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{{Short description|Russian espionage program in the US uncovered in 2010}} | {{Short description|Russian espionage program in the US uncovered in 2010}} | ||
{{about|the Russian spy network in the United States|the type of spy called "Illegals"|Non-official cover|and|Resident spy}} | {{about|the Russian spy network in the United States|the type of spy called "Illegals"|Non-official cover|and|Resident spy}} | ||
{{Use mdy dates|date= |
{{Use mdy dates|date=December 2024}} | ||
{{Use American English|date=July 2022}} | {{Use American English|date=July 2022}} | ||
{{Infobox | {{Infobox | ||
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|caption = Ten Russian agents apprehended on June 27, 2010 | |caption = Ten Russian agents apprehended on June 27, 2010 | ||
}} | }} | ||
The '''Illegals Program''' (so named by the ]) was a network of Russian ]s under ]. An investigation by the ] (FBI) culminated in the arrest of ten agents on June 27, 2010, and a ] between |
The '''Illegals Program''' (so named by the ]) was a network of Russian ]s under ]. An investigation by the ] (FBI) culminated in the arrest of ten agents on June 27, 2010, and a ] between Russia and the United States on July 9, 2010.<ref>{{cite news|title=Ten Alleged Secret Agents Arrested in the United States|url=https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/ten-alleged-secret-agents-arrested-united-states|access-date=September 20, 2016|publisher=United States Department of Justice|date=June 28, 2010|archive-date=December 30, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20141230194636/http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/ten-alleged-secret-agents-arrested-united-states|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
The arrested spies were Russian nationals who had been planted in the US by the Russian ] (known by its ] abbreviation, ''SVR''), most of them using false identities.<ref name="2010 Spy Ring">{{cite web|url=http://www.numbers-stations.com/russian-spy-ring |
The arrested spies were Russian nationals who had been planted in the US by the Russian ] (known by its ] abbreviation, ''SVR''), most of them using false identities.<ref name="2010 Spy Ring">{{cite web|url=http://www.numbers-stations.com/russian-spy-ring|title=The Russian Spy Ring of 2010, The Use of Ciphers and Radio Messages|publisher=The NSRIC|access-date=January 31, 2015|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150216004006/http://www.numbers-stations.com/russian-spy-ring|archive-date=February 16, 2015}}</ref> Posing as ordinary American citizens, they tried to build contacts with academics, industrialists, and policymakers to gain access to intelligence. They were the target of a multi-year investigation by the FBI. The investigation, called '''Operation Ghost Stories''', culminated at the end of June 2010 with the arrest of ten people in the US and an eleventh in ].<ref name="2010 Spy Ring"/> The ten sleeper agents were charged with "carrying out long-term, 'deep-cover' assignments in the United States on behalf of the Russian Federation."<ref name="FBI">" {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160417170511/https://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2011/october/russian_103111/russian_103111 |date=April 17, 2016 }}' (October 31, 2011). Federal Bureau of Investigation.</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140723002016/http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/2010/June/10-nsd-753.html |date=July 23, 2014 }} Monday, June 28, 2010, ] official web site.</ref><ref>Shifrel, Scott; Kennedy, Helen; and Sherisan, Michael. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100702222353/http://www.nydailynews.com/news/world/2010/06/29/2010-06-29_russian_spy_ring_11th_suspect_arrested_in_cyprus_moscow_calls_spy_claims_baseles.html |date=July 2, 2010 }}, '']'', June 29, 2010. Retrieved July 7, 2010.</ref> | ||
The suspect arrested in Cyprus ] the day after his arrest.<ref>Staff. , BBC News, June 30, 2010. Retrieved July 7, 2010.</ref> A twelfth person, a Russian national who worked for ], was also apprehended about the same time and ] on July 13, 2010.<ref name = "WP1">{{Cite news|last |
The suspect arrested in Cyprus ] the day after his arrest.<ref>Staff. , BBC News, June 30, 2010. Retrieved July 7, 2010.</ref> A twelfth person, a Russian national who worked for ], was also apprehended about the same time and ] on July 13, 2010.<ref name = "WP1">{{Cite news|last=Markon|first=Jerry|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=July 14, 2010|access-date=July 28, 2010|title=U.S. deports alleged 12th Russian spy|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/13/AR2010071302840.html}}</ref> Moscow court documents made public on June 27, 2011, revealed that another two Russian agents, who Russia alleges were known to the FBI, managed to flee the US without being arrested.<ref name="Pot1999"/> | ||
Ten of the agents were flown to ] on July 9, 2010, soon after pleading guilty to charges of failing to register as representatives of a foreign government. The same day, the agents were exchanged for four Russian nationals, three of whom had been convicted and imprisoned by Russia for espionage (]) on behalf of the US and UK.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100801052411/http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSLDE6680KB20100709 |date=August 1, 2010 }}, Reuters, July 9, 2010.</ref> | Ten of the agents were flown to ] on July 9, 2010, soon after pleading guilty to charges of failing to register as representatives of a foreign government. The same day, the agents were exchanged for four Russian nationals, three of whom had been convicted and imprisoned by Russia for espionage (]) on behalf of the US and UK.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100801052411/http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSLDE6680KB20100709 |date=August 1, 2010 }}, Reuters, July 9, 2010.</ref> | ||
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==FBI arrests and criminal charges== | ==FBI arrests and criminal charges== | ||
Using forged documents, some of the spies assumed stolen identities of Americans, enrolled at American universities, and joined professional organizations as a means of further infiltrating |
Using forged documents, some of the spies assumed stolen identities of Americans, enrolled at American universities, and joined professional organizations as a means of further infiltrating government circles.<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /><ref name=NYT2010 /> Two of the individuals used the names of Richard and Cynthia Murphy and resided in ], New Jersey, in the mid-1990s, before purchasing a nearby home in suburban ]. Another couple named in court documents were journalist ] and Mikhail Vasenkov (using the alias Juan Lazaro) in ], New York. The court filings allege that couples were arranged in Russia to "co-habit in the country to which they are assigned", going as far as having children together to help maintain their deep covert status.<ref name=NYT2010>Savage, Charles. , ''The New York Times'', June 28, 2010. Retrieved June 28, 2010.</ref> | ||
The criminal complaints later filed in various ] allege that the Russian agents in the US passed information back to the SVR by ] inside digital photographs, written in ], ], and shortwave radio transmissions, as well as by agents swapping identical bags while passing each other in the stairwell of a train station.<ref name=NYT2010 /> Messages and materials were passed in such places as ] and ].<ref>Montanaro, Domenico. , ], June 28, 2010. Retrieved June 28, 2010.</ref> | The criminal complaints later filed in various ] allege that the Russian agents in the US passed information back to the SVR by ] inside digital photographs, written in ], ], and shortwave radio transmissions, as well as by agents swapping identical bags while passing each other in the stairwell of a train station.<ref name=NYT2010 /> Messages and materials were passed in such places as ] and ].<ref>Montanaro, Domenico. , ], June 28, 2010. Retrieved June 28, 2010.</ref> | ||
The Russian agents were tasked by "Moscow centre" to report about US policy in Central America, US interpretation of Russian foreign policy, problems with US military policy, and "United States policy with regard to the use of the Internet by terrorists".<ref name="news.cnet.com">{{cite web |
The Russian agents were tasked by "Moscow centre" to report about US policy in Central America, US interpretation of Russian foreign policy, problems with US military policy, and "United States policy with regard to the use of the Internet by terrorists".<ref name="news.cnet.com">{{cite web|last=McCullagh|first=Declan|url=https://www.cnet.com/news/alleged-russian-agents-used-high-tech-tricks/|title=Alleged Russian agents used high-tech tricks|publisher=CNET News|date=June 28, 2010|access-date=2013-08-18|archive-date=April 26, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210426183247/https://www.cnet.com/news/alleged-russian-agents-used-high-tech-tricks/|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
According to the media reports, planning by the FBI to have the "illegals" arrested began in mid-June 2010, but the action was hastened reportedly by some members of the group intending to travel outside the US as well as by Anna Chapman's growing concern about having been exposed.<ref name="WashP1" /><ref name="Guard1" /><ref name="nj" /> Vladimir Guriyev was planning to travel to France and possibly Russia, Bezrukov was planning to travel outside the US with his son,<ref name="nj">{{cite news |
According to the media reports, planning by the FBI to have the "illegals" arrested began in mid-June 2010, but the action was hastened reportedly by some members of the group intending to travel outside the US as well as by Anna Chapman's growing concern about having been exposed.<ref name="WashP1" /><ref name="Guard1" /><ref name="nj" /> Vladimir Guriyev was planning to travel to France and possibly Russia, Bezrukov was planning to travel outside the US with his son,<ref name="nj">{{cite news|title=Investigation of Russian agent in Massachusetts led to FBI takedown of network|url=http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/07/investigation_into_russian_age.html|website=nj.com|agency=Associated Press|access-date=July 25, 2010|archive-date=July 16, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100716172316/http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/07/investigation_into_russian_age.html|url-status=live}}</ref> and Chapman, in a telephone call to her father the day before the arrest, said she suspected that she may have been discovered<ref name="WashP1" /><ref name="Guard1" /> and planned to leave for Moscow in mid-July 2010.<ref name=nj /> | ||
US authorities arrested ten of the agents involved on June 27, 2010, in a series of raids in ], Montclair (New Jersey), Yonkers, and ]. They charged the individuals with ] and failing to register as agents of a foreign government. No charges were made that the individuals involved gained access to classified material, though contacts were made with a former intelligence official and with a scientist involved in developing ] bombs.<ref name=NYT2010 /><ref name=BBC>Staff. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100702215529/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/us_and_canada/10442223.stm |date=July 2, 2010 }}, |
