Pubdate: Sun, 05 Aug 2001 Source: Los Angeles Times (CA) Copyright: 2001 Los Angeles Times Contact: http://www.latimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/248 Author: Jim Heintz, Associated Press Writer AMERICAN STUDENT REUNITED WITH FATHER MOSCOW -- The father of American Fulbright scholar John Tobin was reunited Sunday with his son, who had been jailed since January on drug charges in a case that became an irritant in U.S.-Russian relations. Tobin, released Friday on parole from a prison in southern Russia, was in Moscow to work out the formalities necessary to get an exit visa to leave the country. "He sounded very good" over the telephone, John Tobin Sr. said of his son after arriving Sunday at Moscow's Sheremetyevo-2 airport. "He's very happy to be out. He seems elated." Father and son later managed to spend some time together, said Rep. James Maloney, who accompanied the elder Tobin to Moscow. The son appeared pale and thin, Maloney told Connecticut station WVIT-TV. But "I think his spirits are good," he said. The younger Tobin has declined to speak publicly since his release, possibly reflecting concern that any comment on the touchy case could affect his prospects of leaving Russia. Tobin was arrested in January in Voronezh, where he was studying at the local university under the Fulbright program. Police said he had a small amount of marijuana in his possession and that more was found at his apartment. The arrest attracted little attention until a spokesman for the Federal Security Service, the main successor to the Soviet-era KGB, said Tobin was believed to be training to be a U.S. spy, noting that he had studied at the elite U.S. Defense Language Institute in Monterey, Calif., and was in an intelligence battalion in the Army Reserve. Tobin was never charged with espionage, and some of the drug charges against him unraveled. The prosecutor in his trial accused police of overstating the amount of marijuana and made the unusual move of asking the court to drop the most serious charges -- of running a drug den and obtaining drugs as part of a criminal gang, for which Tobin could have been sentenced to 15 years. He was convicted in April of obtaining, possessing and distributing marijuana and sentenced to three years in prison. A higher court, however, overturned the distribution conviction and reduced the sentence to one year. He became eligible for parole upon serving half his sentence. President Bush raised the case during meetings with President Vladimir Putin in Genoa, Italy, last month. And although Putin has made no comment on the case, there is wide speculation that he pressed for approval of Tobin's parole. "I think President Putin, you know, did the right thing by taking a part in it and expediting things," the senior Tobin said Sunday. Maloney said Russian authorities "have been very cooperative" in trying to expedite the bureaucratic formalities necessary for Tobin's departure. He said he hoped Tobin could leave within a few days. After that, the student's plans were unclear. "He's very adaptable. He needs some time to decompress. I don't think he's even thinking about that, really," his father said. When Tobin walked out of the prison in the town of Rossosh, about 420 miles south of Moscow, he appeared gaunt and had his hair cropped short like most Russian prisoners. He carried a few possessions in shopping bags. He returned to Voronezh and collected other belongings, including boxes of books, and boarded an overnight train for Moscow. He unloaded the goods at Moscow's Paveletsky Station, watched by a half-dozen members of Russia's OMON special troops. The case also sparked an outpouring of support in his hometown of Ridgefield, Conn., with supporters tying yellow ribbons on old-fashioned lamp posts, circulating petitions and holding benefit concerts. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake