Trendinginfo.blog > World > Ex-intelligence officer accused of betraying Austria in Russia spying trial

Ex-intelligence officer accused of betraying Austria in Russia spying trial

5ac52770 f6e1 11f0 a4dd a5af35a571cb.jpg 5ac52770 f6e1 11f0 a4dd a5af35a571cb.jpg

Thank you for reading this post, don't forget to subscribe!

Bethany BellVienna correspondent

Reuters A man with a black jacket and tie and dark hair and glasses stares at a cameraReuters

Egisto Ott is accused of collecting large amounts of data and handing information to Russian intelligence

Former intelligence official Egisto Ott has gone on trial in Vienna, accused of spying for Russia in what is being dubbed Austria’s biggest spy trial in years.

Egisto Ott, who told the court on Thursday that he was not guilty, is charged with having handed over information to Russian intelligence officers and to Jan Marsalek, the fugitive executive of collapsed German payments firm Wirecard.

The prosecutor told the court that Ott, 63, was “not romantic about Russia” but had acted out of financial motives and frustration with his career. “Simply put, this was betraying the country.” he said.

Ott’s lawyer, Anna Mair, rejected the allegations.

“Don’t you think that if he had really been spying for Russia, he would have covered his tracks?” she asked.

The prosecutor argued that people like Ott were “very susceptible” to working for the Russians, saying: “They are frustrated in their careers and urgently need money.”

Ott had done “excellent” work for the Russian secret service”, the prosecution added.

The former intelligence official had been broke since 2013 at the latest, the court heard: “The Russian secret service pays very well.”

He is alleged to have “abused his authority” as an Austrian intelligence official by collecting large amounts of personal data, such as locations, vehicle registration numbers, or travel movements.

Prosecutors say he did this between 2015 and 2020 without authorisation, often using national and international police databases.

They also accuse him of supporting “a secret intelligence service of the Russian Federation to the detriment of the Republic of Austria” by collecting secret facts and a large amount of personal data from police databases between 2017 and 2021.

As well as abuse of authority, Egisto Ott is charged with corruption and espionage against Austria and if found guilty faces up to five years in prison.

The spy scandal has revived fears that Austria remains a hotbed of Russian espionage activity and observers will also be watching closely for details that could emerge about Jan Marsalek.

Marsalek, who is also an Austrian citizen, is wanted by German police for alleged fraud and is currently believed to be in Moscow, having fled via Austria in 2020.

The subject of an Interpol Red Notice, he is alleged to be an intelligence asset for the FSB, Russia’s secretive security service.

Prosecutors allege that Egisto Ott handed information to Marsalek and unknown representatives of the Russian intelligence service, and received payment in return.

In 2022, they say, Marsalek commissioned him to obtain a laptop containing secret electronic security hardware used by EU states for secure electronic communication. The laptop, they say, was handed over to the Russian intelligence service.

Ott is also accused of handing over three Austrian government cell phones to Russia via Marsalek. The devices belonged to high-ranking employees of the Austrian interior ministry.

Ott told the court he had not handed over the cell phones to anyone – “certainly not to the Russian secret service”. He said he had “physically destroyed” the devices by smashing them with a hammer.

He said the media had made him “public enemy number one” and rejected the prosecutor’s claims that he was frustrated or broke. “I am almost 64 years old and want nothing more than to retire,” he said.

grey placeholderMunich Police Munich police wanted poster for Jan MarsalekMunich Police

Jan Marsalek, former executive at Wirecard, is believed to have escaped to Moscow

Meanwhile, prosecutors in the Austrian town of Wiener Neustadt have told the BBC that a former MP, Thomas Schellenbacher, has been charged with helping Marsalek to escape following the collapse of the Wirecard company in 2020, when it emerged that €1.9bn (£1.7bn) was missing from its accounts.

Schellenbacher is alleged to have helped Jan Marsalek fly to Belarus, from Bad Vöslau in Austria, in June 2020.

Schellenbacher was an MP for the far-right Freedom Party (FPÖ), which has been accused by Austria’s Green Party, now in opposition, of enabling Russian espionage, of acting as “an extension of Russia’s arm” in Austria.

The FPÖ and its leader Herbert Kickl have denied the allegations – and have not faced any legal action in connection with any of them.

Marsalek, who was the Wirecard’s Chief Operating Officer, has since been charged with fraud and embezzlement, suspected of having inflated company’s balance sheet total and sales volume.

He is also believed to have been the controller of a group of Bulgarians who were convicted in London in 2025, of spying for Russia.

Messages from that trial reveal Marsalek has had plastic surgery to alter his appearance as well as details of his life as a fugitive.

“I’m off to bed. Had another cosmetic surgery, trying to look differently, and I am dead tired and my head hurts,” he wrote to one of the Bulgarians, Roussev, on Telegram in February 2022.

In another, dated 11 May 2021, Roussev congratulated Marsalek for learning Russian.

“Well I am trying to improve my skills on a few fronts. Languages is one of them,” the Austrian responded.

“In my new role as an international fugitive I must outperform James Bond.”

Source link