Bail hearings to begin in alleged Russian spy case
Topics: From the Wires, News
The Russian Foreign Ministry headquarters seen at the background in Moscow on Thursday, Oct. 4, 2012. US prosecutors allege that naturalized U.S. citizen Alexander Fishenko and six others "engaged in a surreptitious and systematic conspiracy" to obtain highly regulated technology from U.S. makers and sold them to Russian authorities. Fishenko and six others charged in the alleged scheme are expected to appear Thursday morning in U.S. Houston federal court. (AP Photo/Alexander Zemlianichenko) (Credit: AP)HOUSTON (AP) — The man U.S. authorities claim led a plot to funnel cutting-edge military technology to Russia kept a low profile in his suburban Houston neighborhood and was unknown to leaders in the city’s Russian community.
Alexander Fishenko, an immigrant from Kazakhstan, was running a Houston-based company that obtained highly regulated technology and clandestinely exported it to Russia for use by that country’s military and intelligence agencies, according to U.S. authorities.
Hearings begin Friday for Fishenko and seven others arrested by authorities this week to determine whether bail will be granted. None of the defendants has entered a plea. Their cases are expected to be transferred to New York, where the indictment was filed.
For the last four years, Fishenko lived with his family in a two-story, four-bedroom home, a stranger to his neighbors, unknown to leaders in Houston’s Russian community of more than 100,000 residents.
“I wouldn’t have thought he was the ring leader. He was so nondescript, an everyday kind of guy,” Charlie Houssiere, who lives across the street from Fishenko, said Thursday. “The whole time I thought he worked at an oil company.”
Fishenko is accused of scheming to purposely evade strict export controls for cutting-edge microelectronics, of operating inside the U.S. as an unregistered agent of the Russian government, and of money laundering.
The microelectronics could have a wide range of military uses, including radar and surveillance systems, weapons guidance systems and detonation triggers, U.S. authorities say.
Fishenko’s attorney, Eric Reed, said he plans to review the charges against his client with a critical eye.
“I think these are fairly dramatic allegations that we will certainly take a hard look at to determine whether there is any evidence to back that up,” Reed said.
The Russian Foreign Ministry, in a statement, noted the defendants are not charged with espionage.
According to court documents, Fishenko was born in the former Soviet Republic of Kazakhstan and graduated from a technical institute in St. Petersburg before coming to America in 1994. In Houston, he initially worked at a Circuit City store. In his initial asylum application, Fishenko stated he had no prior military experience, but elsewhere he claimed to have served in a Soviet military intelligence unit in Berlin in the 1980s, according to court records.




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