Griner, the W.N.B.A. star, sent a letter to President Biden on Monday, asking him to help free her from prison in Russia. She has been in custody since ...
In April, the United States and Russia held a prisoner swap that freed Trevor R. Reed, a former U.S. Marine who had been held on assault charges for more than two years. The U.S. State Department determined in May that she had been “ wrongfully detained,” though it has not said how or why it came to that conclusion. Griner faces up to 10 years in a penal colony if she is convicted of the drug charges in Russia. Her trial began Friday, and legal experts said that she was likely to be found guilty. Brittney Griner, 31, was detained on Feb. 17 after she was accused of having hashish oil in her luggage at an airport near Moscow. She was in Russia to play with UMMC Yekaterinburg, a professional women’s basketball team that she had competed for during several W.N.B.A. off-seasons. More than 40 Americans were said to be wrongfully detained around the world earlier this year. “I will not be quiet anymore,” Cherelle Griner said. There’s no presumption of innocence, really.” The determination meant that government officials who deal with hostages would work to free her. “There’s a bias mainly because the Russian judicial system says they really should not go to trial unless the defendant is going to be convicted,” William Pomeranz, the acting director of the Kennan Institute and an expert on Russian law, told The New York Times recently. “My wife is struggling and we have to help her.” She said that Brittney also told her in correspondence that she was physically “weak,” but reassured her about her mental health. However, speaking to “CBS Mornings” on Tuesday, Griner’s wife, Cherelle Griner, said the family had still not received a reply from the president, calling it “very disheartening.” Brittney Griner, the W.N.B.A. star who has been detained in Russia on drug charges since February, sent a handwritten letter to President Biden on Monday asking him not to forget about her.
A handwritten letter from Brittney Griner was delivered to the White House on the Fourth of July.
"I realize you are dealing with so much," she wrote, "But please don't forget about me and the other American detainees. In her personal plea, Griner urged Mr. Biden to free all U.S. captives. "I believe in you. I still have so much good to do with my freedom that you can help restore," she wrote. Griner, whose trial began last week, was arrested at a Moscow airport in February after Russia claimed she had cannabis oil in her luggage. In her letter, the imprisoned WNBA star pleaded with the president not to forget her, and said her already deep appreciation for Independence Day has taken on new meaning this year.
Cherelle Griner said the government needs to do more to help her wife.
... Nothing about this is justice," she added. WNBA star Brittney Griner appealed to President Biden to help her and other American detainees in Russia in a handwritten letter that was delivered to the White House on Monday morning. "I’m terrified I might be here forever": Brittney Griner in letter to Biden - "I’m terrified I might be here forever": Brittney Griner in letter to Biden Because being quiet, they are not moving.” Brittney Griner's wife Cherelle Griner told " CBS Mornings" that President Biden hasn't responded to the WNBA star's recent letter to the White House, adding that the government needs to do more to help her wife.
Brittney Griner, a WNBA All-Star and two-time Olympic gold medalist from Texas, has been detained in Russia since February on cannabis possession charges. Her ...
Cherelle Griner also told The Associated Press last month that her wife tried to call her 11 times over a period of several hours to mark the couple’s fourth anniversary. “I will find that balance of harm versus help in pushing our government to do everything that’s possible. Carstens “has met with Brittney’s family, her teammates, and her support network,” Watson said. Because being quiet, they are not moving.” So I’m going to do it myself.’” “I still have not heard from him.
WNBA star Brittney Griner, in a handwritten letter to President Joe Biden, said she fears she will be detained in Russia indefinitely and pleaded with the ...
"We will continue to push for her release and make sure that she is not forgotten." "It made me cry, you know, just hearing her words talking about her father being a Vietnam vet, her new perspective on freedom, her wanting to be with her family and her teammates, her not knowing if she'll ever be free again. "I'm grateful for this overwhelming show of support from Congress. We need to be doing all we can to keep Brittney's case on the forefront and finally put an end to this nightmare," Cherelle Griner said in a statement at the time. It's over 130 days and BG's still not back." Three excerpts from the letter were made public, while the rest is being kept private, the statement said. "It's really, really difficult. I miss my teammates! I miss my family! This is not a situation where the rhetoric is matching the action," she said. I miss my wife! I voted for the first time in 2020 and I voted for you. She went on trial
The letter is an escalation of a pressure campaign by the WNBA star's supporters that comes as her trial proceeds in a court outside of Moscow.
… Four months is too long for this to have gone on, and I hope the president acts on her pleas to come home.” She deserves to see the United States is doing something for her, so she can find the strength as this show trial goes on. “After speaking with her wife last week, I am deeply concerned for Brittney Griner’s physical, mental and spiritual well-being,” Sharpton said in a statement. After being able to speak with Griner in the courtroom, Rood said, “She is doing as well as expected under these difficult circumstances.” In early May, the State Department declared Griner’s case a “wrongful detainment,” an official classification that elevated it to the office of the U.S. Special Presidential Envoy for Hostage Affairs. I try to put myself in her shoes, and I’d want somebody fighting for me — people who won’t shut up.” Asked for comment on Griner’s letter to Biden, Adrienne Watson, spokeswoman for the National Security Council, told The Washington Post: “[Biden’s] team is in regular contact with Brittney’s family and we will continue to work to support her family. “Whatever that is.” Her trial began Friday and is expected to continue Thursday; Griner has yet to enter a plea. This letter is going to make them pay attention.” But U.S. officials have not commented on the likelihood of such a swap. In April, U.S. officials secured the release of former Marine Trevor Reed from Russia through a prisoner swap.
