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Fugitive Snowden granted a year's asylum in Russia, leaves airport - Reuters Posted: 01 Aug 2013 09:36 AM PDT MOSCOW | (Reuters) - Fugitive former U.S. spy agency contractor Edward Snowden slipped quietly out of Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport on Thursday after being granted a year's asylum in Russia, ending more than five weeks in limbo in the transit area. Russia's decision to help the American, and ignore U.S. requests to send him home to face trial for leaking details of government surveillance programs, is sure to anger Washington and increase doubts that a summit between presidents Barack Obama and Vladimir Putin will go ahead in Moscow in September. After 39 days avoiding hordes of international reporters desperate for a glimpse of him, Snowden managed to give them the slip again, leaving the airport in a car. "Over the past eight weeks we have seen the Obama administration show no respect for international or domestic law but in the end the law is winning," Snowden, whose first leaks were published two months ago, was quoted as saying by the WikiLeaks anti-secrecy group which has assisted him. "I thank the Russian Federation for granting me asylum in accordance with its laws and international obligations." Grainy images on state television showed the 30-year-old's document, which is similar to a Russian passport, and revealed that he had been granted asylum for a year from July 31. A Russian lawyer said he had handed Snowden a document from Russia which enabled him to leave the airport for a safe location which would remain secret, and that he could now work and travel freely in the country of 142 million. State television also showed a picture of him getting into a grey car at the airport driven by a young man in a baseball cap. Snowden wore a backpack and a blue button-up shirt. "He is the most wanted man on planet Earth," Snowden's lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, told Reuters. "He has to think about his personal security. I cannot tell you where he is going." "He can live wherever he wants in Russia. It's his personal choice," he said. OTHER OFFERS OF ASYLUM Snowden, who had his U.S. passport revoked by Washington, fled to Moscow from Hong Kong on June 23 and had stayed at a hotel at the airport, Kucherena said, but was "psychologically exhausted". "Imagine yourself daily (having to listen to) 'Dear passengers, the flight to New York, the flight to Washington, the flight from Rome'," the lawyer said. Snowden, whose revelations have fuelled a debate in the United States about civil liberties and national security needs, was accompanied by Sarah Harrison, a WikiLeaks representative. "We would like to thank the Russian people and all those others who have helped to protect Mr. Snowden. We have won the battle - now the war," WikiLeaks said on Twitter. WikiLeaks issued its statement as the case against Private Bradley Manning continued for releasing classified U.S. data through its website. Snowden hopes to avoid a similar fate. Nicaragua, Bolivia and Venezuela have offered him refuge, but there are no direct commercial flights to Latin America from Moscow and he was concerned the United States would intercept any flight he took. He was forced to bide his time in the transit area between the runway and passport control, which Russia considers neutral territory. Kucherena had given Snowden Russian books to help pass the time and says he has started learning Russian in preparation for his stay, which could be extended after a year. "I am so thankful to the Russian nation and President Vladimir Putin," the American's father, Lonnie Snowden, told Russian state television. He is expected to come to Russia to see his son shortly. It is not clear what Snowden plans to do in Russia, although he has said he would like to travel around the country. VKontakte, Russia's answer to social networking site Facebook, has already offered him a job. STRAINS IN TIES Washington has signaled in the last few weeks that Obama might consider boycotting the planned summit with Putin. It did not immediately comment on Snowden's change of status, which steps up the level of support he is receiving from Russia. It is not clear whether Obama might also consider a boycott of a G20 summit in Russia in September or of the Winter Olympics which Russia will host in the city of Sochi next February. A senior Kremlin official played down concerns. "Our president has ... expressed hope many times that this will not affect the character of our relations," Yuri Ushakov, Putin's top foreign policy adviser, told reporters. But Senator Robert Menendez, chairman of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, criticized Moscow's decision and said Russia should send Snowden home because his revelations could do great harm to the United States. "Edward Snowden is a fugitive who belongs in a United States courtroom, not a free man deserving of asylum in Russia," Menendez said. "Regardless of the fact that Russia is granting asylum for one year, this action is a setback to U.S.