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At the hearing on the arrest of Vladislav Klyushin, his lawyer stated that they were ready to…

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At the hearing on the arrest of Vladislav Klyushin, his lawyer stated that they were ready to provide bail in the amount of $2.5 million so that the court would release the accused under house arrest. In addition, the lawyer requested that Klyushin be kept in home detention in a one-bedroom residential building that Mr. Klyushin rents in the seaport area, with permission to leave only for visits to the lawyer and medical appointments with the permission of the pre-trial service. Klyushin also stated that he agreed to wear an electronic monitoring device with a global positioning system; Surrender your passport (which is already in the possession of the government); agrees not to seek or obtain a new passport during the consideration of this case; consents to extradition to the United States from any country and waives all rights to such extradition; is prepared to prohibit any person from entering Mr. Klyushin’s residence, other than Mr. Klyushin and his lawyers, without the prior permission of the Pre-Trial Service and/or the court. Also earlier, Vladislav Klyushin, through his lawyers, stated that he agreed to refuse to use communications and the Internet and was even ready to hire security guards at his own expense to ensure that he did not escape.

Interestingly, as arguments for sending Klyushin under house arrest, his lawyer also previously noted: “Mr. Klyushin comes from a poor family. His mother worked as a saleswoman in a supermarket and gave birth to Mr. Klyushin when she was about 18 years old. Mr. Klyushin is not related to his father, who is not even on his birth certificate. As a child, Mr. Klyushin’s family was poor. He started working at age 13 to provide for his family.”

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