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(I walked outside into the beautiful sunlight and immediately noticed a lawyer’s office directly across the street at Furkasovsky Lane, 3 (Фуркасовский переулок, 3). It was a pastel lime green building and had an old Soviet style lawyer's (юрист) sign above it - with no company name. The law offices have many names, including Боярцев и Партнеры and [https://yandex.ru/maps/org/tsentr_pravovoy_pomoshchi/237725855937/ Legal Aid Center]. Their site: http://www.urpark.ru I entered the building an)
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[[File:lawyers office across from fsb building.jpg|300px|left|Lawyer's office across the street from FSB main building]]
[[File:lawyers office across from fsb building.jpg|300px|left|Lawyer's office across the street from FSB main building]]
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I walked outside into the beautiful  sunlight and immediately noticed a lawyer’s office directly across the street at Furkasovsky Lane, 3 (Фуркасовский переулок, 3).  It was a pastel lime green building and had an old Soviet style lawyer's (юрист) sign above it - with no company name.  The law offices have many names, including Боярцев и Партнеры and [https://yandex.ru/maps/org/tsentr_pravovoy_pomoshchi/237725855937/ Legal Aid Center]. Their site: http://www.urpark.ru
I entered the building and requested a lawyer's consultation. 
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[[File:akob edyardovich business card fsb laywer.png|300px|thumb|Akob Edyardovich's business card]]
[[File:akob edyardovich.png|300px|thumb|Business card with time to meet next]]
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The secretary took me back to met Akob Edyardovich.  There were several men in the office.  I told him that I had just walked into FSB (KGB) Lubyanka building, this put everyone in the office in a panic. One man looked out the curtain window at the building across the street.  They really were surprised.  Akob agreed to help me with political asylum.
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==Contract for political asylum== 
[[File:political asylum application.png|500px]]
[[File:political asylum application 2.png|500px]]
[[File:political asylum application 3.png|500px]]
[[File:political asylum application 4 signature.png|500px]]
[[File:Akob June 8 receipt.png|500px|thumb|June 8 Receipt]]
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====== Contract for political asylum  ======
On June 8, 2016, Akob Edyardovich drew up a contract.  For 500,000 rubles (approximately $8000 at the time) Edyardovich would help me get political asylum.  I had read in the Moscow Times that it was impossible for Americans to get political asylum, even for Edward Snowden.  But the end goal was not political asylum, the end goal  was to put my name out their to those in power and show that I was dedicated completely and wholly to Russia. 
I returned with 20,000 Rubles later.  In another visit, Akob Edyardovich asked me to renounce my family and my ex-wife.  I said no I could not.
I was explicitly warned (threatened) by Akob that I many lawyers like me are killed all the time in Russia.
Akob told me not post any political comments on Facebook or social media. In response, I increased the number of Facebook political comments.

Revision as of 14:28, 19 February 2024

Moscow/Political Asylum

(Extremely redacted and edited public version)
See also: Smuggling classified secret cyber documents to Russia

On June 8, 2016, I walked into the main KGB (FSB) building in Moscow and asked for political asylum. I had smuggled a Secret Document from the United States government to Russia which I gave to the KGB (FSB)


Actively seeking Russian political asylum (June 2016)

Background

File:Lubyanka building 2 circles and arrows only with words.png
Where I entered the Lubyanka building twice. Location of the lawyer's office


File:Lubyanka petr burning.jpg
Petr Pavlensky being arrested in front of the Lubyanka building


During Stalin's Great Purges. Lubyanka Building (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lubyanka_Building) was the main headquarters of the KGB (NKVD). Many prisoners were tortured in the building and executed. After the fall of the Soviet Union, the KGB was renamed the FSB.

In November 2015, Russian activist Petr Pavlensky https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Petr_Pavlensky set fire to the door of the infamous FSB (KGB) Lubyanka building.


Walking into the infamous FSB (KGB) Lubyanka building (June 8?, 2016)

File:Lubyanka building door.png
Lubyanka building door I entered
File:Lubyanka building.png
Layout of the inside of the Lubyanka building


Security tensions in this infamous building were high by June 2016.

On June 8?, 2016, after trying since arrival in Moscow to get the attention of the Russian intelligentsia, I entered this KGB building unannounced and stated that I wanted political asylum to the guard. The guard said he could not help me.

Amazingly, I was able to just walk out of the building and I was not detained.

OK

Lawyer's office across the street from the FSB (KGB)
2018 update: As of 2018, this office location has been closed and has been extensively remodeled.



I walked outside into the beautiful sunlight and immediately noticed a lawyer’s office directly across the street at Furkasovsky Lane, 3 (Фуркасовский переулок, 3). It was a pastel lime green building and had an old Soviet style lawyer's (юрист) sign above it - with no company name. The law offices have many names, including Боярцев и Партнеры and Legal Aid Center. Their site: http://www.urpark.ru

I entered the building and requested a lawyer's consultation.


File:Akob edyardovich.png
Business card with time to meet next


The secretary took me back to met Akob Edyardovich. There were several men in the office. I told him that I had just walked into FSB (KGB) Lubyanka building, this put everyone in the office in a panic. One man looked out the curtain window at the building across the street. They really were surprised. Akob agreed to help me with political asylum.

Contract for political asylum

File:Political asylum application.png

File:Political asylum application 2.png

File:Political asylum application 3.png

File:Political asylum application 4 signature.png


Contract for political asylum

On June 8, 2016, Akob Edyardovich drew up a contract. For 500,000 rubles (approximately $8000 at the time) Edyardovich would help me get political asylum. I had read in the Moscow Times that it was impossible for Americans to get political asylum, even for Edward Snowden. But the end goal was not political asylum, the end goal was to put my name out their to those in power and show that I was dedicated completely and wholly to Russia.

I returned with 20,000 Rubles later. In another visit, Akob Edyardovich asked me to renounce my family and my ex-wife. I said no I could not.

I was explicitly warned (threatened) by Akob that I many lawyers like me are killed all the time in Russia.

Akob told me not post any political comments on Facebook or social media. In response, I increased the number of Facebook political comments.