Austrian court finds former domestic intelligence officer guilty of spying - Headlines news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
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Austrian court finds former domestic intelligence officer guilty of spying

Published by Global Banking & Finance Review

Posted on May 20, 2026

3 min read

· Last updated: May 20, 2026

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Austrian former domestic intelligence officer spied for Russia, court finds

Key Details of the Egisto Ott Espionage Case

By Francois Murphy

Conviction and Sentencing

VIENNA, May 20 (Reuters) - An Austrian court found former intelligence officer Egisto Ott guilty of spying on Wednesday, for helping Russia hunt down opponents and selling it state laptops and phones at the behest of suspected Moscow agent Jan Marsalek.

Ott's is the biggest spying case in Austria since a retired army colonel was convicted in 2020 of having spied for Moscow for decades.

Additional Charges and Sentencing

In addition to spying to the detriment of Austria, which carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison, Ott was found guilty of offences including misuse of office, bribery and breach of trust. 

Ott, 63, pleaded not guilty and has maintained his innocence since the trial opened in January. He was sentenced to four years and one month in prison. 

Ott, wearing a dark suit and black shirt, did not react as the ruling was delivered. He felt "calm", his lawyer Anna Mair told reporters afterwards, adding that he planned to appeal.

Alleged Moscow Agent on the Run

The proceedings offered a glimpse of Russian intelligence-gathering in Europe, and of Marsalek's alleged operations across the continent, after a London court convicted three Bulgarians last year of being part of a Russian spy ring run by him.

Profile of Jan Marsalek

Marsalek, the former chief operating officer of Wirecard, the collapsed German payments firm, is on the run and believed to be in Russia. As such, he could not be reached for comment.

Details of the Espionage Activities

Targeting Russian Opponents

Ott was found to have made unauthorised searches in police and other databases in an attempt to locate people Moscow wanted to hunt down, such as Dmitry Senin, a former Russian intelligence agent who has now claimed asylum in Montenegro.

Ott acknowledged saving the results in his private Gmail account or in unrelated case files of the agency he worked for, the now-defunct Federal Office for the Protection of the Constitution and Counterterrorism.

Defense Claims

Ott said he had been operating under the orders of a superior who had been contacted by an allied Western intelligence agency that had hoped to recruit Senin, but did not say which agency or which country it was from.

Other Targets and Operations

Another target was Bulgarian journalist Christo Grozev, who worked for investigative outlet Bellingcat and led its reporting on the 2018 poisoning in Britain of Russian double agent Sergei Skripal, which Britain blames on Russia.

Moscow denies involvement in that case and has regularly accused Western powers of trying to inflame anti-Russian hysteria.

Prosecutors’ Allegations

Prosecutors said Ott provided Grozev's address in Vienna to Marsalek, who then arranged a break-in at the apartment. Grozev later moved away from Austria for security reasons when he learned he was a target.

Sale of State Devices

Ott was found to have provided an accomplice of Marsalek's with a SINA-S laptop, which includes hardware used by European Union governments for secure communications, in exchange for €20,000 ($23,200).

He also provided Marsalek's network with three work phones belonging to members of the then-interior minister's private office that were recovered after a boating accident in 2017, the court found.

(Reporting by Francois Murphy; Editing by Alex Richardson, Rod Nickel)

Key Takeaways

  • Egisto Ott was convicted of espionage, misuse of office, bribery, aggravated fraud and breach of trust for aiding Russian intelligence to Austria’s detriment, and supplying secure laptops and phones via fugitive Jan Marsalek. (apnews.com)
  • Prosecutors allege Ott conducted unauthorized searches in police and intelligence databases, shared sensitive information including journalist Christo Grozev’s address—leading to a break-in—and stored data in personal accounts. (crbcnews.com)
  • The case, Austria’s highest-profile espionage trial in decades, highlights broader concerns about Russian intelligence infiltration and Marsalek’s Europe-wide spy network. (apnews.com)

References

Frequently Asked Questions

Who was found guilty of spying in Austria?
Former intelligence officer Egisto Ott was found guilty of spying by an Austrian court.
What was Egisto Ott accused of?
Egisto Ott was accused of helping Russia hunt down opponents and selling state laptops and phones.
Who is Jan Marsalek in this case?
Jan Marsalek is a suspected Moscow agent whom Ott allegedly acted on behalf of.
What is the maximum sentence for Ott’s spying conviction?
Spying to the detriment of Austria carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison.
Did Egisto Ott admit guilt during the trial?
Egisto Ott maintained his innocence throughout the trial.

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