, he’s been tangled in lawsuits, debt disputes, and legal fights. He’s also drawn scrutiny from the FBI for, among other things, his ties to former FBI special agent Charles McGonigal. 🧵👇
Gusinsky socialized w/ McGonigal; he dined at Gusinsky’s Greenwich, Ct., mansion twice. The two were introduced by Sergei Shestakov, an ex-Russian diplomat who worked as a U.S. court interpreter and ALSO worked for Gusinsky. (Shestakov regularly attended Gusinsky’s birthdays.)
McGonigal and Shestakov were charged in Jan. 2023 with trying to help another oligarch, Oleg Deripaska, evade U.S. sanctions. A month prior, the FBI visited Gusinsky’s Greenwich home, and questioned his wife about the relationships. Gusinsky was not there at the time.
A grocery store (or cafe) in the village of Hroza, near Kupyansk in northeast Ukraine, was hit by shelling today; at least 48 people were killed, according to @ZelenskyyUa.
fascinating, granular details in this FBI affidavit unsealed last night about a Russian intel agent who created a false Brazilian identity, enrolled at @SAISHopkins, tried to get a @IntlCrimCourt internship, and is now in jail in Brazil (awaiting extradition)
When Brazilian police last year arrested the guy, Sergey Cherkasov, he had "multiple electronic devices"-- thumb drives, cell phones. They found a dead drop in Rio for comms equipment, all of which was turned over to the FBI. (sure seems like some super bad spycraft ops)
According to the FBI, Cherkasov (allegedly) spent a decade building this elaborate identity in Brazil about "Victor Ferreira," incl. a fake birth certificate, a backstory about a fictitious mother, a Portuguese aunt, and a story to explain why he didn't like fish.
.@tv2danmark adds new details to the Nord Stream investigation. For still unexplained reasons, Greek tanker Minerva Julie drifted over the explosions site, with its engine on/off, in early Sept. 2022, then continued on to St. Petersburg. Two weeks later, the blast was reported.
The @WSJ and @derspiegel earlier added new details about a yacht named Andromeda that German prosecutors believe is linked to the blasts. The yacht was rented in mid Sept. by a group of people, some of whom carried Ukrainian passports. wsj.com/articles/inves…@bopanc
Now opening in Boston federal courthouse (literally this hour): opening statements in the trial of Russian businessman Vladislav Klyushin, arrested in Switzerland in March 2021, and extradited some months later on a U.S. arrest warrant.
U.S. prosecutors have charged him and several co-conspirators with (essentially) hacking and insider trading. Klyushin has pleaded not guilty. He’s been sitting in a Massachusetts cell since arriving in the U.S., after a judge denied bail, deeming him a flight risk.
Klyushin owns/owned a company called M13, which provided media monitoring services to the Kremlin and other cybersecurity services. The company is reportedly close to Alexei Gromov, first deputy minister in the presidential administration and kind of a Kremlin media handler