The hearing is essentially procedural - about how Gershkovich should be detained as he awaits trial, not about the substance of the charges as investigators are still working on the details of the case.
Gershkovich, the American son of Soviet-born Jews who fled to the West in 1979, was detained by Russia's FSB on March 29 shortly after he arrived at a steakhouse in Yekaterinburg during his second trip to the Urals in a month.
He was moved to the Lefortovo prison, which in Soviet times
was run by the KGB but is now operated by the Federal
Penitentiary Service. Traditionally it has been used to hold
those suspected by the FSB of spying and other grave crimes.
The Kremlin has said Gershkovich was carrying out espionage
"under the cover" of journalism. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
has told the United States that Gershkovich was caught
red-handed while trying to obtain secrets.
Last Monday, the United States determined that Russia had
"wrongfully detained" Gershkovich, effectively saying that the
espionage charges were bogus and that the case was political.
A spokesperson for The Wall Street Journal did not
immediately respond on Monday to a request for comment.
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge
Editing by Gareth Jones)