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Basketball Star Brittney Griner’s Cannabis Smuggling Trial to Begin Friday in Russia

“Our requests for access are consistently delayed or denied, and we will continue to press for fair and transparent treatment for all U.S. citizen detainees in Russia.”

— Jalina Porter, principal deputy spokesperson with the State Department

Four-and-a-half months after her arrest at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport on allegations of attempted drug smuggling, WNBA player Brittney Griner’s trial will begin Friday in Russia. Griner has been imprisoned in Russia since February, facing charges she carried a “significant amount” of cannabis oil vapes in her luggage.

Griner, 31, appeared impassive wearing handcuffs and a red hoodie at her pretrial hearing on Monday in Khimki, Russia. Neither Griner nor her Russian lawyer made a statement to the press, reported UPI.  At the hearing, after setting the trial date, a Russian judge extended Griner’s incarceration for a third time since February. The Phoenix Mercury star could remain behind bars for another six months during her trial.

Griner was returning to Russia just a week after Russia invaded the Ukraine. The two-time Olympic gold medalist plays in Russia for the UMMC Ekaterinburg basketball team during her off-season with the Phoenix Mercury. It’s not uncommon for women basketball players to join teams overseas during the off-season, as they earn substantially less than their male counterparts in the NBA.

The timing of her arrest has many positing that Griner’s extended detention — and Russia’s indifferent response to her case — could signal Russian authorities see Griner as a potential political pawn. Due to Russia’s classification of cannabis extracts, Griner could face 10 years in prison on the serious charge of narcotics smuggling.  Fewer than 1% of defendants in Russian criminal cases are acquitted, and unlike in the U.S., acquittals can be overturned, according the the Associated Press.

Conviction before freedom
However, if Griner is convicted, that could open the door to a prisoner exchange for her freedom — a possibility given the high-profile nature of her case. However, any swap would first require Griner to first be convicted and sentenced, then apply for a presidential pardon, according Maria Yarmush, a lawyer specializing in international civil affairs, told Kremlin-funded TV Channel RT.

In April, U.S. Marine veteran Trevor Reed was exchanged for Konstantin Yaroshenko, a Russian citizen serving 20 years in U.S. prison for planning to smuggle than $100 million worth of cocaine into the U.S.  Reed served three years of a nine- years sentence for attacking a Russian policeman while intoxicated — an allegation he denies, according to NPR.

The likelihood of a prisoner exchange could be also bolstered by the State Department in April reclassifying Griner as being “wrongfully detained.” That step up in classification saw the U.S. Special Presidential Envoy for Hostage Affairs, Roger Carstens, assigned to Griner’s case.  But  progress has been stonewalled by Russian authorities and access to the detained basketball star denied.

“Our requests for access are consistently delayed or denied, and we will continue to press for fair and transparent treatment for all U.S. citizen detainees in Russia, ” Jalina Porter,  principal deputy spokesperson with the State Department, said in May about Griner’s plight.

 

 

Brad Cheng

Brad Cheng is the digital editor of Global Cannabis Times, produced by SmartWork Media. Brad's journalism career spans working as an editor for PR Newswire, The Nation and The Santa Barbara News Press, and as Managing Editor of The Katy Courier, and publisher of Now This in Princeton. His career as a screenwriter took him into entertainment advertising, writing major film campaigns for studios and for HBO.

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