Anti-Putin protester gets 4 ½ years in jail
Topics: From the Wires, News
Maxim Luzyanin, 36, attends his trial on charges that he attacked riot police during a massive rally against Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Zamoskvoretsky district court, Moscow, Russia, Friday, Nov. 9, 2012. The Zamoskvoretsky district court in Moscow said Thursday that 36-year-old gym owner Maxim Luzyanin assaulted police and pelted them with pieces of asphalt when scuffles broke out at a May opposition rally in central Moscow, sentencing him to four and half years in jail. (AP Photo/Yevgeny Feldman, Novaya Gazeta)(Credit: AP)MOSCOW (AP) — The first of 19 defendants being tried for participating in a massive rally against President Vladimir Putin’s return to the Kremlin that turned violent pleaded guilty on Friday and was sentenced to 4 ½ years in prison.
The cases are seen as litmus test about whether the government plans to continue a crackdown on dissent.
None of the other defendants have pleaded guilty and they could receive longer prison terms if convicted.
The May protest was part of a series of anti-Putin rallies that erupted across Russia after fraud-plagued parliamentary elections. The demonstrations drew tens of thousands of people in the largest show of discontent in the country since the 1991 Soviet collapse.
In Zamoskvoretsky district court in Moscow, 36-year-old gym owner Maxim Luzyanin pleaded guilty on Friday to assaulting police and pelting them with pieces of asphalt when scuffles broke out during the May opposition rally in central Moscow. He was given a 4 ½ year sentence.
None of the 18 other defendants charged with participating in the protest violence have pleaded guilty.
Opposition leaders said police provoked the violence and called Luzyanin’s sentencing part of a Kremlin-orchestrated persecution of government critics.
“They’ll give the others eight (years) now,” Alexei Navalny, a charismatic anti-corruption activist and the protest movement’s semi-official leader, tweeted.
During Luzyanin’s trial, prosecutors had asked for 6 ½ years of the maximum sentence of 8 years.
Judge Andrei Fedin said the court decided to give Luzyanin a shorter sentence for several reasons: his guilty plea, his testimony to investigators against other defendants, and his 15-year-old son and dependent mother.
Lawyers and opposition leaders had expected Luzyanin — who was already under a suspended sentence for extortion — to get a shorter sentence after cooperating with prosecutors.
Luzyanin had requested an expedited trial, which meant he could receive no more than two-thirds of the maximum sentence and could not challenge evidence.
But afterward his lawyer, Sergei Shushpanov, said his client would appeal his sentence.
Pavel Chikov of the Agora human rights lawyer association, which represents several of the 18 other defendants, said Luzyanin’s sentence showed prosecutors “definitely want everyone in prison for a long time in order to frighten the rest of the activists.”




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