WASHINGTON (AP) The arrest of Jonathan Pollard nearly 30 years ago set off an emotional legal saga that has confronted American presidents and Israeli prime ministers, wound through the courts and divided those who say the convicted spy has paid his debt to society and those who contend the
Pollard talks latest twist in long legal US saga
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The U.S. is now dangling the possibility of freeing Pollard, 59, as an incentive to Israel, though the White House has said President Barack Obama has not decided whether to do it and Israeli-Palestinian talks appeared near collapse. Separately, Pollard becomes presumptively eligible for release from his life sentence, which he is serving in North Carolina, in November 2015. But it's not clear that he'd be released then.
His imprisonment has been defined by years of legal wrangling fights over document access, appeals of his sentence, court petitions but also repeated diplomatic efforts to secure freedom.
Israelis, for instance, have campaigned for his release; in the 1980s, after years of claiming that Pollard was part of a rogue operation run without the government's knowledge, Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's government recognized Pollard as an Israeli agent and granted him citizenship. But each American president since Ronald Reagan has refused to free him, with President Bill Clinton writing in his memoir that Pollard's release "was a hard case to push in America."
But enough time has passed from the crime to make his release more feasible now than 20 years ago, said Mark Zaid, a Washington lawyer specializing in national security cases.
"I think there's more pros than cons in this stage of our lives in releasing him than maintaining him in prison," he said.
Pollard has argued that his guilty plea was coerced and that his sentence was excessive. Though other defendants in high-profile espionage cases including notorious double agents Robert Hanssen and Aldrich Ames, both of whom spied for Russia are serving sentences of life without parole, Pollard's backers say he's been punished more harshly than others caught spying for allied countries.
Lawrence Korb, a former assistant secretary of defense and senior fellow at the Center for American Progress who has visited Pollard in prison, said "as things came out, a lot of the claims that were made about the damage turned out not to be what people claimed from the beginning."
But those assertions remain in dispute.
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Associated Press writer Pete Yost contributed to this report.
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