Pubdate: Tue, 27 Mar 2001 Source: New York Times (NY) Copyright: 2001 The New York Times Company Contact: 229 West 43rd Street, New York, NY 10036 Fax: (212) 556-3622 Website: http://www.nytimes.com/ Forum: http://forums.nytimes.com/comment/ Author: Patrick E. Tyler AMERICAN STUDYING IN RUSSIA MAY BE SWEPT UP IN SPY CASE MOSCOW -- An American student who was investigated on suspicion of espionage and charged with possession of marijuana may instead face more serious drug charges, Russian police authorities indicated today. It was not clear whether the case of the student, John Edward Tobin, 24, was taking a more serious turn because of last week's decision by the Bush administration to expel 50 Russian diplomats for what Washington calls espionage activity. But given that Mr. Tobin is in a Army Reserve intelligence unit, it seems likely that his case has been complicated by the spying dispute. Foreign Minister Igor S. Ivanov, speaking on state television tonight, said relations between Washington and Moscow were in an "emergency situation." He repeated that Russia's response to the expulsion of its diplomats would be "adequate and symmetrical," and added that Russia "is not a country with which one can talk in the language of ultimatums." At the Kremlin tonight, President Vladimir V. Putin met with parliamentary leaders and one of them, the former prime minister Yevgeny Primakov, said Mr. Putin expressed a desire "to improve Russia's relations with the United States." Mr. Primakov said Mr. Putin speculated that the Bush administration is taking a harder line with Moscow to contrast itself with the "flabbiness of the former administration." In a diplomatic note on Friday, the Foreign Ministry said it was expelling four Americans, though it did not initially provide their names to the United States Embassy. A Foreign Ministry spokesman said today that further information would be delivered through diplomatic channels. In the police case against Mr. Tobin, a native of Ridgefield, Conn., a senior investigator in the prosecutor's office, Andrei Makarov, told the Reuters news agency that Mr. Tobin, already charged with simple possession of marijuana, would now face charges of being part of a drug ring. If convicted, he could face 15 years in prison. Mr. Makarov said Mr. Tobin's suspected accomplices are American citizens who are no longer in the country. Mr. Tobin was pursuing graduate studies at Voronezh State University in southwestern Russia under the State Department's Fulbright scholars program. Though he was in Russia as a private citizen, Mr. Tobin is a trained interrogator who holds the rank of Army Reserve specialist in the 325th Military Intelligence Battalion in Waterbury, Conn. He studied Russian at the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, Calif. Mr. Tobin was arrested on Feb. 1 after he had been questioned by the police in Voronezh on Jan. 25. The night he was arrested, the police said they had found a half ounce of marijuana in his possession. A search of his apartment yielded another ounce and a half, the police said. At first, Russia's domestic intelligence agency took an interest in Mr. Tobin, but later said there were no grounds for espionage charges. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth