American in Russia Sentenced to 12 Years for Drug Offences
Robert Woodland, an American citizen who has been detained in Moscow since January on charges of trying to sell methadone, was sentenced to 12-and-a-half years at a maximum security penal colony on Thursday....
0:00
/1861
Facts
- Robert Woodland, an American citizen who has been detained in Moscow since January on charges of trying to sell methadone, was sentenced to 12-and-a-half years at a maximum security penal colony on Thursday.[1]
- A dual Russia-US national, Woodland moved back to the country of his birth in 2020 after tracking down his biological mother, having been mostly raised in America by foster parents. Woodland is one of several Americans currently detained in Russia.[2]
- The US Dept. of State said it was aware of the sentencing of a US national and that the embassy in Russia was monitoring the case without further comment, citing privacy concerns.[3]
- Russian prosecutors claim that Woodland moved 50 grams of the drug while working for a criminal organization. The accused's lawyer initially held that there was 'no evidence' for the charges, before saying yesterday that Woodland confessed to some of the allegations.[1]
- The US has warned Americans to avoid traveling to Russia. High-profile cases of imprisoned Americans include Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, who has been detained for 15 months, and Paul Whelan, who is serving a 16 year sentence; the State Department considers both to be 'wrongfully detained.'[2]
- The lawyers for Woodland are planning to appeal the conviction, saying that the accused is suffering from mental health issues that the court did not take into account.[4]
Sources: [1]BBC News, [2]CBS, [3]Associated Press and [4]ABC News.
Narratives
- Anti-Russia narrative, as provided by Wsj. Russia has been shamelessly practicing 'hostage diplomacy' against the US, as they detain Americans under dubious circumstances to coerce concessions from the government. Foreign citizens are valuable pawns, and are wrongfully convicted for leverage against governments that care about their people. Russia has been all too willing to employ this repugnant strategy, and every conviction in a Russian court against a US citizen must be taken with a grain of salt.
- Pro-Russia narrative, as provided by Opinio Juris. Claims that Russia has acted uniquely punitively towards Americans accused of crimes are unfounded. All foreign nationals are ineligible for bail, for instance, and the sentencing guidelines for drug offenses in Russia are roughly equivalent to those in several US states. Wrongful detention is a vague, ambiguous term that is used by the US to beat the war drum against their enemies. They should accept the Russian legal process as thorough and impartial.