AMERICAN student Tobin returns to Moscow after release from Russian prison
MOSCOW (AP) _ U.S. Rep. James Maloney and the father of paroled American Fulbright scholar John Tobin arrived in Moscow on Sunday to help Tobin secure an exit visa and bring him back to the United States.
Sunday, August 5th 2001, 12:00 am
By: News On 6
MOSCOW (AP) _ U.S. Rep. James Maloney and the father of paroled American Fulbright scholar John Tobin arrived in Moscow on Sunday to help Tobin secure an exit visa and bring him back to the United States.
Free after six months behind bars in provincial Russia, Tobin pulled into Moscow on an overnight train Saturday and prepared for his journey home.
After his release on parole from a one-year drug sentence, Tobin arrived in the Russian capital from Voronezh, the southern city where he was arrested in January in a case that became an irritant in U.S.-Russian relations.
Looking gaunt and with hair cropped short like most prisoners in Russia, Tobin unloaded boxes and bags of books and belongings from the train at Moscow's Paveletsky Station, watched by a half-dozen members of Russia's OMON special troops.
Tobin, 24, declined to comment to reporters before he was escorted away by U.S. Embassy representatives.
John Tobin Sr. said he had spoken to his son by telephone Saturday night. ``He seemed a little stunned.''
Asked if he knew his son's future plans, Tobin said, ``he's a very adaptable kid, he needs some time to decompress. I don't think he's thinking about that (the future) really.''
Maloney said they planned to work on the paperwork needed for an exit visa for Tobin, and hoped it would be completed within a couple of days. He said so far, Russian authorities have been very cooperative.
All Americans and many other foreigners in Russia need entry and exit visas. Maloney said he expected Tobin would return to the United States on Wednesday or Thursday.
``We think it's important that he be accompanied back from Moscow to New York. His father and I think that is important for Jack's security,'' Maloney said at a news conference before leaving Connecticut for Moscow.
Tobin has called his father, mother and girlfriend from Moscow, and was in good spirits but fatigued, Maloney said.
A court on Friday freed Tobin halfway through his sentence, a day after a parole board recommended him for release. Local court and prison officials said he was a model inmate _ but they also appeared weary of the attention and controversy the case brought.
Soon after the decision, Tobin, looking pale and thinner than during his trial, walked out of the gates of the shabby, Soviet-era prison in the town of Rossosh near Voronezh. Flashing a brief smile, he wore blue jeans and toted his belongings in two plastic shopping bags.
Before leaving for Moscow, Tobin's father beamed as he held up a copy of a photo showing his son leaving the prison.
``That's the best smile I've seen from him since last summer,'' the father said at his home in Connecticut. ``It's beginning to be a relief. I can sleep.''
Tobin was doing political science research at a Voronezh university when he was arrested in January as he left a local nightclub. He was convicted in April of obtaining, possessing and distributing marijuana and was sentenced to three years in prison.
A higher court, however, overturned the distribution conviction and reduced the sentence to one year.
The case attracted wider attention when local officials of the Federal Security Service, or FSB, charged that Tobin was a spy in training, citing his studies at the elite Defense Language Institute in Monterey, Calif.
No espionage charges were filed, however, and Tobin said he was framed on the drug charges because he refused to work for Russian intelligence.
The FSB is the main successor to the KGB, the Soviet-era secret police and spy agency.
Tobin's case was taken up by members of Congress from Connecticut, who wrote to Russian officials and pressed President Bush to take up the case in his meetings with President Vladimir Putin.
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.
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