-Russia relations." Putin wants to improve relations with the United States that are strained by issues from the Syrian conflict to his treatment of opponents and foreign-funded non-governmental organizations, but would have risked looking weak if he had handed him over to the U.S. authorities. More than half of Russians have a positive opinion of Snowden and 43 percent wanted him to be granted asylum, a poll released by independent research group Levada said this week. Putin has said Snowden must stop anti-U.S. activities, but it was not clear whether the American had agreed to do so. Snowden has said that he does not regard his activities as hostile to the United States. There has already been diplomatic fallout from Snowden's leaks, which included information that the U.S. National Security Agency bugged European Union offices and gained access to EU internal computer networks, even though the EU is an ally. China, Brazil and France have voiced concern over the spying program and U.S. ties with Latin American states have been clouded. (Additional reporting by Gabriela Baczynska, Alexei Anishchuk, Katya Golubkova and Gleb Stolyarov, editing by Elizabeth Piper and Michael Roddy) |
Ariel Castro victim: 'Nobody should go through what I went through' - CNN Posted: 01 Aug 2013 07:51 AM PDT STORY HIGHLIGHTS
Cleveland (CNN) -- [Breaking news alert, 12:51 p.m. ET] Cleveland kidnapper Ariel Castro, speaking at his sentencing hearing, said, "I'm not a violent person. I simply kept them there so they couldn't leave." He was referring to the three women he held captive for about a decade. Castro said he knew what he did was wrong, but he argued that the "accusations that I would come home and beat them" are "totally wrong." "I'm not a monster. I'm just sick. I have an addiction. Just like an alcoholic has an addiction." "God as my witness, I never beat these women like they're trying to say that I did. I never tortured them," he said. Castro admitted that he drove past his own daughter, failing to give her a ride, so he could kidnap his second victim, Gina DeJesus. He said he did it because "I was driven by sex." "I am truly sorry for what happened," he said. [Breaking news alert, 12:43 p.m. ET] Describing himself as a "very emotional person," Ariel Castro said during his sentencing hearing that "these people are trying to paint me as a monster and I'm not a monster. I'm sick." "I believe I am addicted to porn to the point that it makes me impulsive and I lost it," he said, adding he's "not trying to make excuses." "I'm a happy person inside," he added. [Breaking news alert, 12:36 p.m. ET] Tim McGinty, Cuyahoga County prosecutor, stressed there's no backing to the claim that Ariel Castro suffered from mental illness. "He is responsible," he said, likening him to murderers John Wayne Gacy and Ted Bundy. "He has no excuse." When asked what Castro would do if he could go back and do things differently, the kidnapper responded that he'd do it all over again, McGinty said. "He doesn't believe he did anything wrong," McGinty said. "There is no remorse." [Breaking news alert, 12:30 p.m. ET] During Ariel Castro's sentencing hearing, prosecutor Anna Faraglia said that Castro "tormented (his victims) by allowing them to watch their vigils ... and even had the audacity to attend them." She further said that Castro would talk to his victims' parents as if he were distraught by their disappearances when "they were right underneath his roof."
Defense attorney Craig Weintraub then told the judge that he felt some of the testimony presented was inappropriate because "these were really private matters," the sentence had been agreed upon prior to the hearing and Castro waived his right to challenge the facts of the case. Judge Michael Russo responded that he felt the testimony and evidence was necessary to help him guide his decision on whether to accept the sentence.
