- Russia sentenced Paul Whelan, a former US Marine, to 16 years in a high-security prison on Monday.
- Whelan was arrested in Moscow in late December 2018 and accused of being on a "spy mission." He had been in town to attend a wedding.
- Moscow said Whelan was caught with a USB drive containing state secrets. Whelan said the drive was planted in his hotel room.
- His arrest was believed to be tied to the US prosecution of Maria Butina, the Russian agent who infiltrated the National Rifle Association.
- According to The Washington Post, Whelan on Monday shouted in the court room that the case was a "political charade" and that Russia was "impotent."
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Paul Whelan, the former US Marine accused of espionage, has been sentenced to 16 years in a high-security Russian prison.
A judge in Moscow handed down the sentence on Monday.
Whelan, 50, was arrested in a luxury Moscow hotel in late December 2018, and formally charged with espionage a week later. He has been in pre-trial detention since.
Russia's security agency, the FSB, said at the time he was detained "while on a spy mission." Whelan's family has rejected that charge and said he was in town to attend a wedding of a fellow Marine veteran to a Russian woman.
Russia said Whelan was caught with a USB drive containing classified information. Whelan said he was set up and thought the flash drive, which was given to him by a Russian acquaintance, contained holiday photos.
He previously told the BBC the acquaintance had showed up to his room uninvited and placed the drive there.
The US has repeatedly said there is no evidence against him.
According to The Washington Post, Whelan on Monday shouted in the court room that the case was a "political charade," and that Russia was taking political prisoners because it "feels impotent in the world."
He also said that he didn't understand any of his judicial proceedings because they were in Russian, The New York Times reported. His lawyer, Vladimir Zherebenkov, plans to appeal, both newspapers said.
Whelan's 2018 detention came two weeks after Maria Butina, a Russian gun-rights activist based in the US, pleaded guilty to engaging in a conspiracy against the US.
Butina pleaded guilty to working with a Russian government official to establish informal "back channel" communications with the US government via the National Rifle Association.
She was imprisoned in the US in April 2019, and let out in October that year. She has since returned to Russia.
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