Brittney Griner moved to penal colony in Russia’s Mordovia region

WNBA participant, whose whereabouts had been publicly unknown, is in a penal colony 500km southeast of Moscow, legal professionals verify.

Griner, from shoulders up, behind white bars
A Russian court docket final month upheld Griner's nine-year jail sentence [File: Alexander Zemlianichenko/Pool via AP Photo]

United States basketball participant Brittney Griner has been moved to a penal colony in Russia’s Mordovia area to serve a nine-year jail sentence for drug possession, her legal professionals confirmed, as Washington continues to push for her launch.

Griner’s legal professionals stated in a press release on Thursday that she was taken to Feminine Penal Colony IK-2 within the city of Yavas, roughly 500km (300 miles) southeast of Moscow.

The Girls’s Nationwide Basketball Affiliation (WNBA) star was relocated from a detention centre close to the Russian capital on November 4. Whereas her legal professionals stated at the moment that she had been moved to a penal colony, her precise whereabouts had been unknown to the general public.

“We are able to verify that Brittney started serving her sentence at IK-2 in Mordovia. We visited her early this week,” legal professionals Maria Blagovolina and Alexander Boikov stated in Thursday’s assertion.

“Brittney is doing in addition to may very well be anticipated and making an attempt to remain robust as she adapts to a brand new atmosphere.”

The US State Division stated on Wednesday the embassy in Moscow has not been in a position to talk with Griner because the switch.

“We, by means of our legal professionals, are conscious of her location and are in frequent contact with Ms Griner’s authorized group, however formally, the Russian Federation has nonetheless failed to supply any official notification for such a transfer of a US citizen, which we strongly protest,” Deputy Spokesperson Vedant Patel informed reporters.

“Our embassy and our mission in Moscow has continued to press for extra details about her switch and her present location, and people requests proceed to be ongoing.”

Russian penal colonies are identified for his or her harsh situations, the place prisoners are positioned in barracks, not particular person cells, and compelled to carry out day by day work.

Griner, a two-time Olympic gold medallist, is one in every of two US residents Washington says are unjustifiably imprisoned in Russia. Paul Whelan, a US Marine veteran, was sentenced to 16 years in jail in 2020 on espionage prices.

Griner’s arrest earlier this 12 months got here days earlier than Russia launched a full-scale invasion of Ukraine and her case has moved by means of the Russian court docket system amid frayed relations between Moscow and Washington over the battle.

Russian authorities stated they discovered vape cartridges containing hashish oil in her baggage as she was coming into the nation to play for a Russian group throughout the WNBA’s low season.

She was sentenced to 9 years in jail in August and, final month, a Russian court docket upheld that sentence, which the basketball star’s defence legal professionals described as extreme.

In earlier proceedings, Griner stated she didn't intend to convey the vape cartridges into Russia and that it was an “trustworthy mistake” they ended up in her luggage.

Since Griner’s arrest, kinfolk, teammates and supporters have been calling on the US authorities to place its full weight behind the case to safe her launch.

In September, US President Joe Biden met the Griner and Whelan households to replace them on his administration’s efforts.

Secretary of State Antony Blinken stated in July that Washington made a “substantial proposal” to Moscow to free the pair. A number of US media retailers reported round that point that the Biden administration had supplied a prisoner change involving a Russian arms supplier jailed within the US.

US officers have stated they proceed to have interaction with their Russian counterparts to safe the 2 Individuals’ launch.

Regardless of the deteriorating ties between Washington and Moscow, Russia in April freed Trevor Reed, a former US Marine. In change, the US launched Russian pilot Konstantin Yaroshenko who was serving a 20-year jail sentence within the US over drug prices.

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