Russia reduces prison sentence for US soldier convicted of theft
[April 07, 2025]
MOSCOW (AP) — An appellate court in Russia’s far east on
Monday reduced the prison sentence for an American soldier convicted of
stealing and making threats of murder, Russia's state news agency RIA
Novosti reported.
Staff Sgt. Gordon Black, 34, flew to the Pacific port city of
Vladivostok to see his girlfriend and was arrested in May 2024 after she
accused him of stealing from her, according to U.S. officials and
Russian authorities. A month later, a court in Vladivostok convicted him
and sentenced him to three years and nine months in prison. Black was
also ordered to pay 10,000 rubles ($115 at the time) in damages.
Black lost one appeal in a regional court that upheld his sentence, but
the judge in the 9th Court of Cassation on Monday agreed to reduce his
sentence to three years and two months in prison. Black's defense had
asked the court to acquit him of making threats of murder and reduce the
punishment for theft, a request the judge partially sustained, according
to the RIA report.
Russia has jailed a number of Americans in recent years as tensions
between Moscow and the West grew. Some, like corporate security
executive Paul Whelan, Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich and
teacher Marc Fogel, were designated by the U.S. government as wrongfully
detained and released in prisoner swaps.
A few others remain jailed in Russia on drug or assault convictions.
They include Robert Gilman, 72, who was handed a 3 1/2-year sentence
after being found guilty of assaulting a police officer following a
drunken disturbance on a train, and Travis Leake, a musician who was
convicted on drug charges and sentenced to 13 years in prison in July
2024.

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Black was on leave and in the process of returning to his home base
at Fort Cavazos, Texas, from South Korea, where he had been
stationed at Camp Humphreys with the Eighth Army.
The U.S. Army said Black signed out for his move back home and,
“instead of returning to the continental United States, Black flew
from Incheon, Republic of Korea, through China to Vladivostok,
Russia, for personal reasons.”
Under Pentagon policy, service members must get clearance for any
international travel from a security manager or commander.
The U.S. Army said last month that Black hadn’t sought such travel
clearance and it wasn’t authorized by the Defense Department. Given
the hostilities in Ukraine and threats to the U.S. and its military,
it is extremely unlikely he would have been granted approval.
Black’s girlfriend, Alexandra Vashchuk, told reporters last year
that “it was a simple domestic dispute,” during which Black “became
aggressive and attacked” her, stealing money from her wallet. She
described Black as “violent and unable to control himself.”
U.S. officials have said that Black, who is married, met Vashchuk in
South Korea.
According to U.S. officials, she had lived in South Korea, and last
fall she and Black got into some type of domestic dispute or
altercation. After that, she left South Korea. It isn’t clear if she
was forced to leave or what, if any, role South Korean authorities
had in the matter.
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