[Breaking news alert, 12:20 p.m. ET] Michelle Knight, one of Ariel Castro's kidnap victims, said in court she missed her son during her ordeal in captivity. "I cried every night. I was so alone. I worried what would happen to me and the other girls every day," she said at Castro's sentencing hearing Thursday. Kidnapping victim Michelle Knight told her captor, Ariel Castro, during his sentencing hearing, "You took 11 years of my life away. ... I spent 11 years in hell. Now, your hell is just beginning." "I can forgive you, but I will never forget," she said in her statement to Castro, calling him a hypocrite. "Nobody should go through what I went through," she said tearfully. She called another victim, Gina DeJesus, her "teammate" saying the woman saved her when she was "dying from his abuse." Knight said she "will overcome what happened" but Castro "will face hell for eternity." "I will live on. You will die a little every day." [Breaking news alert, 12:15 p.m. ET] Sylvia Colon, cousin and spokeswoman for kidnap victim Gina DeJesus, told Ariel Castro's family that "we do not hold you accountable" for Castro's crimes. Colon, speaking at Ariel Castro's sentencing hearing Thursday, added, "It is not for us to judge or determine any punishment. Only a higher power can do that." She was speaking at Ariel Castro's sentencing Beth Serrano, sister of kidnap victim Amanda Berry, said her sister doesn't want to speak of the horrors she went through because she doesn't want her daughter to hear details about the case. "She will do anything to protect her daughter." She was speaking at Ariel Castro's sentencing hearing, [Breaking news alert, 12:04 p.m. ET] Michelle Knight, one of three women held captive for a decade by Cleveland kidnapper Ariel Castro, entered the courtroom after a break in his sentencing hearing Thursday. [Previously published story, 11:55 a.m. ET] They were forced to play Russian roulette. He threw money at them after sex. He reconfigured his entire home to keep their whereabouts a secret. And it was all to "purely satisfy his sexual needs," Det. David Jacobs of the Cuyahoga County Sheriff's Office testified Thursday during the sentencing hearing for Cleveland kidnapper Ariel Castro. Castro's victims were subjected to a "complete and comprehensive captivity," forensic psychiatrist Dr. Gregory Saathoff said during the Cleveland kidnapper's sentencing hearing. Saathoff initially wrote upon learning of the kidnappings, "The scope and magnitude of Ariel Castro's crimes is unprecedented," but he said that an examination of the defendant showed "no psychiatric illness whatsoever." Already in the testimony, witnesses have recounted Castro forcing the girls to play Russian roulette, throwing money at them after sexually abusing them, his admission that he's a "criminal" and "sexual predator" and the measures he took to keep the women's whereabouts a secret. Explaining how women the age of Castro's victims typically are learning how to be intimate in life, psychiatrist Frank Ochberg, a pioneer in trauma science, described the mental damage the women suffered. "This was not real intimacy. This was a perversion of intimacy," Ochberg said, further describing the women's survival and coping skills as "marvelous, compelling examples of resilience, of imagination, of humanity." While Castro faces the possibility of spending the rest of his days in prison, Ochberg said the women will experience "life sentences" themselves and the horrific memories are not going away. Deborah Knight, the grandmother of kidnapping victim Michelle Knight, participates in a community balloon-release service in Michelle's honor on Thursday, May 9, in Cleveland. Four females were found in a home on Seymour Avenue in the Clark Fulton neighborhood on Monday. Since then, the neighborhood and the nation have wondered how they were held captive without anyone noticing sooner. The Clark Fulton neighborhood HIDE CAPTION Testimony kicked off with Barbara Johnson, the Cleveland police officer who first responded to kidnapper Ariel Castro's home. She recalled finding Michelle Knight and Georgina DeJesus after hearing the pitter-patter of footsteps in a dark room. Knight "literally launched herself" into another officer's arms," Johnson said, "legs, arms, just choking him. She just kept repeating, 'You saved us! You saved us!' " Johnson said the kidnapping victims were scared, pale, talkative and didn't want to be left alone. After the women were rescued in May, Castro was quick to tell police that his brothers had no involvement in the kidnappings and it was in that context that he told authorities, "I'm a criminal," but he showed no remorse at that time, said . " 'I knew what I did was wrong.' He said that more than once," Jacobs said, explaining how Castro cooperated with police. Castro had a gun in the home that he told Jacobs he would "show to the girls as a form of control." Asked if he had ever forced the girls to play Russian roulette, Castro told Jacobs that he didn't remember it, "but