A Russian court on Monday will deliver a verdict in the trial of former US marine Paul Whelan who risks up to 20 years in prison on an espionage charge.

The hearing at Moscow City Court is due to start at 0800 GMT.

The trial has been held behind closed doors because Whelan is accused of seeking to obtain state secrets.

The 50-year-old has been held in a Moscow prison since he was arrested in December 2018.

He has maintained his innocence, saying he was framed and comparing himself to the hapless comedy character Mr Bean.

Fifty-year-old former US Marine Paul Whelan has been held in a Moscow prison since he was arrested in December 2018 
Fifty-year-old former US Marine Paul Whelan has been held in a Moscow prison since he was arrested in December 2018  AFP / Dimitar DILKOFF

"Russia thought they caught James Bond on a spy mission, in reality they abducted Mr Bean on holiday," he said.

Whelan says he was detained on a visit to Moscow to attend a wedding when he took a USB drive from an acquaintance thinking it contained holiday photographs.

The prosecution has asked the judge to sentence Whelan to 18 years in a strict-regime penal colony, just short of the 20 years maximum term for the charge.

The trial comes during an exceptional chill in US and Russia relations and has further exacerbated tensions.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo tweeted: 'We demand Paul's release.'
US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo tweeted: 'We demand Paul's release.' POOL / Andrew Harnik

The United States Ambassador to Moscow John Sullivan has condemned the trial as unfair and lacking transparency.

"It was secret, no evidence was produced, no allowances were made for defense witnesses," he was quoted as saying in a tweet by the embassy spokeswoman.

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo tweeted last month: "We demand Paul's release."

The prosecutor summed up last month by saying Whelan tried to receive secret information that is a state secret and could harm Russia's security, the American's lawyer Vladimir Zherebenkov told reporters.

The prosecutor claimed that Whelan has the rank of an officer -- "at least a colonel" -- at the US defence intelligence agency, the lawyer said.

Whelan's family said they see a guilty verdict as a "foregone conclusion" while insisting this would "not be based on facts or justice".

Whelan was dishonourably discharged as a marine before working as head of global security at a US autoparts company.

There have been suggestions that if convicted, Whelan, who also has British, Canadian and Irish passports, could be returned to the US in a prisoner swap.

His twin brother David said in a statement that the family hope that a conviction will allow Russia and the United States to "begin discussing Paul's release immediately".

Whelan has complained of being mistreated in prison and late last month underwent an operation in a Moscow hospital that his family said was emergency hernia surgery.

The US embassy criticised the Russian authorities for waiting till his condition was "life-threatening to provide him medical attention", while the Russian foreign ministry described the procedure as "simple".