Minnesota Is Suing the Trump Administration Over ICE Operations...and the Reasoning Is a...
A CNBC Host Delivered One Remark That Wrecked a Dem Senator's Entire Narrative...
A Reporter in the WH Press Pool Tried to Hide Who She Worked...
Chevron Showdown: Supreme Court Weighs Energy Lawfare and Rogue Courts
Why Free Speech Scares the Hell Out of the Left
A Tough Week for PBS As It Struggles With Defunding – and Struggles...
Mark Ruffalo and His Hollywood Comrades Turned Golden Globes Into Anti-ICE Protest
Aaron Rupar Worries the U.S. Won't Survive President Trump Enforcing Immigration Laws
Mortgage Rates Fall to Three-Year Low
Trump Says the US is 'Screwed' if Supreme Court Strikes Down His Liberation...
Radio Host Resigns After Calling for the Assassination of Vice President JD Vance
Elizabeth Warren Calls on Democrats to Double Down on Progressive Economics
Mark Kelly Files Lawsuit Against Pete Hegseth Following ‘Seditious Six' Censure Effort
Trump Signals Exxon Could Be Shut Out of Venezuela Oil Opportunities As the...
Progressive Squad Member Calls Trump a ‘Dictator,’ Demands ICE Be Abolished Following Deat...
Tipsheet
Premium

Here's What WSJ Reporter Evan Gershkovich Requested From Putin Before Being Freed

Mikhail Klimentyev, Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP

Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich requested an interview with Russian President Vladimir Putin upon being released from a Russian prison where he had been held for over 16 months. 

On Thursday, in a form he had to complete before his release was finalized that mandated him to request presidential clemency, Gershkovich asked whether he could interview Putin. 

The WSJ reported, “The last line submitted a proposal of its own: After his release, would Putin be willing to sit down for an interview?" 

Putin agreed to release 16 prisoners in exchange for eight Russians being held in the West.  Gershkovich was freed alongside former U.S. Marine Paul Whelan, five Germans, and seven Russian citizens who were taken hostage as political prisoners. 

The Russian Federation had a few final items of protocol to tick through with the man who had become its most famous prisoner. One, he would be allowed to leave with the papers he’d penned in detention, the letters he’d scrawled out and the makings of a book he’d labored over. But first, they had another piece of writing they required from him, an official request for presidential clemency. The text, moreover, should be addressed to Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin. 

The pro forma printout included a long blank space the prison could fill out if desired, or simply, as expected, leave blank. In the formal high Russian he had honed over 16 months imprisonment, the Journal’s Russia correspondent filled the page. The last line submitted a proposal of his own: After his release, would Putin be willing to sit down for an interview? via the WSJ. 

Gershkovich was detained in 2023 while working as a reporter for the WSJ. He was charged with espionage charges, which critics say should have been dismissed as fraud. At the time of his arrest, the outlet was ironically covering Russia’s “hostage-taking spree.” 

Former President Donald Trump criticized President Joe Biden’s deal with Russia, saying Americans were freed under his administration without negotiating an agreement with the opposing party. 

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos