Was his 1st visit to the us when he was extradited?
So this talented Ukrainian did consultancy work for an online criminal gang lasting from 2016 to 2018, effectively standing up a Jira server outside the US and coordinating the gangs online attacks.
For his efforts he got handsomely compensated and on a trip to Thailand in 2019 he was arrested, held in custody until May 2020 when he was extradited to the US and then tried and sentenced within the last few weeks.
He’s been in custody for what could be years.
His activities causing financial harm to american citizens is abhorrent, but then so is having someone arrested in Thailand in 2019 and then not putting them on trial till early 2022.
What if he was found innocent? - slim chance by the sounds of things but still why the wait?
Regardless of who the person is they deserve a fair trial, locking someone up for 3 years before giving them a trial is not fair, it’s kidnapping.
Democracy is not having third nations abduct people of interest to you and then leaving then in prison until such a time as you get round to ”judging” them in front of a jury.
As I understand it the Taliban are into false trials & the us spent ~20 years and a trillion $ to try and stop them as their way of life and false trials was deemed abhorrent, yet the US is doing much the same albeit less publicly.
It’s great he’s been stopped providing his skills to the criminal gangs, but the way he was stopped needs to be modernised and made less brutal.
If the USA can do this to a single IT person, why can’t they do that to those that distribute drugs or csam or other harmful activities?