if the girls said it, it probably happened." FBI agent Andrew Burke said he had been familiar with DeJesus' and Amanda Berry's disappearances prior to their discovery earlier this year. Asked if he remembered the moment he saw them, Burke recalled first laying eyes on the three adult victims and Berry's daughter in an ambulance outside Castro's home. "I'll never forget it," Burke said, explaining the women appeared dehydrated and malnourished. "It was surreal to me. I had been involved in the missing persons investigations for quite some time." Shown photos and a model of Castro's home, Burke described a residence equipped with an alarm on the back door, a bedspread separating the kitchen and living area, a porch swing obstructing a flight of stairs and a curtain over the stairs leading to the area where the women were held captive. The door to the room where Berry and her daughter were held had no doorknob and could be secured from the outside. Because the windows in that room were boarded up from the inside, Burke said, a hole was cut in the door for ventilation. Authorities also found a "significant amount" of cash in a washing machine in the house. On occasion, Castro would throw the money at the women after sexually abusing them and require that they pay him to pick up any special items for them when he left the house, the agent said. Also found in the home was a handwritten letter in which Castro described how he victimized his captives and declared, "I am a sexual predator," Burke said. The letter also noted that Castro himself had been sexually abused as a child and mentioned an addiction to pornography and masturbation. On cross-examination, Burke said the Castro also expressed remorse and said he was sick and mentally ill, but the FBI agent did not concur with the defense's characterization of the letter as a suicide note. Gerald Maloney, the emergency room doctor on duty when the three victims were taken to the hospital, described them as "very much emotionally fragile at the time" and said Knight requested that no male physicians attend to her. The women told Maloney that they had been sexually and physically abused and, at times, deprived of food during their years of captivity. Castro lured DeJesus into his car in 2004 by asking her for help locating his daughter, said Det. Andrew Harasimchuk, recalling DeJesus' statement to him. Castro then told DeJesus he had to go home for money before asking her for help moving a speaker, the detective said. She became uncomfortable, and Castro told her she had to leave through a different door than the one she entered through. When she walked through that door, she found herself in the basement of his home, Harasimchuk said. Castro then chained her to a center support pole in the basement, bound her hands with plastic ties and sexually assaulted her, the detective said. All three women told Harasimchuk that they had been repeatedly raped "vaginally, orally and anally" during their captivity, he said. Castro pleaded guilty last week to 937 counts, including murder and kidnapping, in a deal that dropped a possible death penalty in exchange for life in prison plus 1,000 years. At the beginning of his hearing, a shackled Castro, flanked by his lawyers and wearing an orange prison uniform and eyeglasses, quietly told the judge he understood the reporting requirements of his sex-offender status, should he ever be released, which is unlikely given the plea deal. Defense attorney Craig Weintraub told the court that his client accepts "full responsibility" for his conduct. Noting that Castro promptly took responsibility for his crimes, Judge Michael Russo said that given the scope of the crimes, "I don't know that this could've been any more dignified." Amanda Berry speaks in a video released on YouTube on Monday, July 8, thanking people for support and privacy. Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight escaped from a Cleveland home on May 6 after being held captive for nearly a decade. Kidnapped teens found decade later HIDE CAPTION With a model of Castro's home in the courtroom, another defense attorney, Jaye Schlachet, said he did not approve of anything but the victims' impact statements being introduced during the sentencing hearing. He also mentioned doctors' reports and photos as other examples of things he felt shouldn't be presented in court. Russo later responded that he wanted to see records pertaining to the case and hear testimony to ensure that "the court can reach and appropriate sentence." Castro is expected to speak at length during his sentencing, delivering a statement that his sister promises will allow people to see "the other side of Ariel Castro." He'll give a rather lengthy statement, explaining his life and who he really is, his sister, Marisol Alicea, told CNN on Wednesday night. "(People will) see the other side of Ariel Castro ... not the monster that everyone thinks he is," she said, adding that she was in no way defending her brother. "He must pay for what