Pubdate: Sat, 28 Apr 2001 Source: Register-Guard, The (OR) Copyright: 2001 The Register-Guard Contact: http://www.registerguard.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/362 Author: Associated Press AMERICAN GETS 3 YEARS IN DRUG TRAFFICKING CASE VORONEZH, Russia - An American Fulbright scholar was sentenced to more than 3 years in prison on drug charges Friday in a verdict his lawyer said was influenced by accusations from Russia's secret services that he was a spy in training. John Tobin, 24, of Ridgefield, Conn., had firmly asserted his innocence. During the trial, a prosecutor who said police apparently doctored reports in the case asked for the most serious drug trafficking charges against him to be thrown out. Tobin was convicted on the lesser charges of obtaining, possessing and distributing marijuana. Tobin was arrested Jan. 26 outside a nightclub in Voronezh. Police said he had a small matchbox containing marijuana and that a small packet of the drug was found in a book in his apartment. The arrest attracted little attention until about a month later, when the Federal Security Service stated publicly that Tobin, who was studying at Voronezh State University under a grant, was apparently training to be a spy. Although he was not charged with spying, "the social fuss that has been pumped up by certain law enforcement officials could not but influence the attitude toward this case and the way it was investigated," his attorney, Maxim Bayev, said after the verdict. The accusation about Tobin's intelligence connections came about a week after U.S. investigators arrested FBI agent Robert Philip Hanssen on charges of spying for Russia, escalating tensions over espionage between Washington and Moscow. Tobin, a graduate of Middlebury College, had studied at a U.S. military school and at the U.S. Defense Language Institute. "I am a student. I came here to study. I don't have anything to do with drugs," Tobin said in his final statement to the court, speaking from the metal cage in which defendants are kept in Russian trials. Four hours later, Judge Tatyana Korchagina read the verdict in a courtroom packed with journalists, supporters and curious Voronezh residents. Tobin stood with his hands behind his back, listening attentively but showing no reaction. Bayev said he would appeal the sentence and demand in particular that the conviction for distribution be overturned because it was not supported by the evidence. He said he also would protest the way the investigation was carried out. Earlier in the trial, the prosecutor accused police of overstating by 10 times the amount of marijuana allegedly found on Tobin - from 0.148 grams in the initial report to 1.48 grams later - and asked for the dropping of charges of running a drug den and obtaining and possessing drugs as part of a criminal gang, which carried sentences of up to 15 years. "The position of the prosecutor's office ... is telling," Bayev said. After the verdict, Pavel Bolshunov, spokesman for the Voronezh branch of the Federal Security Service, said the agency was interested in learning about Tobin. "Was he just studying here or was he doing something else." Bolshunov said. "He did not violate anything (in terms of state security), he just behaved strangely." Severe sentences for possessing small amounts of drugs are not unusual in Russia, even for first offenders, said Karina Moskalenko, a prominent defense attorney and human rights activist in Moscow. Russian law defines more than 0.1 grams of marijuana as a "large amount," Moskalenko said. - --- MAP posted-by: Terry Liittschwager