US authorities arrested ten of the agents involved on June 27, 2010, in a series of raids in ], Montclair (New Jersey), Yonkers, and ]. They charged the individuals with ] and failing to register as agents of a foreign government. No charges were made that the individuals involved gained access to classified material, though contacts were made with a former intelligence official and with a scientist involved in developing ] bombs.<ref name=NYT2010 /><ref name=BBC>Staff. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100702215529/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/us_and_canada/10442223.stm |date=July 2, 2010 }}, BBC News, June 29, 2010. Retrieved June 28, 2010.</ref> | ||
One of the suspects, using the name of Christopher R. Metsos, was detained on June 29, 2010,<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100701063345/http://edition.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/06/28/russian.spying.arrests/index.html |date=July 1, 2010 }}, ], June 28, 2010.</ref> while attempting to depart from Cyprus for ], but was released on bail and then disappeared.<ref name=BBC /><ref>Barnes, Taylor. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210805142804/https://www.csmonitor.com/World/terrorism-security/2010/0701/Russian-spy-ring-paymaster-disappears-from-Cyprus |date=August 5, 2021 }}, '']'', July 1, 2010. Retrieved July 7, 2010.</ref> | One of the suspects, using the name of Christopher R. Metsos, was detained on June 29, 2010,<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100701063345/http://edition.cnn.com/2010/POLITICS/06/28/russian.spying.arrests/index.html |date=July 1, 2010 }}, ], June 28, 2010.</ref> while attempting to depart from Cyprus for ], but was released on bail and then disappeared.<ref name=BBC /><ref>Barnes, Taylor. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210805142804/https://www.csmonitor.com/World/terrorism-security/2010/0701/Russian-spy-ring-paymaster-disappears-from-Cyprus |date=August 5, 2021 }}, '']'', July 1, 2010. Retrieved July 7, 2010.</ref> | ||
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There was no evidence that the convicted agents knew each other beyond their respective spouses; military analyst ] believed that they consequently did not constitute a "spy ring".<ref name="NovGazFel" /> | There was no evidence that the convicted agents knew each other beyond their respective spouses; military analyst ] believed that they consequently did not constitute a "spy ring".<ref name="NovGazFel" /> | ||
Shortly after the arrests, '']'' commented: "The FBI operation represents the biggest penetration of SVR communications in recent memory. The FBI read their emails, decrypted their intel, read the embedded coded texts on images posted on the net, bugged their mobile phones, videotaped the passing of bags of cash and messages in invisible ink from one agent to another, and hacked into their bogus expenses claims. ... The tradecraft used by the alleged SVR ring was amateurish, and will send shivers down the spine of the rival intelligence organisations in Russia. This was bungling on a truly epic scale. No secrets about bunker-busting bombs were actually obtained, but the network was betrayed. ... To have a spy ring uncovered before they could actually do any serious spying is doubly embarrassing."<ref name="GdEpic">{{cite news|last=Hearst |
Shortly after the arrests, '']'' commented: "The FBI operation represents the biggest penetration of SVR communications in recent memory. The FBI read their emails, decrypted their intel, read the embedded coded texts on images posted on the net, bugged their mobile phones, videotaped the passing of bags of cash and messages in invisible ink from one agent to another, and hacked into their bogus expenses claims. ... The tradecraft used by the alleged SVR ring was amateurish, and will send shivers down the spine of the rival intelligence organisations in Russia. This was bungling on a truly epic scale. No secrets about bunker-busting bombs were actually obtained, but the network was betrayed. ... To have a spy ring uncovered before they could actually do any serious spying is doubly embarrassing."<ref name="GdEpic">{{cite news|last=Hearst|first=David|newspaper=The Guardian|date=June 29, 2010|access-date=July 26, 2010|title='Russian spies' bungle was epic|url=https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2010/jun/29/russian-spies-bungle-epic|location=London}}</ref> | ||
Coinciding with the day of the prisoners' swap, the death of the prominent Russian defector ], who died in the US on June 13, 2010, was reported on July 9, 2010.<ref>{{cite web |
Coinciding with the day of the prisoners' swap, the death of the prominent Russian defector ], who died in the US on June 13, 2010, was reported on July 9, 2010.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wtop.com/?nid=25&sid=1999036|title=Famed spy and defector dead|publisher=Wtop.com|access-date=2013-08-18|archive-date=November 29, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101129183006/http://wtop.com/?nid=25&sid=1999036|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{lang|ru|italic=no|}} . ], July 9, 2010.</ref> A Florida medical examiner's report, released on September 20, 2010, cited an accident and a tumour as the cause of death.<ref>{{cite news|title=Russian ex-spy living in Osprey choked to death|first=Mitch|last=Stacy|newspaper=]|agency=Associated Press|date=November 11, 2010|url=http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20100921/ARTICLE/9211064|access-date=November 11, 2010|archive-date=December 26, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151226065311/http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20100921/ARTICLE/9211064|url-status=dead}}</ref> In response to allegations in the media that he might have tipped off the US authorities about some of the "illegals",<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101207055440/http://www.nrs.com/?p=3176 |date=December 7, 2010 }} . ''Novoye Russkoye Slovo'', July 16, 2010.</ref> Tretyakov's co-author ], citing anonymous "well-informed" sources, said in July 2010 that Tretyakov had not been privy to the case of Russian "illegals".<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100713134820/http://www.newsru.com/world/10jul2010/tr.html |date=July 13, 2010 }} . ], July 10, 2010.</ref> | ||
The November 11, 2010, issue of span broadsheet '']'' carried an article<ref name="KommAlleg">{{cite news |
The November 11, 2010, issue of span broadsheet '']'' carried an article<ref name="KommAlleg">{{cite news|last=Solovyev|first=Vladimir|newspaper=]|date=November 11, 2010|access-date=November 11, 2010|title=Свежо предательство|trans-title=A fresh betrayal|url=http://kommersant.ru/doc.aspx?DocsID=1536406|location=Moscow|archive-date=November 12, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101112171328/http://kommersant.ru/doc.aspx?DocsID=1536406|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="NYTAlleg">{{cite news|last=Levy|first=Clifford|newspaper=The New York Times|date=November 11, 2010|access-date=November 11, 2010|title=Report Points to Russian Double Agent|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/12/world/europe/12spies.html?_r=1|location=New York|archive-date=April 25, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130425130141/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/12/world/europe/12spies.html?_r=1|url-status=live}}</ref> that, with reference to unnamed Russian government sources, contained allegations that the "illegals" were fingered by a senior SVR officer named "Colonel Shcherbakov" (according to an unnamed ex-CIA source, his full name may be {{lang|ru|Александр Васильевич Щербаков}}, {{lang|ru-Latn|Alexander Vasilievich Shcherbakov}}).<ref> . ], November 14, 2010.</ref> The latter, according to the newspaper's sources, headed the "American" unit of the SVR department in charge of "illegals" and left Russia for the US "three days prior to ]'s June visit to the U.S."<ref name="KommAlleg" /> According to other media outlets' sources, the name "Shcherbakov" was fictitious,<ref> . ], November 11, 2010.</ref> and a number of experts and commentators judged many allegations in the article to be dubious or improbable.<ref name="NovGazFel">]. . {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101220180935/http://www.novayagazeta.ru/data/2010/128/00.html |date=December 20, 2010 }}. '']'', November 15, 2010.</ref><ref name="NYTAlleg" /><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120330112207/http://www.svobodanews.ru/content/transcript/2218493.html |date=March 30, 2012 }} . ], November 11, 2010.</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101115022810/http://www.newsru.com/russia/12nov2010/scherbakov.html |date=November 15, 2010 }} . ], November 12, 2010.</ref> Nevertheless, some comments made the following day by Russian president Medvedev were interpreted as an indirect confirmation of a high-level defection in the Russian intelligence apparatus.<ref name="MedvComm"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101114191845/http://www.newsru.com/russia/12nov2010/medvedev.html |date=November 14, 2010 }} . ], November 12, 2010.</ref><ref name="FTAlleg">{{cite news|last=Clover|first=Charles|newspaper=]|date=November 12, 2010|access-date=November 14, 2010|title=Medvedev confirms defection of high-level spy|url=http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/e4548750-ee92-11df-9db0-00144feab49a.html#axzz15I2qjnPY|location=London}}</ref> On November 15, 2010, '']'' cited unnamed sources within Russian intelligence as alleging that the real name of the defector who was primarily responsible for uncovering the ten convicted agents was ] (reportedly, his full name is {{lang|ru|Александр Николаевич Потеев}}, {{lang|ru-Latn|Aleksandr Nikolayevich Poteyev}}),<ref name="RegnumPotInfo" /><ref name="RosbaltPot" /> who was a colonel in the SVR and was deputy head of the American department within Directorate "S" of SVR ("S" oversees illegals).<ref name="Interfax Poteev">{{cite news|url=http://www.interfax.ru/politics/txt.asp?id=165046|publisher=Interfax|date=November 15, 2010|access-date=November 16, 2010|script-title=ru:Полковник Потеев вместо полковника Щербакова|trans-title=Colonel Poteev instead of Colonel Scherbakov|language=ru}}</ref><ref name="RosbaltPot"> . {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101120022127/http://www.rosbalt.ru/2010/11/16/790436.html |date=November 20, 2010}}. Rosbalt.ru, November 16, 2010.</ref> According to ''Interfax''{{'}}s unnamed source, a person called Shcherbakov had indeed held a senior position in the SVR and "defected about two years ago".<ref name="Interfax Poteev" /><ref name="KommPot">{{cite news|last=Solovyev|first=Vladimir|newspaper=]|date=November 16, 2010|access-date=November 16, 2010|title=Предательство опять освежили|trans-title=Betrayal freshened up again|url=http://kommersant.ru/doc.aspx?DocsID=1540457|location=Moscow}}</ref> | ||
==Agents apprehended by FBI on June 27, 2010== | ==Agents apprehended by FBI on June 27, 2010== | ||
