Edward Snowden’s lawyer Anatoly Kucherena does not see reasons for his client’s extradition to the U.S. Reports TASS.
“There are no any reasons for extradition of Edward Snowden,” he said on Saturday. “Those are certain speculations, which come from the so-called sources of the U.S. intelligence services.”
“I think, this topic still remains in the U.S. political sphere, but managers there are the U.S. intelligence services, which are injecting information from time to time,” he said, adding Snowden has a residential permit in Russia and observes all Russian laws.
“There is no whatever reason to raise and discuss this topic in Russia,” he said. “Back in the times of the Obama administration, there were permanent attempts to draw Russia into something, but, once again, Russia is not trading people, Russia is not trading human rights or freedoms.”
“At no level – be it economic or political – the topic of Snowden could be a subject of trade,” the lawyer said.
The US intelligence has received information suggesting that Russian special services consider handing over NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden as a “gift” to Donald Trump, NBC reported citing unnamed US intelligence sources.
The channel sources an unnamed US official who came to the conclusion that Russia considers turning over Snowden to “curry favor” with Trump after analyzing “a series of highly sensitive intelligence reports detailing Russian deliberations.” Another source confirmed the information about the Russian conversations.
Snowden’s lawyer in the US, Ben Wizner, said he was unaware of such plans. “Team Snowden has received no such signals and has no new reason for concern,” Wizner said.
Snowden’s Russian lawyer Anatoly Kucherena told TASS on February 7 that Russia has not received any requests from the United States to date. “No charges have been brought against Snowden to this day. Russia has received no extradition requests,” he said.
He expressed hope that the new US president “will take a balanced approach to this matter and make the sole decision that is correct – to terminate criminal prosecution of Edward Snowden, a man who loves America and misses it.”
Snowden replied to the report on Twitter by saying that those rumors clearly show that he never worked with the Russian government.
“Finally: irrefutable evidence that I never cooperated with Russian intel,” Snowden wrote. “No country trades away spies, as the rest would fear they’re next.”
Snowden, a civil employee of the National Security Agency, in 2013 disclosed electronic spying methods being used by US secret services, including the tapping of telephones of foreign leaders. In his attempts to escape persecution by the US authorities, Snowden asked more than 20 countries, including Russia, for political asylum. On August 1, 2014 he was granted a residence permit and has remained in Russian territory since.
In the United States Snowden is charged under two articles of the spying law. Each of the charges is punishable with a maximum of ten years in prison. US Administration officials have said more than once they regarded Snowden as a traitor and had no intention of forgiving him, because he caused serious harm to national security.