Family hopes for spy exchange after Paul Whelan convicted of espionage by Russia
TORONTO — The family of a Canadian-American corporate security executive convicted of espionage by a Russian court say they are trying to bring him back home.
Paul Whelan, who was born in Ottawa but holds Canadian, American, British and Irish citizenship, was convicted Monday and sentenced to 16 years in prison after a closed trial in Moscow that the U.S. has denounced as a “mockery of justice.”
His twin brother David, who lives in Toronto, said their family always expected a conviction, but the Russian government wouldn’t speak about potentially releasing Paul until the court had rendered its verdict.
“Today is really the removal of that obstacle. It’s the silver lining,” David Whelan said in an interview. “Now we can say, OK, everybody can get down to brass tacks and figure out how to get Paul home.