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] meet in a coffee shop in New York, June 26, 2010]] | ] meet in a coffee shop in New York, June 26, 2010]] | ||
Anna Chapman—maiden name {{lang|ru-Latn|Anna Vasil'evna Kushchenko}} ({{lang-rus|Анна Васильевна Кущенко}})—was arrested with nine others in 2010. According to US authorities, her former name is Anya Kushchenko,<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-femme-fatale-20100701,0,3628706.story |
Anna Chapman—maiden name {{lang|ru-Latn|Anna Vasil'evna Kushchenko}} ({{lang-rus|Анна Васильевна Кущенко}})—was arrested with nine others in 2010. According to US authorities, her former name is Anya Kushchenko,<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/nation/la-na-femme-fatale-20100701,0,3628706.story|title=Sultry red-head sensationalizes spy story|last1=Abcarian|first1=Robin|first2=Geraldine|last2=Baum|date=June 30, 2010|work=Los Angeles Times|access-date=June 30, 2010}} In Russian, "Anya" is a diminutive form of the given name Anna.</ref> and she is a ] native. (According to some reports, she was born in Ukraine.)<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120407065558/http://www.newsru.com/world/02jul2010/bondgirl.html |date=April 7, 2012 }} . ], December 7, 2017.</ref> Her father was employed in the ] in ], Kenya. She received her master's in economics degree from the ] in Moscow. She later worked in London at ], ], and other companies.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}} | ||
On July 5, 2010, '']'' reported that Chapman may have been recruited to become an agent when she was in the United Kingdom, citing Oleg Gordievsky and Alex Chapman as sources, and that an urgent probe was underway in the UK to ascertain whether Chapman organized sleeper cells in the United Kingdom.<ref>{{cite web |
On July 5, 2010, '']'' reported that Chapman may have been recruited to become an agent when she was in the United Kingdom, citing Oleg Gordievsky and Alex Chapman as sources, and that an urgent probe was underway in the UK to ascertain whether Chapman organized sleeper cells in the United Kingdom.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.oneindia.in/2010/07/05/ukprobe-to-check-sexy-russian-spys-possible-sleepercell.html|title=UK to probe Russian spy's 'sleeper cell'|work=One India|date=July 5, 2010|access-date=2013-08-18|archive-date=March 13, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120313171951/http://news.oneindia.in/2010/07/05/ukprobe-to-check-sexy-russian-spys-possible-sleepercell.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> | ||
Her ] social networking site profile said she was CEO of PropertyFinder Ltd, a website selling ] internationally. Chapman posted photos of herself on the ] ("Classmates") social networking website in Russia where she stated "Russia, Moscow. My favorite place on earth, my native capital!" She also posted photos and profiles on the ] and LinkedIn social networking websites.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/anna-chapman-russian-spy/2010/06/29/gIQAvEqfZM_gallery.html |
Her ] social networking site profile said she was CEO of PropertyFinder Ltd, a website selling ] internationally. Chapman posted photos of herself on the ] ("Classmates") social networking website in Russia where she stated "Russia, Moscow. My favorite place on earth, my native capital!" She also posted photos and profiles on the ] and LinkedIn social networking websites.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/anna-chapman-russian-spy/2010/06/29/gIQAvEqfZM_gallery.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221001223245/https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/anna-chapman-russian-spy/2010/06/29/gIQAvEqfZM_gallery.html|url-status=live|archive-date=2022-10-01|author=<!--Staff author(s); no by-line-->|title=Anna Chapman, Russian spy|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=June 29, 2010|access-date=July 7, 2010}}</ref> | ||
Chapman's prior meetings with her Russian handlers were on Wednesdays; not face to face; solely to pass information via encrypted private computer networks<ref name="WashP1">{{cite news|last=Pincus|first=Walter|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=July 12, 2010|access-date=July 25, 2010|title=Sources: Call by Russian spy Anna Chapman to dad in Moscow led U.S. to hasten arrests|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/11/AR2010071102416.html|archive-date=November 11, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121111031248/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/11/AR2010071102416.html|url-status=live}}</ref> at ] or at ].<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /><ref name="nydailynews1">Belenkaya, Veronika; Sgobbo, Robert; and Gendar, Alison. . {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100704053633/http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2010/06/30/2010-06-30_russian_stunner_loves_living_it_up_in_city.html |date=July 4, 2010 }}. '']'', June 30, 2010. New York. Retrieved July 7, 2010.</ref> Thus her suspicion was aroused when an FBI informant, posing as a Russian consular officer named "Roman", on Saturday, June 26 asked her to come to New York from Connecticut, where she was spending the weekend.<ref name="WashP1" /> Her suspicions increased when "Roman" turned out to be a man she did not know who asked her to deliver a fake United States passport to another sleeper agent in a face-to-face meeting.<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /> The task of transferring a fake US passport to another Russian agent in a face-to-face meeting was beyond anything that the Moscow Center had previously assigned to her.{{ |
Chapman's prior meetings with her Russian handlers were on Wednesdays; not face to face; solely to pass information via encrypted private computer networks<ref name="WashP1">{{cite news|last=Pincus|first=Walter|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=July 12, 2010|access-date=July 25, 2010|title=Sources: Call by Russian spy Anna Chapman to dad in Moscow led U.S. to hasten arrests|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/11/AR2010071102416.html|archive-date=November 11, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121111031248/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/11/AR2010071102416.html|url-status=live}}</ref> at ] or at ].<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /><ref name="nydailynews1">Belenkaya, Veronika; Sgobbo, Robert; and Gendar, Alison. . {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100704053633/http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2010/06/30/2010-06-30_russian_stunner_loves_living_it_up_in_city.html |date=July 4, 2010 }}. '']'', June 30, 2010. New York. Retrieved July 7, 2010.</ref> Thus her suspicion was aroused when an FBI informant, posing as a Russian consular officer named "Roman", on Saturday, June 26 asked her to come to New York from Connecticut, where she was spending the weekend.<ref name="WashP1" /> Her suspicions increased when "Roman" turned out to be a man she did not know who asked her to deliver a fake United States passport to another sleeper agent in a face-to-face meeting.<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /> The task of transferring a fake US passport to another Russian agent in a face-to-face meeting was beyond anything that the Moscow Center had previously assigned to her.{{citation needed|date=November 2021}} | ||
After the meeting with "Roman", Chapman bought a new cell phone and two telephone cards.<ref name="WashP1" /> She called her father in Moscow and another individual in New York, both advising her not to transfer the passport. The FBI monitored the calls.<ref name="WashP1" /> | After the meeting with "Roman", Chapman bought a new cell phone and two telephone cards.<ref name="WashP1" /> She called her father in Moscow and another individual in New York, both advising her not to transfer the passport. The FBI monitored the calls.<ref name="WashP1" /> | ||
Chapman turned in the passport to the 1st Precinct police station in New York but was questioned by the FBI and arrested.<ref name="WashP1" /><ref name="Guard1">{{cite news|last=Clark |
Chapman turned in the passport to the 1st Precinct police station in New York but was questioned by the FBI and arrested.<ref name="WashP1" /><ref name="Guard1">{{cite news|last=Clark|first=Andrew|newspaper=The Guardian|date=July 12, 2010|access-date=July 25, 2010|title=Anna Chapman's call to father led to FBI spy arrests|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/jul/12/anna-chapman-call-father-fbi-spy-arrests|location=London}}</ref> | ||
According to her American lawyer, Robert Baum, while in the US jail, she feared she would be deported.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.sptimes.ru/index.php?action_id=2&story_id=31881|title=Femme Fatale Chapman Fears Deportation|author=Larry Neumeister|date=July 6, 2010|agency=Associated Press|work=Saint Petersburg Times|access-date=June 18, 2010|archive-date=March 14, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120314064443/http://www.sptimes.ru/index.php?action_id=2&story_id=31881|url-status=dead}}</ref> When her deportation became imminent, she said she would go to live in London on her UK passport, but it was subsequently ].<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100713231325/http://lenta.ru/news/2010/07/09/return/ |date=July 13, 2010 }} . ], July 9, 2010.</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10620352|title=Russian spy Anna Chapman is stripped of UK citizenship|date=July 13, 2010|publisher= |
According to her American lawyer, Robert Baum, while in the US jail, she feared she would be deported.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.sptimes.ru/index.php?action_id=2&story_id=31881|title=Femme Fatale Chapman Fears Deportation|author=Larry Neumeister|date=July 6, 2010|agency=Associated Press|work=Saint Petersburg Times|access-date=June 18, 2010|archive-date=March 14, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120314064443/http://www.sptimes.ru/index.php?action_id=2&story_id=31881|url-status=dead}}</ref> When her deportation became imminent, she said she would go to live in London on her UK passport, but it was subsequently ].<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100713231325/http://lenta.ru/news/2010/07/09/return/ |date=July 13, 2010 }} . ], July 9, 2010.</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10620352|title=Russian spy Anna Chapman is stripped of UK citizenship|date=July 13, 2010|publisher=BBC News|location=UK|access-date=June 18, 2010|archive-date=July 13, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100713185418/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/10620352.stm|url-status=live}}</ref> After her deportation to Russia, in July 2010, Robert Baum reiterated that his client wished to stay in the US. He also said that she was "particularly upset" by the revocation of her UK citizenship and exclusion from the country.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.foxnews.com/us/its-enough-to-make-a-redhead-blue-russian-spy-upset-over-being-bounced-by-britain/|title=It's Enough to Make a Redhead Blue: Russian Spy Upset Over Being Bounced by Britain|date=July 21, 2010|agency=Associated Press|access-date=July 24, 2010|publisher=Fox News|archive-date=July 23, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100723222147/http://www.foxnews.com/us/2010/07/21/lawyer-red-haired-russian-spy-says-client-disappointed-england-revoked/|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
