US Shuts 2 Russian Compounds

US Shuts 2 Russian Compounds
A fence encloses an estate in the village of Upper Brookville in the town of Oyster Bay, N.Y., on Long Island on Dec. 30, 2016. On Friday, the Obama administration closed this compound for Russian diplomats, in retaliation for spying and cyber-meddling in the U.S. presidential election. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)
Epoch Newsroom
12/30/2016
Updated:
12/30/2016

The Obama administration is shutting access to a New York retreat and a Maryland riverfront compound where Russian diplomats played tennis, sailed and escaped the political bustle, claiming those doubled for intelligence activities.

As the Obama administration retaliates for alleged cyber-meddling in the U.S. presidential election, Russians were being denied access to the compounds starting at noon Friday. President Barack Obama announced that step recently in Washington as part of sanctions highlighted by the expulsion of 35 Russians.

The 45-acre Maryland retreat boasts a brick mansion along the Corsica River in the bucolic Eastern Shore region. Reports indicate it was bought by the former Soviet Union in 1972 and historically served as a recreational getaway for its diplomats seeking a respite from the diplomatic whirl in nearby Washington, D.C.

White House officials said this week that the compounds were being used for intelligence activities.

On Thursday, people who identified themselves as U.S. State Department employees asked reporters to leave when they approached the Maryland property.

Alison Davis, who lives nearby, said the Russians have been using that complex for years.

This Thursday, Dec. 29, 2016 photo shows a tennis court at a riverfront compound near Centreville, Md., that has been used by Russian Federation diplomats for years.  (AP Photo/Brian Witte)
This Thursday, Dec. 29, 2016 photo shows a tennis court at a riverfront compound near Centreville, Md., that has been used by Russian Federation diplomats for years.  (AP Photo/Brian Witte)

“We coexist with these people peacefully. It’s basically their summer cottage, but we see the diplomat tags driving here all the time, very friendly,” she said. “We see them biking, say hello.”

Still, she said, local residents don’t “really have any interactions with them. They kind of keep to themselves.”

She said the compound has a private beach and had been known to be used for a sailing regatta at the end-of-summer Labor Day holiday weekend.

An Associated Press story from 1992 about the sprawling property said at the time that the brick mansion had been converted into 12 apartments and a dozen cottages, each with four apartments; in total, the compound can accommodate 40 families at a time, according to that report.

A car with diplomatic license plates drives out of a compound near Glen Cove, N.Y., on Long Island on Friday, Dec. 30, 2016. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)
A car with diplomatic license plates drives out of a compound near Glen Cove, N.Y., on Long Island on Friday, Dec. 30, 2016. (AP Photo/Alexander F. Yuan)
This 1940 aerial photo shows the Raskob Estate at Pioneer Point seen on the Eastern Shore in Maryland. Reports indicate the property was bought by the Soviet Union in the 1970s and historically served as a recreational getaway for its diplomats seeking a respite from the diplomatic whirl in nearby Washington, D.C. The Obama administration is shutting access to a New York retreat and the swanky Maryland riverfront compound where Russian diplomats played tennis, sailed and escaped the political bustle, saying those doubled for intelligence activities. (The Baltimore Sun via AP)
This 1940 aerial photo shows the Raskob Estate at Pioneer Point seen on the Eastern Shore in Maryland. Reports indicate the property was bought by the Soviet Union in the 1970s and historically served as a recreational getaway for its diplomats seeking a respite from the diplomatic whirl in nearby Washington, D.C. The Obama administration is shutting access to a New York retreat and the swanky Maryland riverfront compound where Russian diplomats played tennis, sailed and escaped the political bustle, saying those doubled for intelligence activities. (The Baltimore Sun via AP)

U.S. officials didn’t clarify which of the two countryside compounds would be closed, but Glen Cove mayor Reggie Spinello said Friday that it wasn’t Killenworth. And about a dozen men with badges and black SUVs who identified themselves as being with the U.S. State Department blocked the gate Friday to the Upper Brookville estate.

Both Long Island properties were the subject of long-running property battles between the Russian government and local officials, who insisted that the luxurious estates be subject to property taxes. Those disputes have since been resolved, and for years the Town of Oyster Bay has waived parking and beach permit fees for Russia’s U.N. diplomatic staff as a goodwill gesture.