Israeli-Canadian racer Joshua Cartu arrested in Russia for alleged fraud in US
Israeli-Canadian racing driver Joshua Cartu detained in St. Petersburg for alleged large-scale fraud linked to binary options scheme.
Police in St Petersburg have detained an Israeli-Canadian racing car driver wanted by the United States for alleged large-scale fraud relating to an illegal online stock trading scheme, the city's court system said on Wednesday evening.
The man, Joshua Cartu, is wanted, alongside his brothers David and Jonathan and several others, for allegedly operating a fraudulent binary options trading scheme between 2013 and 2018 that defrauded investors of millions of dollars, according to a US Commodity Futures Trading Commission statement from May 2020.
The St Petersburg court service said Cartu had been detained on Aug. 19 at Pulkovo airport. It identified him as a citizen of Israel and Canada and said he was "wanted by the United States of America." It wasn't immediately clear when Cartu arrived in Russia.
On Wednesday, the court extended his detention by 72 hours. Reuters was not able to determine if Cartu had a lawyer.
The Canadian and Israeli embassies did not immediately respond to comment requests.
The court said Cartu could be charged under Russia's fraud statute, which carries a punishment of up to 10 years in prison.
Foreign passport hinders US extradition
"Cartu is not employed and has no permanent place of residence in St. Petersburg, but he has a passport of a foreign citizen, which makes it possible (for him) to cross the border of the Russian Federation without hindrance, thus preventing an extradition inspection," the court said.
Moscow and Washington do not have an extradition treaty. The US embassy did not immediately respond to a comment request.
Cartu was separately accused of fraud in Canada relating to a fraudulent binary options scheme targeting Ontarians, according to a September 2020 statement from the Ontario Securities Commission.
Cartu's arrest comes less than a month after Russia and the West, led by the United States, conducted the most prominent prisoner swap since the Cold War, exchanging 16 people held in Russia and Belarus for eight Russians jailed in the West.
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