Détenue en Russie depuis février, la star du basket féminin a écrit une lettre au président américain pour lui demander son aide à l'approche de son procès ...
Selon les médias américains, Moscou pourrait tenter d’utiliser Brittney Griner comme monnaie d’échange. Son procès s'est ouvert vendredi 1er juillet à huis clos partiel. La joueuse des Phoenix Mercury venait en Russie en février pour y jouer durant l'intersaison américaine, pratique courante pour les basketteuses qui gagnent parfois mieux leur vie à l'étranger que chez elles. « Je suis terrifiée à l’idée d’être assise ici dans une prison russe pour toujours, écrit la double championne olympique.
Brittney Griner a lancé un appel au président Joe Biden dans une lettre transmise à la Maison-Blanche par l'intermédiaire de ses représentants disant ...
Je suis reconnaissante pour tout ce que vous pouvez faire en ce moment pour me ramener à la maison.» Griner a pu avoir des communications sporadiques avec sa famille, ses amis et les joueuses de la WNBA via un compte de messagerie créé par son agent. «S’il vous plaît, faites tout ce que vous pouvez pour nous ramener à la maison. «Nous pensons que la Fédération de Russie détient à tort Brittney Griner, a déclaré la porte-parole du NSC, Adrienne Watson, lundi. L’agent de Griner, Lindsay Kagawa Colas, a révélé que la lettre avait été livrée, lundi. Et vous savez que je partage les mêmes sentiments.
La vedette américaine du basketball féminin a demandé lundi à son président de tout faire pour la libérer de la prison russe où elle est détenue.
J’ai encore tant de choses à accomplir avec ma liberté que vous pouvez m’aider à retrouver», écrit-elle encore dans une lettre poignante. «Je sais très bien que vous devez faire face à beaucoup de choses, mais s’il vous plaît, ne nous oubliez pas, moi et les autres détenus américains», implore la championne. «Ma femme me manque!
Libérer Brittney Griner, emprisonnée en Russie depuis février, est une « priorité » pour Joe Biden, a assuré mardi sa porte-parole, indiquant, de manière ...
« Nous comprenons bien sûr la volonté des familles d’attirer autant que possible l’attention sur leurs affaires », a assuré Ned Price. « Nous voulons mettre fin à cette pratique, que ce soit en Russie ou dans un autre pays, de détenir des Américains ou des ressortissants étrangers de manière illégale pour en tirer des bénéfices politiques », a commenté mardi Ned Price, porte-parole du département d’État. « Assise ici dans une prison russe, seule avec mes pensées et sans la protection de ma femme, de ma famille, de mes amis, de mon maillot olympique ou de tout ce que j’ai accompli, je suis terrifiée à l’idée d’être ici pour toujours », a écrit la double championne olympique de basket.
White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre was asked repeatedly about the detained WNBA star on Tuesday during the regular briefing.
Griner has been able to have sporadic communications with family, friends and WNBA players through an email account her agent set up. Griner’s supporters have encouraged a prisoner swap like the one in April that brought home Marine veteran Trevor Reed in exchange for a Russian pilot convicted of drug trafficking conspiracy. “It hurts thinking about how I usually celebrate this day because freedom means something completely different to me this year.” “That means she truly is terrified that she may never see us again. White House press secretary Karine Jean-Pierre was asked repeatedly about Griner on Tuesday during the regular briefing. However Griner’s wife, Cherelle, said Tuesday on a morning talk show that she hadn’t heard from Biden.
American WNBA star Brittney Griner wrote a letter to President Joe Biden from a Russian jail cell pleading for the United States to take action Tuesday.
The U.S. classified her as wrongly detained in April and said Russia is using her as a political pawn. Griner’s agent said likely her only way home is the U.S. negotiating on her behalf. It has not said the statement is connected to Griner’s case.
In her letter, Brittney Griner reminds Biden about her father who served in Vietnam war and says she misses her wife and family.
I miss my teammates! I miss my family! “I miss my wife!
Brittney Griner's wife, Cherelle, still has not heard from the president, which she said was "very disheartening."
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Detained in Russia, the WNBA star sent a letter to Biden saying she's 'terrified' she might be there forever.
I miss my teammates! I miss my family! White House officials confirmed Tuesday Biden has read Griner's handwritten letter, and that the President will do everything in his power to get Griner and other detainees home. I miss my wife! Griner was detained at Sheremetyevo International Airport on Feb. 17 after the Russian Federal Customs Service claimed to have found vape cartridges containing the marijuana concentrate hashish oil in Griner's luggage. I'm sure she is like 'I'm going to write him and ask now because my family has tried to no avail, so I'm going to do it myself,'" Cherelle said.