he did." Alicea said she doesn't plan on attending the sentencing with others in her family, fearing the evidence will be too graphic. Hearing to last hours The sentencing hearing is expected to last hours and include witness testimony and evidence, a Cuyahoga County court source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, told CNN. Child custody rights for rapists? Most states have them Prosecutors want to make sure there's a record going forward in case of a future appeal, should Castro want to try to get out of prison, said the source who was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter. Prosecutors also want the court and the public to understand the impact Castro's actions had on his victims and the community. At least one of Castro's victims, Knight, will likely make an impact statement during the hearing, Alicea said. An official with direct knowledge of the investigation also said Knight intends to speak. In a handwritten note, posted Wednesday on the Cleveland Police Community Relations Facebook page, Knight said she was overwhelmed with the support she has received from "complete strangers." "It is comforting. Life is tough, but I'm tougher," she wrote. "Just when the caterpillar thought the world was over, she became a butterfly. Thanks." The other two women -- DeJesus and Berry -- will not be present in the court, according to the attorney representing the three women. They could make a videotaped statement, or a family member could talk on their behalf. Ariel Castro's son: I won't visit dad in prison Evaluating a kidnapper Prosecutors also have submitted an evaluation of Castro's confinement and abuse of Knight, DeJesus and Berry that was compiled by acclaimed psychiatrist Frank Ochberg, considered a pioneer in trauma science. The evaluation was part of the prosecution's pre-sentencing report, which has been submitted to the court. The evaluation -- using statements, medical records, videotaped interviews and transcripts -- painted a horrifying picture of physical and emotional abuse at the hands of Castro that included brutal beatings and repeated rapes that resulted in pregnancies that he would end by punching the women in the stomach. "He appeared to be evolving in an ever more dangerous direction, capturing younger and younger women, telling his captives he was hunting for replacements," Ochberg wrote. Castro abducted Knight, Berry and DeJesus separately over a two-year period between 2002 and 2004, according to investigators. Promise of a ride In each case, Castro lured the women into his car with the promise of a ride, according to court documents submitted by Timothy McGinty, Cuyahoga County prosecuting attorney. Castro "enticed" Knight to go inside the house, where she would be held captive in the next 11 years, with "promises of a puppy for her son." The documents also say that Castro "serially abused (Knight, Berry and DeJesus) physically, emotionally, and sexually on a daily basis." All three women kept diaries, with Castro's permission, providing many of the details used in the case. Knight suffered "the longest" The women and Berry's 6-year-old daughter were held in Castro's 1,400-square-foot home. DNA tests have confirmed that Castro is the child's father. In the evaluation, Ochberg wrote that Knight, who was kidnapped first, suffered "the longest and most severely." "But it was Michelle who served as doctor, nurse, midwife and pediatrician during the birth (of Berry's child). She breathed life into that infant when she wasn't breathing," he wrote. "At other times, she interceded when Castro sought to abuse Gina, interposing herself and absorbing physical and sexual trauma. But each survivor had a will to prevail and used that will to live through the ordeal." When freedom came The women were freed in May after Berry shouted for help while Castro was away. Neighbor Charles Ramsey said he heard their cries as he was sitting down to eat. "I see this girl going nuts trying to get out of a house," he told CNN affiliate WEWS. "I go on the porch and she says, 'Help me get out. I've been in here a long time.'" Finally free, Berry pleaded for a phone. "Help me, I am Amanda Berry," she frantically told a 911 operator. "I've been kidnapped, and I've been missing for 10 years. And I'm here, I'm free now." In early July, Berry, DeJesus and Knight released a YouTube video offering their thanks to all those who have helped them since they were freed. They have not faced their captor and tormentor since their rescue. "I want to thank everyone who has helped me and my family through this entire ordeal. Everyone who has been there to support us has been a blessing," Berry said in the video. "I'm getting stronger each day." Why so many high-profile crimes in Cleveland? CNN's Eliott C. McLaughlin wrote from Atlanta, and Pamela Brown reported from Cleveland. CNN's Chelsea J. Carter, Chris Boyette, Ronni Berke, Ashley Fantz and Martin Savidge contributed to this report. |
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