US Embassy Guard Spied for Russia and Iran, Court Finds

Defense maintains 'the information he shared was worthless'
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Oct 16, 2025 5:19 PM CDT
Norwegian Court Finds Guard at US Embassy Spied for Russia
The Norway and US flags are displayed on the table at the Pentagon, on Sept. 20, 2022.   (AP Photo/Alex Brandon, File)

A former security guard at the US Embassy in Norway was convicted of espionage Wednesday after a court in Oslo found that he spied for Russia and Iran. The 28-year-old Norwegian man, whose name has not been made public, was sentenced to three years, seven months behind bars. He had acknowledged the indictment's facts but denied any criminal guilt, the AP reports. Norwegian state broadcaster NRK reported that American ties to Israel and the war in Gaza prompted the man to contact Russia and Iran and that he handed over details about the embassy's diplomats, floor plans, and security routines.

The defendant was found guilty of five espionage-related charges and acquitted of gross corruption. His attorneys, in a statement Thursday, said the verdict raises questions about what is considered espionage under Norwegian law. "He lied about having security clearance to agents from other countries and exaggerated his own role," attorney Inger Zadig said in the statement. "He had roughly the same level of access as a janitor at the embassy. The information he shared was worthless and neither separately nor collectively capable of harming individuals or the security interests of any state." The defense attorneys are weighing whether to appeal the verdict.

Prosecutor Carl Fredrik Fari said his team is considering appealing the sentence, because the state had asked for more than six years in prison. At the time of his arrest last November, the man had been studying for a bachelor's degree in security and preparedness at Norway's Arctic University, UiT. It is a second such case at UiT in recent years, according to NRK. One of the people the West swapped with Russia in a major prisoner exchange last year was a UiT guest researcher who claimed to be a Brazilian named José Assis Giammaria, arrested on espionage allegations in 2022. The police revealed him to be a Russian national by the name of Mikhail Valeryevich Mikushin.

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