Originally published Friday, July 30, 2010 at 1:06 PM
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Peru: Spy husband could face fraud charges
A Peruvian journalist whom the U.S. deported to Russia this month in a spy swap is free to return home but her Russian husband could be charged with lying on his citizenship application, Peru's foreign minister said Friday.
Associated Press Writer
A Peruvian journalist whom the U.S. deported to Russia this month in a spy swap is free to return home but her Russian husband could be charged with lying on his citizenship application, Peru's foreign minister said Friday.
"They didn't spy in favor of or against Peru," the official, Jose Antonio Garcia, said in a radio interview.
He said Peruvian-born Vicky Pelaez, a longtime columnist for the newspaper El Diario La Prensa in New York City, is a Peruvian citizen and is free to return home, where she is not accused of breaking any laws.
But her husband Mikhail Vasenkov - who plans to accompany her - could face fraud charges, Garcia said.
Pelaez, 55, and Vasenkov, 65, met in Peru in the early 1980s when she was a TV reporter and he a news photographer. He identified himself as Juan Lazaro, an Uruguayan. It was that name he gave when he fraudulently obtained Peruvian citizenship in 1979, Garcia said.
The couple's New York lawyer, Genesis Perduto, told The Associated Press on Friday that the couple plans to return to Peru in a matter of weeks. She said it remains to be resolved whether Vasenkov can indeed be prosecuted here.
The law against the falsification and use of fraudulent public documents that Vasenkov allegedly broke has a 10-year statute of limitations so he cannot be prosecuted, said Mario Amoretti, a Peruvian criminal law expert.
It is unclear whether Pelaez was aware of her husband's true identity before the couple's arrest in late June.
Perduto said the couple's 17-year-old son, Juan Lazaro Jr., and his stepbrother Waldo Mariscal, 38, would stay in the New York area.
"They're getting an apartment," she said. "They have a few more months until they have to leave the house."
U.S. prosecutors say the family's two-story brick and stucco home in suburban Yonkers was paid for by Vasenkov's Russian government handlers.
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Associated Press writer Frank Bajak contributed to this report from Bogota, Colombia.
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