On August 8, 2010, the United Kingdom's tabloid '']'' cited an unidentified "source close to ]" as saying, "There was a deal on the table just before she caught her connecting flight to Moscow. The secret service intercepted her on her flight back from America to Vienna, where her plane landed to refuel. MI6 were keen to know about other 'illegals'—Russian spy cells—hiding in the United Kingdom, so they made her an offer. In return they offered to give her back British citizenship and allow her to settle in London. Anna was having none of it though and told them in no uncertain terms that she wished to return to Russia."<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110124031229/http://express.co.uk/posts/view/191835/Russian-femme-fatale-Anna-Chapman-told-MI6-she-wouldn-t-come-in-from-cold |date=January 24, 2011 }}. ''Sunday Express'', August 8, 2010.</ref> | On August 8, 2010, the United Kingdom's tabloid '']'' cited an unidentified "source close to ]" as saying, "There was a deal on the table just before she caught her connecting flight to Moscow. The secret service intercepted her on her flight back from America to Vienna, where her plane landed to refuel. MI6 were keen to know about other 'illegals'—Russian spy cells—hiding in the United Kingdom, so they made her an offer. In return they offered to give her back British citizenship and allow her to settle in London. Anna was having none of it though and told them in no uncertain terms that she wished to return to Russia."<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110124031229/http://express.co.uk/posts/view/191835/Russian-femme-fatale-Anna-Chapman-told-MI6-she-wouldn-t-come-in-from-cold |date=January 24, 2011 }}. ''Sunday Express'', August 8, 2010.</ref> | ||
In September 2010, German magazine {{lang|de|]}} reported that Chapman said the SVR had forbidden her from saying anything about her activities in the US.<ref>{{cite web |
In September 2010, German magazine {{lang|de|]}} reported that Chapman said the SVR had forbidden her from saying anything about her activities in the US.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://newsru.com/russia/09sep2010/anna.html#2|title=Чапман не стала рассказывать о своей работе в США: 'Ей запретили'|trans-title=Chapman did not talk about her work in the US: 'She was banned'|date=September 9, 2010|publisher=Newsru.com|access-date=2013-08-18|archive-date=September 11, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100911000017/http://www.newsru.com/russia/09sep2010/anna.html#2|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
===Mikhail Anatolyevich Vasenkov (Juan Lazaro) and Vicky Peláez=== | ===Mikhail Anatolyevich Vasenkov (Juan Lazaro) and Vicky Peláez=== | ||
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In 1983, "Juan Lazaro" married Vicky Peláez. Peláez was a television reporter in Peru, and a columnist at {{lang|es|]}} in New York City. In her writings, Peláez often criticized US policy in Latin America, and supported liberation movements in those countries. In 1985, Peláez and "Lazaro" moved to New York with her son from a previous relationship.<ref name="WSJVas" /> | In 1983, "Juan Lazaro" married Vicky Peláez. Peláez was a television reporter in Peru, and a columnist at {{lang|es|]}} in New York City. In her writings, Peláez often criticized US policy in Latin America, and supported liberation movements in those countries. In 1985, Peláez and "Lazaro" moved to New York with her son from a previous relationship.<ref name="WSJVas" /> | ||
"Juan Lazaro" wrote a 1990 article for a European publication that spoke "glowingly" of the ] guerrilla movement.<ref>Gonzalez, Juan. , '']'', June 30, 2010. New York. Retrieved June 30, 2010.</ref> He was described as a "journalist and anthropologist" in the 1998 book ''Women and Revolution: Global Expression'', for which he was a contributing author.<ref>{{cite book |
"Juan Lazaro" wrote a 1990 article for a European publication that spoke "glowingly" of the ] guerrilla movement.<ref>Gonzalez, Juan. , '']'', June 30, 2010. New York. Retrieved June 30, 2010.</ref> He was described as a "journalist and anthropologist" in the 1998 book ''Women and Revolution: Global Expression'', for which he was a contributing author.<ref>{{cite book|editor-last=Diamond|editor-first=M. J.|title=Women and Revolution: Global Expressions|year=1998|publisher=Kluwer Academic|isbn=0-7923-5182-7}}</ref> Vasenkov studied at the ] and taught a class on Latin American and Caribbean Politics at ] for one semester during the 2008–2009 school year as an ].<ref name="NYTCurios" /> According to ''The New York Times'' June 29, 2010, report, Vasenkov was a vocal opponent of American foreign policy in class: "He maintained that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were a money-making ploy for corporate America. He praised President ] of Venezuela and disparaged President ] of Colombia as a pawn for paramilitary groups that have broad control over drug trafficking."<ref name="NYTCurios" /> At least one student complained about Vasenkov's teaching and he was let go at the end of the semester.<ref name="NYTCurios">{{cite news|last=Barron|first=James|newspaper=The New York Times|date=June 29, 2010|access-date=July 10, 2010|title=Curiosities Emerge About Suspected Russian Agents|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/30/nyregion/30suspects.html|archive-date=May 16, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130516094606/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/30/nyregion/30suspects.html|url-status=live}}</ref> The department chairman reported that Vasenkov's instruction was not up to standard, resulting in his teaching for only one semester, but that he recalled no controversy over any anti-American views.<ref name="NYTCurios" /> | ||
US officials reported that on June 27, 2010, Vasenkov confessed to being a spy and that "Juan Lazaro" was not his real name, though he declined to give his true identity.<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /> He additionally stated he was not born in Uruguay, and that Peláez delivered letters to Russian authorities on his behalf.<ref><!--Staff author(s); no by-line--> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100704044528/http://www.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/07/01/russian.spies.hearing.delayed/index.html?hpt=T2 |date=July 4, 2010 }}, ], July 1, 2010. Retrieved July 1, 2010.</ref> It was later reported that Lazaro's real name is Mikhail Vasenkov.<ref name=thumbnails>{{cite news|url=https://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2010/07/08/thumbnails_of_11_defendants_in_russian_spy_case/ |
US officials reported that on June 27, 2010, Vasenkov confessed to being a spy and that "Juan Lazaro" was not his real name, though he declined to give his true identity.<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /> He additionally stated he was not born in Uruguay, and that Peláez delivered letters to Russian authorities on his behalf.<ref><!--Staff author(s); no by-line--> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100704044528/http://www.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/07/01/russian.spies.hearing.delayed/index.html?hpt=T2 |date=July 4, 2010 }}, ], July 1, 2010. Retrieved July 1, 2010.</ref> It was later reported that Lazaro's real name is Mikhail Vasenkov.<ref name=thumbnails>{{cite news|url=https://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2010/07/08/thumbnails_of_11_defendants_in_russian_spy_case/|title=Thumbnails of 11 defendants in Russian spy case|agency=Associated Press|date=July 8, 2010|access-date=Jul 8, 2010|work=The Boston Globe|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121026131316/http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2010/07/08/thumbnails_of_11_defendants_in_russian_spy_case/|archive-date=October 26, 2012}}</ref> In November 2010, Russian broadsheet '']'' published Russian anonymous sources' allegations<ref name="KommAlleg" /> that while in US custody, Vasenkov had three ribs and a leg broken by investigators trying to extract more information from him—a claim assessed by experts as highly improbable.<ref name="NovGazFel" /> The ''Kommersant'' article also cited unnamed Russian government sources as saying<ref name="KommAlleg" /> that Vasenkov was presented with the SVR personal file on him obtained through a senior SVR defector ("Colonel Shcherbakov"),<ref name="NYTAlleg" /> whereafter he was forced to own up to his real name. | ||
On August 7, 2010, ''The Wall Street Journal'' cited Vasenkov's American lawyer, Genesis Peduto, as saying that his client indicated to him on the phone that he wanted to leave Moscow for Peru: "He doesn't want to stay in Russia. He says he's Juan Lazaro and he's not from Russia and doesn't speak Russian. He wants to be where his wife is going, to her native country, where it will be easier for Juan Jr. to visit. His family comes first."<ref name="WSJVas" /><ref name="IndepVas">{{cite news |
On August 7, 2010, ''The Wall Street Journal'' cited Vasenkov's American lawyer, Genesis Peduto, as saying that his client indicated to him on the phone that he wanted to leave Moscow for Peru: "He doesn't want to stay in Russia. He says he's Juan Lazaro and he's not from Russia and doesn't speak Russian. He wants to be where his wife is going, to her native country, where it will be easier for Juan Jr. to visit. His family comes first."<ref name="WSJVas" /><ref name="IndepVas">{{cite news|last=Usborne|first=David|newspaper=The Independent|date=August 9, 2010|access-date=August 9, 2010|title=Former spy 'is not Russian and wants to go to Peru'|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/former-spy-is-not-russian-and-wants-to-go-to-peru-2047314.html|location=London|archive-date=September 7, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100907035819/http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/europe/former-spy-is-not-russian-and-wants-to-go-to-peru-2047314.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120315172852/http://www.svobodanews.ru/content/article/2128179.html |date=March 15, 2012 }} . ], August 18, 2010.</ref> In December 2013, Vicky Pelaez left Russia and returned home to Peru; Vasenkov moved there in January 2014. | ||
Vasenkov died in April 2022.<ref>{{cite news |
Vasenkov died in April 2022.<ref>{{cite news|last=Kanavin|first=Ilya|title="If it weren't for betrayal, they wouldn't have taken me": the story of intelligence officer Mikhail Vasenkov|date=April 7, 2022|url=https://smotrim.ru/article/2700507|publisher=]|access-date=November 22, 2023|archive-date=November 22, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231122231826/https://smotrim.ru/article/2700507|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
===Andrey Bezrukov and Yelena Vavilova (Donald Heathfield and Tracey Lee Ann Foley)=== | ===Andrey Bezrukov and Yelena Vavilova (Donald Heathfield and Tracey Lee Ann Foley)=== | ||
