Sofia, 11, and Daniel, 8, did not speak the language and knew nothing about their new home country
The Russian government plane that landed in Moscow from Ankara on Thursday carried an assortment of spies, assassins and criminals, one half of the biggest prisoner exchange since the cold war.
But among the first to descend the stairs to the tarmac, where president Vladimir Putin was waiting to greet the returnees, were two young children, looking wide-eyed and confused.
Sofia, 11, and Daniel, 8, had been born in Argentina. They later moved with their parents, Maria Mayer and Ludwig Gisch, to Slovenia, where Mayer ran an online art gallery and Gisch started an IT company.
Mayer told friends the family had left their home country of Argentina to avoid street crime. The family spoke Spanish at home; the children went to an international school in Ljubljana, where they studied in English.
We still do execute spies, as long as their actions were sufficiently serious.
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/794
We also don’t have parole for federal crimes, so when the statue says you maybe get sentenced to life, it doesn’t mean “you get at most fifteen years until a parole hearing” the way it does in Germany. It means you’re going to jail for the rest of your life.
They were living in Slovenia, though, and the Council of Europe requires members to not have the death penalty, so they wouldn’t have been executed. The only European country that isn’t in the Council of Europe and has the death penalty is Belarus. Well, and Russia withdrew, and the Kremlin did extrajudicial killings anyway when Russia was in the Council of Europe.
I also don’t think that Slovenia considered this to be at the upper end of the scale. They apparently, assuming that this was them, got a year and seven months. I don’t know Slovenia’s criminal code, but I am confident that whatever espionage law they have permits for more-severe penalties than that.