David Barnes of Texas was sentenced to 21 years in a Russian penal colony for abusing his two sons.
A Russian judge convicted a Texas man on Tuesday of abusing his two sons between 2014 and 2018 in the United States, even though the law enforcement officials in suburban Houston who previously investigated the allegations never found cause to file charges.
David Barnes, 66, was sentenced to 21 years in a high-security Russian penal colony. His attorney, Gleb Glinka, said he is planning to appeal.
"Frankly, I'm horrified," Glinka told ABC News outside the courthouse. "There was almost no evidence that the court could base that verdict on."
Barnes, a native of Huntsville, Alabama, has been detained in Moscow since January 2022. His bench trial began in the fall of 2022 but occurred on nonconsecutive days and did not conclude until Monday. Barnes testified in his own defense near the end of the trial.
He was arrested by Russian authorities a few weeks after his family said he traveled to Moscow to see his children and apply for visitation rights in a Russian family court.
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Barnes' children had allegedly been taken out of the U.S. in 2019 illegally by his Russian ex-wife Svetlana Koptyaeva during a custody dispute, causing Interpol to issue global yellow warning notices to announce that the boys were missing.
"I didn't steal anyone," Koptyaeva said outside the courthouse on Tuesday. "I was just protecting my kids."
A warrant for felony interference with child custody against Koptyaeva was issued by Montgomery County prosecutors, who said in 2023 that the warrant was still active at the time.
A criminal complaint said Koptyaeva "failed to comply with any condition for travel outside the United States with the children" and that an FBI agent believed that she initially flew with the children from Houston to Istanbul.
Barnes was subsequently designated by a Texas court as the children's primary guardian, though the designation has been unenforceable due to the children disappearing from the U.S.
Koptyaeva had previously gone to law enforcement in Texas to allege that Barnes had abused the children there, but officials in the Lone Star State investigated the claims and found no basis to file charges against him.
In 2018, the Texas Department of Family and Protective Services found insufficient evidence to support the accusations of abuse and closed the case, while in 2023, the Montgomery County District Attorney's Office told ABC News, "At this time, there are no accusations out of Montgomery County that we are aware of that would allow Mr. Barnes to be held in custody."
After Barnes arrived in Russia, Koptyaeva reported the allegations from Texas to police in Moscow. Koptyaeva later testified as part of the trial.
READ MORE: David Barnes, American detained in Russia, plans to testify in his own defense
She told ABC News via email that the children were abused by Barnes, alleging they experienced "suffering and pain" and that she left the U.S. with them for their protection. Barnes has denied the allegations.
Unlike other Americans who have been held in Russia, all of Barnes' previous court appearances were closed to the press and U.S. embassy representatives. ABC News was granted access to the reading of the verdict on Tuesday.
Barnes appeared in a cell in the courtroom, telling an ABC News reporter that although trips to court have been very exhausting, he feels that justice will triumph.
Barnes' relatives in Alabama were expecting this outcome given the rarity of not-guilty verdicts in Russia, but they fear what will happen next. They said they hoped Barnes could be included in a prisoner exchange similar to the ones that allowed Trevor Reed and Brittney Griner to return to the U.S. from Russia after they were each convicted.
American Paul Whelan was sentenced to a Russian penal colony in 2020 and remains in custody, while Evan Gershkovich was arrested last year and is currently awaiting trial.
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