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| alt2 = Tracey Foley | | alt2 = Tracey Foley | ||
| caption2 = ]<br />(Tracey Lee Ann Foley) | | caption2 = ]<br />(Tracey Lee Ann Foley) | ||
}}{{Main|Donald Heathfield and Tracey Foley}} | |||
}} | |||
] ({{lang-rus|Андрей Безруков}}, alias Donald Howard Heathfield) and ] ({{lang-rus|Елена Вавилова}}, alias Tracey Lee Ann Foley) admitted being both Russian citizens and Russian agents.<ref name =bbcspyswap>{{cite news |
] ({{lang-rus|Андрей Безруков}}, alias Donald Howard Heathfield) and ] ({{lang-rus|Елена Вавилова}}, alias Tracey Lee Ann Foley) admitted being both Russian citizens and Russian agents.<ref name =bbcspyswap>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/us_and_canada/10564994.stm|title=US and Russia reach agreement on 'spy exchange'|publisher=BBC News|date=July 8, 2010|access-date=Jul 5, 2010|archive-date=July 9, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100709191013/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/us_and_canada/10564994.stm|url-status=live}}</ref> They used Canadian identities stolen for them by the KGB, and lived in Canada for several years.<ref name=20-years/> | ||
When arrested, Bezrukov and his cover wife Yelena Vavilova had a home in ], Massachusetts. Heathfield had earned an ] degree from the ] at ], where he was described as a "joiner". Heathfield claimed to have been the son of a Canadian diplomat and to have studied at a school in the Czech Republic. A fellow graduate of the Kennedy School noted that Heathfield kept careful track of his nearly 200 classmates, who included President of Mexico ]. The couple was arrested on June 27, 2010.<ref |
When arrested, Bezrukov and his cover wife Yelena Vavilova had a home in ], Massachusetts. Heathfield had earned an ] degree from the ] at ], where he was described as a "joiner". Heathfield claimed to have been the son of a Canadian diplomat and to have studied at a school in the Czech Republic. A fellow graduate of the Kennedy School noted that Heathfield kept careful track of his nearly 200 classmates, who included President of Mexico ]. The couple was arrested on June 27, 2010.<ref name="20-years"/> | ||
On July 16, 2010, after his arrest and deportation, Harvard revoked Heathfield's degree on grounds of his misrepresentation of his identity on his application.<ref>{{cite news|title=Harvard revokes degree given to Russian spy |
On July 16, 2010, after his arrest and deportation, Harvard revoked Heathfield's degree on grounds of his misrepresentation of his identity on his application.<ref>{{cite news|title=Harvard revokes degree given to Russian spy|work=The Boston Globe|agency=Associated Press|date=July 16, 2010|url=http://archive.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/articles/2010/07/16/harvard_revokes_degree_given_to_russian_spy/|access-date=July 17, 2010}}</ref><ref>Heslam, Jessica, and Sherman, Natalie (July 17, 2010). . {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100719224836/http://news.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view/20100717harvard_strips_russian_spy_of_degree_classmate_says_move_protects_integrity/ |date=July 19, 2010 }}. ''Boston Herald''. Accessed January 19, 2023</ref> | ||
Bezrukov was a professional member of the ], described by the '']'' as "a think tank on future technologies that holds conferences featuring top government scientists".<ref>{{cite |
Bezrukov was a professional member of the ], described by the '']'' as "a think tank on future technologies that holds conferences featuring top government scientists".<ref>{{cite news|last=Van|first=Jessica|url=http://news.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view/20100630spy_suspect_linked_to_futurist_group|title=Spy suspect linked to 'futurist' group|work=Boston Herald|date=June 30, 2010|access-date=Jul 5, 2010|archive-date=July 3, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100703151541/http://news.bostonherald.com/news/regional/view/20100630spy_suspect_linked_to_futurist_group|url-status=live}}</ref> ], a former national security advisor to US Vice President ], spoke at the World Future Society 2008 conference in Washington, D.C., along with ] professor William Halal.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.wfs.org/2008techsci.htm|title=WFS WorldFuture 2008 Annual Conference-Technology and Science|publisher=Wfs.org|date=July 29, 2008|access-date=Jul 5, 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110717205055/http://www.wfs.org/2008techsci.htm|archive-date=July 17, 2011}}</ref> In a July 2, 2010, '']'' article, Fuerth is quoted acknowledging he met Heathfield after a speech he gave. In the same article, Halal described his relationship to Heathfield as benign; "I would bump into him at meetings of Federal agencies, think tanks, and the World Future Society. I have no information that's of any security value ... Everything I gave Don was published widely and readily available on the Internet".<ref>{{cite news|last=Perez|first=Evan|url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748703571704575341633816865778?mod=WSJ_hpp_MIDDLENexttoWhatsNewsForth|title=Alleged Russian Spy Claimed Clinton Official Leon Feurth Was His Firm's Adviser|work=The Wall Street Journal|date=July 2, 2010|access-date=Jul 5, 2010|archive-date=May 6, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200506115939/https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748703571704575341633816865778?mod=WSJ_hpp_MIDDLENexttoWhatsNewsForth|url-status=live}}</ref> Bezrukov was chief executive of Future Map, a consulting company involved in government and corporate preparedness systems.<ref name=WashPostSuspects /> | ||
Bezrukov's cover wife, Yelena Vavilova (as Tracy Foley), worked for ], a real estate firm in ], Massachusetts.<ref>Goodnough, Abby. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170206080415/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/01/us/01cambridge.html |date=February 6, 2017 }}, ''The New York Times'', June 30, 2010. Retrieved June 30, 2010.</ref> She claimed she was from |
Bezrukov's cover wife, Yelena Vavilova (as Tracy Foley), worked for ], a real estate firm in ], Massachusetts.<ref>Goodnough, Abby. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170206080415/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/01/us/01cambridge.html |date=February 6, 2017 }}, ''The New York Times'', June 30, 2010. Retrieved June 30, 2010.</ref> She claimed she was from Canada, but also traveled on a ].<ref name="TelegrWhosWho" /> | ||
The agents have two sons, Alexander and Timothy, who were, at the time of their parents' arrest, aged 16 and 20.<ref name=thumbnails /> The sons said they had no inkling of their parents' real identities.<ref name=Walker>Walker, Shaun. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160826023708/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/may/07/discovered-our-parents-were-russian-spies-tim-alex-foley |date=August 26, 2016 }}, ''The Guardian'' ( |
The agents have two sons, Alexander and Timothy, who were, at the time of their parents' arrest, aged 16 and 20.<ref name=thumbnails /> The sons said they had no inkling of their parents' real identities.<ref name=Walker>Walker, Shaun. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160826023708/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/may/07/discovered-our-parents-were-russian-spies-tim-alex-foley |date=August 26, 2016 }}, ''The Guardian'' (May 7, 2016).</ref> However, US officials claimed the parents had revealed their true identities to the elder son long before the arrest.<ref name=heathfield/> In July 2012, referring to "current and former U.S. officials", '']'' reported that the couple had groomed their son, Tim Foley, for a future spy career. He was 20 when his parents were arrested, and had just finished his second year at ] in ]. He and his younger brother traveled to Russia in July 2010 to meet their parents after their deportations.<ref name=Walker /> Both were unable to return to the US.<ref name=Spykids>{{cite news|last=Barrett|first=Devlin|url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10000872396390444097904577537044185191340?_nocache=1343278380673&user=welcome|title=Russian Spy Ring Aimed to Make Children Agents|work=The Wall Street Journal|date=July 26, 2012|access-date=Jul 26, 2012}}</ref> The sons, while born in Canada and considering themselves Canadian, and not feeling at home in Moscow, were unable to regain their Canadian citizenship, and were denied visas for Canada, France, and the United Kingdom. They were consequently unable to take up university places they were offered.<ref name=heathfield>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/may/07/discovered-our-parents-were-russian-spies-tim-alex-foley|title=The day we discovered our parents were Russian spies|first=Shaun|last=Walker|newspaper=The Guardian|date=May 7, 2016|access-date=May 7, 2016|archive-date=August 26, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160826023708/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/may/07/discovered-our-parents-were-russian-spies-tim-alex-foley|url-status=live}}</ref> By 2018, both sons had won court cases in the ] to affirm their Canadian citizenship; the ruling was affirmed by the ] on December 19, 2019.<ref>'']'', 2019 SCC 65 {{lexum-scc|2019|65}}</ref><ref name="bbc2019">{{cite news|title=Son of Russian spies feels 'relief' to be Canadian|url=https://www.bbc.com/news/world-us-canada-50873329|access-date=August 7, 2024|publisher=BBC News|date=December 20, 2019}}</ref> The decision, '']'', set an important ] precedent. In March 2018, Alexander (going by his mother's surname of Vavilov) received a Canadian passport and moved back to Canada, while awaiting the Supreme Court verdict.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/son-of-russian-spies-returns-to-canada-after-government-loses-fight-to-keep-him-out-1.4611958|title=Son of Russian spies returns to Canada after government loses fight to keep him out|date=April 11, 2018|website=]|access-date=2019-09-13|archive-date=October 17, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191017173346/https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/son-of-russian-spies-returns-to-canada-after-government-loses-fight-to-keep-him-out-1.4611958|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
The FBI lead agent against the spy couple was ].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow/watch/gop-stunt-to-smear-counter-intel-expert-strzok-ripe-for-backfire-1275196995963?playlist=associated|title=GOP stunt to smear counter-intel expert Strzok ripe for backfire|publisher=MSNBC|date=July 11, 2018|access-date=July 12, 2018|archive-date=November 9, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201109024003/https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow/watch/gop-stunt-to-smear-counter-intel-expert-strzok-ripe-for-backfire-1275196995963?playlist=associated|url-status=live}}</ref> | The FBI lead agent against the spy couple was ].<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow/watch/gop-stunt-to-smear-counter-intel-expert-strzok-ripe-for-backfire-1275196995963?playlist=associated|title=GOP stunt to smear counter-intel expert Strzok ripe for backfire|publisher=MSNBC|date=July 11, 2018|access-date=July 12, 2018|archive-date=November 9, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201109024003/https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow/watch/gop-stunt-to-smear-counter-intel-expert-strzok-ripe-for-backfire-1275196995963?playlist=associated|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
