US court orders Tellis’ release pending trial as lawyers say nothing sinister about his China links

TOI correspondent from Washington: A US district court outside Washington DC has directed the pre-trial release of Indian-American scholar Ashley Tellis in a purported espionage case after his attorneys pledged full cooperation with authorities citing his “lifelong commitment to American national security.“In a preliminary appearance before a judge, Tellis’ attorneys portrayed the case as a Justice Department overreach against a US patriot whose “scholarly curiosity,” not malice, led to benign hoarding of classified documents the FBI said it found at his residence. The documents were routine work products from his advisory role, stored inadvertently amid a demanding schedule, they said, vowing to “vigorously contest” all allegations of espionage and framing the case as a tale of overzealous counterintelligence in an era of US-China tensions.
In a 14-page memorandum, they argued that investigators “misinterpreted routine professional duties, such as liaison work and international travel, as clandestine activity.” while asserting that Tellis’s interactions with foreign diplomats, including Chinese officials, were “lawful and expected” for his role as a foreign policy expert. They also dismissed claims surrounding a “red gift bag” exchanged with a Chinese delegation over dinner as “a small gift of tea,” common in diplomatic and academic settings. “To read something sinister into that gesture is unfounded,” the filing stated.On its part, the Justice Department called the case “a serious breach of trust,” adding, “Safeguarding our country’s national defense information is a top priority.” It described the arrest as “a stark warning to anyone thinking about undermining national security,” saying investigators executed a court-authorized search warrant to prevent “highly classified defense information from falling into the wrong hands.”Tellis’ attorneys however contested insinuation of his operating on behalf of a foreign adversary, asserting that his meetings with Chinese officials, which the FBI suggested were aimed at passing classified information, were transparent academic engagements, not covert espionage, and fully disclosed in security clearance renewals. They also said Tellis voluntarily cooperated with investigators pre-arrest, turning over materials without resistance, and underscored his low flight risk by pointing to his deep US roots: a 40-year residency, marriage to a US citizen, adult children in the Washington area, community ties, and substantial assets.Judge Lindsey Robinson Vaala in the Eastern district of Virginia granted his release under stringent conditions, including surrender of passport, travel restrictions, limited internet access, electronic monitoring, and supervision by pretrial services. His wife, Dhun Tellis, co-signed the $1.5 million secured bond, which was backed by the family’s home. A preliminary hearing is scheduled for November 4, 2025.