From Aesthetician to Accused: The Treason Trial of Anastasia Karelina

Anastasia Karelina, a Russian-American aesthetician, faces trial for alleged treason in Russia. Accused of raising money for the Ukrainian army, Karelina could face 12 years to life in prison. The closed-door trial, part of heightened tensions between Moscow and Washington, has been adjourned until Aug. 7.


Reuters | Updated: 20-06-2024 16:14 IST | Created: 20-06-2024 16:14 IST
From Aesthetician to Accused: The Treason Trial of Anastasia Karelina

A Russian-American woman arrested earlier this year while visiting family in Russia went on trial for alleged treason on Thursday after authorities accused her of raising money to send to the Ukrainian army.

Karelina, who was born in Russia but had built a new life as an aesthetician at a Los Angeles spa after immigrating to the United States over a decade ago, faces a sentence of 12 years to life in prison if found guilty. Her trial will be held behind closed doors, as is customary in such cases in Russia. Treason acquittals are rare there.

The court in the Urals city of Yekaterinburg published a short video of Karelina sitting in a glass cage, wearing jeans and a green plaid shirt. She smiled faintly as reporters snapped photographs. A notice on the website of the court posted later on Thursday said the trial had been adjourned until Aug. 7. It did not state a reason.

At least a dozen Americans are currently jailed in Russia, part of a growing list of foreign nationals who have found themselves caught up in the crisis of relations between Moscow and Washington during the Ukraine war. Russia's Federal Security Service (FSB) detained Karelina in January while she was visiting her parents and young sister in Yekaterinburg.

Her former mother-in-law, Eleonora Srebroski, told Reuters in February that Karelina had travelled home around the New Year after her boyfriend surprised her with a plane ticket. She had assured her boyfriend that Russia was "safe" and that he had no reason to fear her travelling there, according to Srebroski.

Initially arrested under a minor "petty hooliganism" statute, Karelina was later charged with treason. Srebroski said Karelina had made a small donation to Razom for Ukraine, a New York-based nonprofit that sends non-military assistance to the country, invaded by Russian forces in 2022 in what Moscow called a special military operation.

Karelina, who is in her early thirties, arrived in the U.S. in 2012 via a work-study program and was briefly married to Srebroski's son. Her ex-husband has described her as a fun-loving woman who didn't care much for politics. Karelina's social media profiles feature photos of herself and friends on the beach and on trips, but without political messaging.

One photo from November 2021 shows her in a long dress, smiling and waving a small American flag, with the caption, "Citizenship". (Reporting and writing by Lucy Papachristou; editing by Andrew Osborn and Mark Heinrich)

(This story has not been edited by Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

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