As of August 2019, the couple was living in Moscow; Bezrukov was teaching at a university and doing consulting work for an oil company while Vavilova "also has a consultancy role at a company", according to an article published by ].<ref name=20-years>{{cite web |
As of August 2019, the couple was living in Moscow; Bezrukov was teaching at a university and doing consulting work for an oil company while Vavilova "also has a consultancy role at a company", according to an article published by ].<ref name=20-years>{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/aug/23/russian-spy-elena-vavilova-posed-as-a-canadian-estate-agent-for-over-20-years|title=The Russian spy who posed as a Canadian for more than 20 years|date=August 23, 2019|work=The Guardian|access-date=January 4, 2021|quote=Elena Vavilova's book offers rare insight into the Soviet deep-cover 'illegals' programme|archive-date=February 6, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200206130224/https://www.theguardian.com/world/2019/aug/23/russian-spy-elena-vavilova-posed-as-a-canadian-estate-agent-for-over-20-years|url-status=live}}</ref> According to her website, she has also published two novels.<ref>{{cite web|title=Elena Vavilova|url=https://elenavavilova.ru/|website=elenavavilova.ru|access-date=April 11, 2023}}</ref> | ||
===Vladimir and Lidiya Guryev (Richard and Cynthia Murphy)=== | ===Vladimir and Lidiya Guryev (Richard and Cynthia Murphy)=== | ||
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| caption2 = ]<br />(Cynthia Murphy) | | caption2 = ]<br />(Cynthia Murphy) | ||
}} | }} | ||
] ({{lang-rus|Владимир Гурьев}},<ref name=Komm10>{{cite news|url=http://www.kommersant.ru/doc-rss.aspx?DocsID=1411987 |
] ({{lang-rus|Владимир Гурьев}},<ref name=Komm10>{{cite news|url=http://www.kommersant.ru/doc-rss.aspx?DocsID=1411987|script-title=ru:Ноль-ноль-семьи|trans-title=Zero-zero-family|date=July 10, 2010|access-date=July 16, 2010|language=ru|work=]|first1=Kirill|last1=Belyaninov|first2=Nikolay|last2=Sergeev}}</ref> alias Richard Murphy) and ] ({{lang-rus|Лидия Гурьева}}, alias Cynthia Murphy) were Russian agents in New Jersey.<ref name =bbcspyswap /> | ||
Lidiya Guriyeva attended school in the United States, receiving two undergraduate degrees from ] and an ] from ].<ref>{{cite web |
Lidiya Guriyeva attended school in the United States, receiving two undergraduate degrees from ] and an ] from ].<ref>{{cite web|last=Bode|first=Nicole|url=http://www.dnainfo.com/20100630/manhattan/suspected-russian-spy-earned-degrees-at-columbia-nyu|title=Suspected Russian Spy Earned Degrees at Columbia, NYU|publisher=DNAinfo.com|date=June 30, 2010|access-date=July 11, 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100703152854/http://www.dnainfo.com/20100630/manhattan/suspected-russian-spy-earned-degrees-at-columbia-nyu|archive-date=July 3, 2010}}</ref> In 2009, Cynthia Murphy developed contacts in New York City financial circles as a means to obtain details about the global gold market.<ref name=Record /> Lidiya was trying to cultivate a relationship with ], a venture capitalist who co-chaired ]'s 2008 presidential bid, with her handlers telling her to "try to build up relations little by little".<ref>Naanes, Marlene; Lamb, William; and Layton, Mary Jo. . {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100703073723/http://www.northjersey.com/news/crime_courts/crime_courts_news/062910_Democratic_fund-raiser_says_he_was_Montclair_womans_target.html |date=July 3, 2010 }}, '']'', June 29, 2010. Retrieved June 30, 2010.</ref> Lidiya Guriyeva was Vice President of Morea Financial Services in New York.<ref name=WashPostSuspects>{{cite news|author=<!--Staff author(s); no by-line-->|title=Suspects in the alleged Russian spy network|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/nation/russia-spies-bios/index.html#suspects|newspaper=The Washington Post|access-date=July 25, 2010|archive-date=August 26, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100826092254/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/nation/russia-spies-bios/index.html#suspects|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
Vladimir Guryev supplied money and equipment to Kutsik (see below) in a 2004 meeting in Columbus Circle, New York and 2009, where $150,000 and a flash drive were given. When the computer program was inoperative, Guryev supplied Kutsik with a laptop computer that Guryev brought from Moscow.<ref name="cbsnews.com" /> | Vladimir Guryev supplied money and equipment to Kutsik (see below) in a 2004 meeting in Columbus Circle, New York and 2009, where $150,000 and a flash drive were given. When the computer program was inoperative, Guryev supplied Kutsik with a laptop computer that Guryev brought from Moscow.<ref name="cbsnews.com" /> | ||
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Vladimir and Lidiya Guriyeva were arrested at their home at 31 Marquette Road in ], New Jersey. The couple have two young daughters, aged 11 and 9 at the time of their parents' arrest.<ref name=thumbnails /> Vladimir Guriyev used a false ] that claimed he was born in ], while his wife said that she was born in New York City as "Cynthia A. Hopkins".<ref name=Record /> The two earlier lived in an apartment in ], New Jersey, after arriving in the United States in the mid-1990s. They then purchased a suburban Montclair home for $481,000 in 2008. When they purchased it, the couple argued with their handlers as to who would officially own the house, with the ultimate decision being that it would be owned by "Moscow Center".<ref name=Record>Bautista, Justo. . {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120916171825/http://www.northjersey.com/recap/062810_Montclair_pair_among_10_alleged_Russian_secret_agents_arrested_in_US.html?page=all |date=September 16, 2012 }}, '']'', June 28, 2010. Retrieved June 30, 2010.</ref> | Vladimir and Lidiya Guriyeva were arrested at their home at 31 Marquette Road in ], New Jersey. The couple have two young daughters, aged 11 and 9 at the time of their parents' arrest.<ref name=thumbnails /> Vladimir Guriyev used a false ] that claimed he was born in ], while his wife said that she was born in New York City as "Cynthia A. Hopkins".<ref name=Record /> The two earlier lived in an apartment in ], New Jersey, after arriving in the United States in the mid-1990s. They then purchased a suburban Montclair home for $481,000 in 2008. When they purchased it, the couple argued with their handlers as to who would officially own the house, with the ultimate decision being that it would be owned by "Moscow Center".<ref name=Record>Bautista, Justo. . {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120916171825/http://www.northjersey.com/recap/062810_Montclair_pair_among_10_alleged_Russian_secret_agents_arrested_in_US.html?page=all |date=September 16, 2012 }}, '']'', June 28, 2010. Retrieved June 30, 2010.</ref> | ||
Professor ], who served as Vladimir's faculty adviser at ] for three years starting in 2002, said in July 2010 that she found it difficult to figure out the purported ] native: "I was always puzzled by the inconsistency between a completely American name and completely Russian behaviour. ... He had a thick Russian accent and an incredibly unhappy Russian personality."<ref name=TelegrKhr>{{cite news |
Professor ], who served as Vladimir's faculty adviser at ] for three years starting in 2002, said in July 2010 that she found it difficult to figure out the purported ] native: "I was always puzzled by the inconsistency between a completely American name and completely Russian behaviour. ... He had a thick Russian accent and an incredibly unhappy Russian personality."<ref name=TelegrKhr>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/7888689/Khrushchevs-great-granddaughter-says-Russian-spy-had-unhappy-personality.html|title=Khrushchev's great-granddaughter says Russian spy had 'unhappy personality'|date=July 14, 2010|access-date=July 14, 2010|work=The Daily Telegraph|location=London|archive-date=July 17, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100717011122/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/7888689/Khrushchevs-great-granddaughter-says-Russian-spy-had-unhappy-personality.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
Vladimir Guryev was criticized by his wife for his poor information gathering; she suggested that he pursue individuals with connections to the White House.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100630092926/http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/06/accused_russian_spies_lived_un.html |date=June 30, 2010 }}. '']'', June 28, 2010. Retrieved June 30, 2010.</ref> The couple was also tasked with obtaining information about US policy in ], the ], and the ].<ref name=Record /> Shortly after the couple's arrest, one of their neighbors quipped: "They couldn't be spies. Look what she did with the ]."<ref>Savage, Charlie; and Shane, Scott. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170212112033/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/29/world/europe/29spy.html |date=February 12, 2017 }}. ''The New York Times'', June 28, 2010. Retrieved July 7, 2010.</ref> | Vladimir Guryev was criticized by his wife for his poor information gathering; she suggested that he pursue individuals with connections to the White House.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100630092926/http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/06/accused_russian_spies_lived_un.html |date=June 30, 2010 }}. '']'', June 28, 2010. Retrieved June 30, 2010.</ref> The couple was also tasked with obtaining information about US policy in ], the ], and the ].<ref name=Record /> Shortly after the couple's arrest, one of their neighbors quipped: "They couldn't be spies. Look what she did with the ]."<ref>Savage, Charlie; and Shane, Scott. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170212112033/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/29/world/europe/29spy.html |date=February 12, 2017 }}. ''The New York Times'', June 28, 2010. Retrieved July 7, 2010.</ref> | ||
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Kutsik and Pereverzeva were arrested on June 27, 2010, at their Arlington, Virginia, home.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220628170238/http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-07-03/alleged-deep-cover-spies-zottoli-mills-admit-to-fake-names.html |date=June 28, 2022 }}. ''Businessweek''.<!--Wayback Machine archive redirects to archive for this Bloomberg article so we assume it's the same-->. Accessed January 19, 2023.</ref> Both had family living in Russia and prosecutors argued that bail be denied under the circumstances.<ref>Weiser, Benjamin. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170626131737/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/03/nyregion/03spies.html |date=June 26, 2017 }}, ''The New York Times'', July 2, 2010. Retrieved July 2, 2010.</ref> | Kutsik and Pereverzeva were arrested on June 27, 2010, at their Arlington, Virginia, home.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220628170238/http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-07-03/alleged-deep-cover-spies-zottoli-mills-admit-to-fake-names.html |date=June 28, 2022 }}. ''Businessweek''.<!--Wayback Machine archive redirects to archive for this Bloomberg article so we assume it's the same-->. Accessed January 19, 2023.</ref> Both had family living in Russia and prosecutors argued that bail be denied under the circumstances.<ref>Weiser, Benjamin. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170626131737/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/03/nyregion/03spies.html |date=June 26, 2017 }}, ''The New York Times'', July 2, 2010. Retrieved July 2, 2010.</ref> | ||
