Pubdate: Thu, 09 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: Deepti Hajela, Associated Press Writer

U.S. STUDENT JOHN TOBIN BACK HOME

NEW YORK -- American student John Tobin, back on U.S. soil and looking
forward to his first hamburger in six months, said overcoming fear of the
unknown was his greatest challenge while imprisoned in Russia on a drug
charge.

"I was most frightened in the beginning. I didn't know what charges were
going to be brought against me," Tobin said Wednesday at a press conference
at Kennedy International Airport upon his return from Moscow.

A tired Tobin, who had lost some weight in jail and sported a close-cropped
prison haircut, answered questions briefly before leaving for a rendezvous
with family and friends.

After his January arrest in Voronezh, where he was studying at the local
university, the Fulbright scholar was initially charged with operating a
drug den and obtaining marijuana as part of a criminal gang. Tobin denied
the charge.

The case gained wide attention after an official of the Federal Security
Service, the main successor to the KGB, said the American was believed to be
training to be a spy.

Tobin's release removed a diplomatic irritant between the United States and
Russia. In June, President Bush had raised the case during his summit
meeting with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Tobin thanked the president, along with his family, friends and other
supporters.

"It's great to be back in the land of the free," the 24-year-old said.

Tobin said he spent most of his time in a Russian holding facility, but the
last six weeks in a Russian work camp. He was "treated fairly," his father
told the news conference. "He wasn't abused."

His father, John Tobin Sr., has said his son claimed the Russian
intelligence service tried to recruit him as an agent and that he believed
he was arrested because he had refused.

Tobin was sentenced to 37 months in jail for drug possession. After a higher
court reduced that sentence to one year, he became eligible for parole after
doing half that time. He was released from jail Friday.

"I never felt alone" in jail, Tobin said. "I could feel the blessings and
good will of the people back here supporting me."
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