A US citizen who was adopted from Russia as a toddler has been sentenced to a 12-and-a-half-year prison term after he returned to his motherland to look for his birth mom.
Robert Woodland, 32, was arrested and held on drug charges earlier this year after he decided to stay in the authoritarian country following his dramatic reunion with with his biological family on a Russian TV show.
He was found guilty by a Moscow court of attempting to traffic a large quantity of drugs as part of an organized group and was sentenced on Thursday.
Images from the hearing show Woodland appearing in court with a shaved head inside a glass courtroom box, smiling only briefly before his verdict was read aloud.
Woodland was identified by Russian media as the English teacher interviewed by the Komsomolskaya Pravda outlet.
In the 2020 interview, Woodland said he was born in Russia’s Perm region in 1991, where he was adopted by an American couple when he was only 2 years old.
As an adult, Woodland made the journey back to Russia to search for his birth mother, reconnecting with her on a state television.
After their heartbreaking reunion, Woodland told Russian media that he liked living in his birth country and decided to stay, settling in Dolgoprudny and teaching English at a local school
Woodland’s fairytale story came to end on Jan. 5, when he was detained on drug charges, according to Russia’s Ostankino District Court.
His lawyer, Stanislav Kshevitskii, told reporters in April that Moscow had “no evidence of drug sales” linked to Woodland.
Kshevitskii did not immediately provide a statement following the court’s verdict.
Woodland was among the latest wave of Americans arrested in Russia, with Washington accusing Moscow of using US citizens as political bargaining chips amid the war in Ukraine.
His conviction comes just days after Moscow began its trial against Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich, a US citizen accused of spying against the Kremlin.
— With Post wires
At least two American hostages are expected to be freed from Hamas in the first phase of the newly announced cease-fire deal between the terror group
WASHINGTON: The three most dreaded letters in sequence in the United States are said to be IRS -- for Internal Revenue Service, the tax collecting agency that
Wildfires have decimated more than 37,000 acres of the Los Angeles metropolitan area over the last several days, charring more than 12,000 structures, displacin
Afghan citizens who fled the country with American assistance after the US’s chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan remain stranded in third countries, new docum