On January 13, 2011, Russia's oil pipeline monopoly, ], confirmed that Natalya Pereverzeva was appointed an adviser for foreign economic relations to the company's president, Nikolai Tokarev.<ref>{{cite web |
On January 13, 2011, Russia's oil pipeline monopoly, ], confirmed that Natalya Pereverzeva was appointed an adviser for foreign economic relations to the company's president, Nikolai Tokarev.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://newsru.com/russia/13jan2011/kucik.html|title=Скандальная 'Транснефть' со второй попытки признала, что наняла провалившуюся в США шпионку|date=January 13, 2011|publisher=NEWSru.com|access-date=2013-08-18|archive-date=January 16, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110116160027/http://www.newsru.com/russia/13jan2011/kucik.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629080718/http://www.themoscowtimes.com/mobile/article/deported-spy-chapman-to-unravel-mysteries-on-tv/428489.html |date=June 29, 2011 }}. '']'', January 13, 2011.</ref> | ||
===Mikhail Semenko=== | ===Mikhail Semenko=== | ||
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Mikhail Semenko ({{lang-rus|Михаил Семенко}}) was one of the two agents who "operated under their true names".<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140104142156/http://www.justice.gov/opa/documents/062810complaint1.pdf |date=January 4, 2014 }}. June 28, 2010, ].</ref> He is reported to have studied for one year at the ]. He also attended school and received graduate degrees in the United States at ], one of the degrees being from the ]. He is fluent in English, ], Russian, and Spanish. He later worked for ] in New York City in 2009, and for 2009–2010 reportedly worked at Travel All Russia, an Arlington, Virginia, travel agency, helping Chinese and ] travelers plan trips.<ref>Markon, Jerry. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170920164356/https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/28/AR2010062805227.html |date=September 20, 2017 }}, ''The Washington Post'', June 29, 2010. Retrieved July 1, 2010.</ref> He appeared to be in his late 20s; his neighbors said that he was a stylish man who drove a ] car and spoke Russian to his girlfriend.<ref name="TelegrWhosWho">, '']'', June 29, 2010. Retrieved July 1, 2010.</ref> | Mikhail Semenko ({{lang-rus|Михаил Семенко}}) was one of the two agents who "operated under their true names".<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140104142156/http://www.justice.gov/opa/documents/062810complaint1.pdf |date=January 4, 2014 }}. June 28, 2010, ].</ref> He is reported to have studied for one year at the ]. He also attended school and received graduate degrees in the United States at ], one of the degrees being from the ]. He is fluent in English, ], Russian, and Spanish. He later worked for ] in New York City in 2009, and for 2009–2010 reportedly worked at Travel All Russia, an Arlington, Virginia, travel agency, helping Chinese and ] travelers plan trips.<ref>Markon, Jerry. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170920164356/https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/06/28/AR2010062805227.html |date=September 20, 2017 }}, ''The Washington Post'', June 29, 2010. Retrieved July 1, 2010.</ref> He appeared to be in his late 20s; his neighbors said that he was a stylish man who drove a ] car and spoke Russian to his girlfriend.<ref name="TelegrWhosWho">, '']'', June 29, 2010. Retrieved July 1, 2010.</ref> | ||
Semenko was first noted by the FBI on June 5 when he used a computer in a restaurant to send encrypted messages, presumably to a car parked in the restaurant lot that had Russian diplomatic plates and was driven by a Russian official who was known to have transferred money to other Russian sleeper agents in 2004.<ref name="Pincus">{{cite news |
Semenko was first noted by the FBI on June 5 when he used a computer in a restaurant to send encrypted messages, presumably to a car parked in the restaurant lot that had Russian diplomatic plates and was driven by a Russian official who was known to have transferred money to other Russian sleeper agents in 2004.<ref name="Pincus">{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/11/AR2010071102416_2.html?sid=ST2010070702502|newspaper=The Washington Post|title=Sources: Call by Russian spy Anna Chapman to dad in Moscow led U.S. to hasten arrests|first=Walter|last=Pincus|date=July 12, 2010|access-date=November 3, 2017|archive-date=September 20, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170920170129/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/11/AR2010071102416_2.html?sid=ST2010070702502|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
On or about June 26, 2010, Semenko met with an undercover FBI agent purporting to be a Russian agent and accepted $5,000, which he delivered to a drop site in an Arlington, Virginia park.<ref>{{cite web |
On or about June 26, 2010, Semenko met with an undercover FBI agent purporting to be a Russian agent and accepted $5,000, which he delivered to a drop site in an Arlington, Virginia park.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.aolnews.com/surge-desk/article/russian-spies-revealed-mikhail-semenkos-double-life/19535732|title=Russian Spies Revealed: Mikhail Semenko's Double Life|publisher=AOL News|date=August 14, 2013|access-date=2013-08-18|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101029062802/http://www.aolnews.com/surge-desk/article/russian-spies-revealed-mikhail-semenkos-double-life/19535732|archive-date=October 29, 2010}}</ref> The drop was made at 11:06 a.m. and Semenko was arrested at his residence in ], Virginia, a suburb of Washington, DC, later that day.<ref name="thumbnails" /><ref name="Pincus" /> | ||
==Other presumed agents of the Illegals Program== | ==Other presumed agents of the Illegals Program== | ||
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The man known by the name of "Christopher Metsos" was alleged to be the money man and main go-between behind the Illegals Program and the SVR. | The man known by the name of "Christopher Metsos" was alleged to be the money man and main go-between behind the Illegals Program and the SVR. | ||
On June 29, 2010, acting on an ] notice, police arrested the 55-year-old man at the ] in Cyprus as he was about to board a jet for ]. He was released after posting €27,000 (equivalent to US$33,777{{ |
On June 29, 2010, acting on an ] notice, police arrested the 55-year-old man at the ] in Cyprus as he was about to board a jet for ]. He was released after posting €27,000 (equivalent to US$33,777{{citation needed|date=January 2023}}) bail and told to report to a police station thereafter but skipped out and apparently fled the country. | ||
According to the information from US authorities shortly after his flight, "Metsos", who traveled on a Canadian passport and claimed to be Canadian, regularly traveled to the US to deliver money to his fellow Russian spies; he would typically drop off money at New York City area locations including a coffee shop, restaurant and subway station.<ref name="LA1">Daragahi, Borzou. , ''Los Angeles Times'', July 1, 2010. Retrieved July 2, 2010.</ref> According to his Cypriot lawyer, "Metsos" had no discernible Russian accent and described himself as a Canadian resident who divorced 15 years prior and had a son living in Paris.<ref name="LA1" /> | According to the information from US authorities shortly after his flight, "Metsos", who traveled on a Canadian passport and claimed to be Canadian, regularly traveled to the US to deliver money to his fellow Russian spies; he would typically drop off money at New York City area locations including a coffee shop, restaurant and subway station.<ref name="LA1">Daragahi, Borzou. , ''Los Angeles Times'', July 1, 2010. Retrieved July 2, 2010.</ref> According to his Cypriot lawyer, "Metsos" had no discernible Russian accent and described himself as a Canadian resident who divorced 15 years prior and had a son living in Paris.<ref name="LA1" /> | ||
On July 26, 2010, it was reported by the media that ], upon conducting a review, revoked the travel document issued to Christopher Metsos.<ref name="PasRev">{{cite news|title=Canada cancels passport of accused Russian spy|work=] |
On July 26, 2010, it was reported by the media that ], upon conducting a review, revoked the travel document issued to Christopher Metsos.<ref name="PasRev">{{cite news|title=Canada cancels passport of accused Russian spy|work=]|publisher=]|date=July 26, 2010|url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/canada-cancels-passport-of-accused-russian-spy-1.887572|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130115095512/http://www.cbc.ca/politics/story/2010/07/26/spy-russia-passport.html|url-status=live|archive-date=January 15, 2013|access-date=2010-07-29}}</ref> | ||
Late in July 2010, Russian political commentator ] voiced a theory that "Christopher Metsos" might have been a ] and was probably now in the US; she did not cite any sources.<ref name="NovG1">{{cite news |last=Latynina |first=Yulia |newspaper=] |date=July 28, 2010 |access-date=July 28, 2010 |script-title=ru:Где 11-й шпион? |trans-title=Where is the 11th spy? |url=http://novayagazeta.ru/data/2010/081/14.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100731205533/http://www.novayagazeta.ru/data/2010/081/14.html |archive-date=July 31, 2010 |df=mdy-all }}</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100814011037/http://intelligencenews.wordpress.com/2010/07/28/01-527/ |date=August 14, 2010 }} ''Intelligence News'' (blog). July 28, 2010.</ref>{{unreliable source?|reason=blog of unclear importance|date=January 2023}} | |||
A court verdict read in Moscow on June 27, 2011, identified "Metsos" as Pavel Kapustin ({{lang|ru|Павел Капустин}}), a Russian espionage professional, who was exfiltrated upon being released on bail in Cyprus.<ref name="Pot1999" /> | A court verdict read in Moscow on June 27, 2011, identified "Metsos" as Pavel Kapustin ({{lang|ru|Павел Капустин}}), a Russian espionage professional, who was exfiltrated upon being released on bail in Cyprus.<ref name="Pot1999" /> | ||
===Alexey Karetnikov=== | ===Alexey Karetnikov=== | ||
On July 13, 2010, the US government disclosed that a 12th, previously undisclosed, person was being held in custody and was said by the media to be implicated in the same federal probe.<ref>{{cite news |
