I SPY – CONSULTANT JAILED FOR INDUSTRIAL ESPIONAGE ON SCANIA

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A 47-year-old former consultant to Scania and Volvo has been sentenced to three years in prison after being found guilty of selling Scania trade secrets to Russia

Swedish court documents reveal the man had previously worked as a consultant for both Volvo cars in 2016-2017 and from February 2018 until his arrest in early 2019 for Swedish truck maker Scania.

The man was apprehended while meeting with a Russian embassy official at a restaurant in central Stockholm with an amount of cash in his possession which he admitted to receiving from the Russian embassy official and which the Swedish court concluded was payment for the espinoage.

The court says the man transfered secret information from Volvo and Scania onto USB storage devices which he handed to the Russian embassy official knowing the information would benefit Russia, which the court says is a trigger for the charge of espionage.

“To be convicted of espionage, it is required that Sweden’s security can be damaged if the information benefits foreign powers,” the court says in a statement.

“The district court has ruled that this is the case with regard to the information that the man obtained from Scania, while it has not been proven that this is the case with regard to the information from Volvo.”

The man, whose occupation is listed as ‘civil engineer’, has denied the crime.

A Swedish court has sentenced a 47-year-old man to three years in prison for spying for Russia by handing over confidential information on the Swedish truck and bus maker Scania to a Russian diplomat in return for money over several years.

The man, identified as Kristian Dimitrievski, had been charged with delivering sensitive corporate information to his handlers about Scania but also about the Chinese-owned Swedish car manufacturer Volvo Cars. The Goteborg District Court acquitted him of that latter charge in its verdict on Wednesday.

Dimitrievski, a civil engineer living in Sweden’s second city of Goteborg who worked between 2016-2019 as a consultant first with Volvo Cars and later with Scania, denied the charges. His nationality was not specified in court papers.

The court verdict said that in 2016 Dimitrievski got in touch with a Russian embassy official and the two began to meet with some regularity until the man was arrested at a meeting with the Russian diplomat at a restaurant in central Stockholm in 2019.

“The district court has concluded that the man copied secret information from both Volvo and Scania … that he then handed over to the Russian embassy official, and that he was fully aware that the information he provided would benefit Russia,” the court said in a statement.

The Swedish court said that for a suspect to be convicted of espionage it is required to be proven that Sweden’s security can be damaged if the information provided benefits foreign powers.

“The district court has ruled that this is the case with regard to the information … from Scania, while it has not been proven that this is the case with regard to the information from Volvo,” the court said.

Prosecutors had said earlier that the man’s actions put Sweden’s security at risk, and demanded “a lengthy sentence.” In Sweden, the maximum penalty is for espionage is six years.