On July 13, 2010, the US government disclosed that a 12th, previously undisclosed, person was being held in custody and was said by the media to be implicated in the same federal probe.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748704288204575363680611357228?mod=WSJEUROPE_hps_MIDDLETopStories|work=The Wall Street Journal|date=July 13, 2010|access-date=July 13, 2010|title=U.S. Detains 12th Person in Russian Spy Probe|first=Evan|last=Pérez|archive-date=December 1, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171201044257/https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748704288204575363680611357228?mod=WSJEUROPE_hps_MIDDLETopStories|url-status=live}}</ref> Later that day, the person was identified as Alexey Karetnikov, a 23-year-old former entry-level software tester at ], who was apprehended on June 28, 2010, in ].<ref name="NW1" /> He was charged with immigration violations and consented to deportation in lieu of further court proceedings;<ref name="NW1" /> he was sent to Russia on July 13, 2010.<ref name="WP1" /><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.techflash.com/seattle/2010/07/reports_12th_russian_spy_worked_at_microsoft.html|work=Techflash|date=July 13, 2010|access-date=July 14, 2010|title=Reports: alleged 12th Russian spy worked at Microsoft|archive-date=July 16, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100716090131/http://www.techflash.com/seattle/2010/07/reports_12th_russian_spy_worked_at_microsoft.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.komonews.com/news/98370534.html|access-date=July 14, 2010|date=July 13, 2010|title=Redmond man with possible link to Russian spy ring deported|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120402235242/http://www.komonews.com/news/98370534.html|archive-date=April 2, 2012}}</ref> Law enforcement officials said on the day of his deportation that Karetnikov had no direct ties to the other deported persons, although his name came up in the broader investigation.<ref name="WP1" /> | ||
On July 22, 2010, ''Newsweek'' published the comments of Karetnikov's fellow dormitory resident, who said that Karetnikov impressed him as "very oily" and "very Russian"; according to the anonymous source, Karetnikov spoke surprisingly poor English but was "sophisticated" and knew a lot about Microsoft.<ref name="NW1">{{cite web |
On July 22, 2010, ''Newsweek'' published the comments of Karetnikov's fellow dormitory resident, who said that Karetnikov impressed him as "very oily" and "very Russian"; according to the anonymous source, Karetnikov spoke surprisingly poor English but was "sophisticated" and knew a lot about Microsoft.<ref name="NW1">{{cite web|url=http://www.newsweek.com/blogs/declassified/2010/07/22/microsoft-s-russian-spy-was-greasy-foreign-and-loved-snickers.html|work=]|date=July 22, 2010|access-date=July 26, 2010|title=Microsoft's Russian Spy Was Greasy, Foreign, and Loved Snickers|archive-date=July 26, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100726071459/http://www.newsweek.com/blogs/declassified/2010/07/22/microsoft-s-russian-spy-was-greasy-foreign-and-loved-snickers.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
==Communication techniques== | ==Communication techniques== | ||
] | ] | ||
The Russian agents used private ] networks, ] and text messages concealed in graphical images to exchange information. Custom ] software developed in Moscow was used where concealed messages were inserted into otherwise innocuous files. This program was initiated by using the Control-Alt-E keys and entering a 27-character password, which the FBI found written down. Coded bursts of data sent by a short wave ] were also used.<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /><ref name="news.cnet.com" /> Other methods included employing invisible ink and exchanging identical bags in public places.<ref>Scott Shane and Charlie Savage, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170212112033/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/29/world/europe/29spy.html |date=February 12, 2017 }}, ''New York Times'', June 29, 2010.</ref> | The Russian agents used private ] networks, ] and text messages concealed in graphical images to exchange information. Custom ] software developed in Moscow was used where concealed messages were inserted into otherwise innocuous files. This program was initiated by using the Control-Alt-E keys and entering a 27-character password, which the FBI found written down. Coded bursts of data sent by a short wave ] were also used.<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /><ref name="news.cnet.com" /> Other methods included employing invisible ink and exchanging identical bags in public places.<ref>Scott Shane and Charlie Savage, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170212112033/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/29/world/europe/29spy.html |date=February 12, 2017 }}, ''The New York Times'', June 29, 2010.</ref> | ||
In January 2010, Anna Chapman used her laptop at a New York coffee shop on 47th Street to electronically transfer data to a Russian official driving by.<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /> Two months later, Chapman used a private Wi-Fi network, possibly at a ] store on Greenwich Street in New York, to communicate with the same Russian official, who was nearby.<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /> Chapman used a range extender for her laptop.<ref>{{cite web |
In January 2010, Anna Chapman used her laptop at a New York coffee shop on 47th Street to electronically transfer data to a Russian official driving by.<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /> Two months later, Chapman used a private Wi-Fi network, possibly at a ] store on Greenwich Street in New York, to communicate with the same Russian official, who was nearby.<ref name="2010 Spy Ring" /> Chapman used a range extender for her laptop.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-20009101-38.html|title=Alleged Russian agents used high-tech tricks|access-date=July 26, 2010|last=McCullagh|first=Declan|date=June 28, 2010|work=CNet|archive-date=December 5, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131205082436/http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-20009101-38.html|url-status=dead}}</ref> | ||
==Court proceedings== | ==Court proceedings== | ||
{{Wikinews|US and Russia announce spy swap}} | {{Wikinews|US and Russia announce spy swap}} | ||
On June 27, 2010, FBI Special Agent Amit Kachhia-Patel submitted a ] alleging a violation of ], section 951 (conspiracy to act as ]). An ] was issued for Anna Chapman and Mikhail Semenko by ] Ronald L. Ellis.<ref>{{cite web |
On June 27, 2010, FBI Special Agent Amit Kachhia-Patel submitted a ] alleging a violation of ], section 951 (conspiracy to act as ]). An ] was issued for Anna Chapman and Mikhail Semenko by ] Ronald L. Ellis.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.justice.gov/opa/documents/062810complaint1.pdf|title=Approved: Michael Farbiarz – Glen Kopp – Jason Smith|publisher=Department of Justice|access-date=November 22, 2020|archive-date=January 4, 2014|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20140104142156/http://www.justice.gov/opa/documents/062810complaint1.pdf|url-status=live}}</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111103082515/http://vault.fbi.gov/ghost-stories-russian-foreign-intelligence-service-illegals/documents/item-86/view |date=November 3, 2011 }}, FBI, Ghost Stories: Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) Illegals</ref> | ||
As of July 6, 2010, '']'' reported that federal and local prosecutors were seeking a rapid conclusion to the case, to avoid a trial that might disclose sensitive information about information-gathering techniques. The proposed deal would have the defendants deported to Russia after pleading guilty to lesser charges.<ref>Weiser, Benjamin. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170112023255/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/07/nyregion/07agents.html |date=January 12, 2017 }}, ''The New York Times'', July 6, 2010. Retrieved July 7, 2010.</ref> | As of July 6, 2010, '']'' reported that federal and local prosecutors were seeking a rapid conclusion to the case, to avoid a trial that might disclose sensitive information about information-gathering techniques. The proposed deal would have the defendants deported to Russia after pleading guilty to lesser charges.<ref>Weiser, Benjamin. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170112023255/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/07/nyregion/07agents.html |date=January 12, 2017 }}, ''The New York Times'', July 6, 2010. Retrieved July 7, 2010.</ref> | ||
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On the morning of July 7, ] Moscow correspondent ] broke the news of the spy swap. He reported that ]—jailed in 2004 for passing secrets to a British company that Russian prosecutors said was a front for the CIA—was to be swapped as part of a deal with the United States to bring home the Russian agents.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201103011458/https://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE66618Y20100707 |date=November 3, 2020 }}, Reuters, Guy Faulconbridge, July 7, 2010.</ref> | On the morning of July 7, ] Moscow correspondent ] broke the news of the spy swap. He reported that ]—jailed in 2004 for passing secrets to a British company that Russian prosecutors said was a front for the CIA—was to be swapped as part of a deal with the United States to bring home the Russian agents.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201103011458/https://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE66618Y20100707 |date=November 3, 2020 }}, Reuters, Guy Faulconbridge, July 7, 2010.</ref> | ||
In a hearing held in federal court in ] on July 8, 2010 before Judge ], all ten defendants pleaded guilty to a single charge each of secretly conspiring to act as agents of the Russian government. While the charge could carry up to five years in prison, ''The Washington Post'' described the pleas as a first step in what could be the largest prisoner swap between the United States and Russia since the days of the ].<ref name="WPPlea">Markon, Jerry; Pincus, Walter; and Branigin, William. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171107030820/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/08/AR2010070803476.html |date=November 7, 2017 }}, ''The Washington Post'', July 8, 2010. Retrieved July 8, 2010.</ref> Under the plea agreements, the defendants also disclosed their true identities and all except for Vicky Peláez admitted that they were Russian citizens. | In a hearing held in federal court in ] on July 8, 2010, before Judge ], all ten defendants pleaded guilty to a single charge each of secretly conspiring to act as agents of the Russian government. While the charge could carry up to five years in prison, ''The Washington Post'' described the pleas as a first step in what could be the largest prisoner swap between the United States and Russia since the days of the ].<ref name="WPPlea">Markon, Jerry; Pincus, Walter; and Branigin, William. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171107030820/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/08/AR2010070803476.html |date=November 7, 2017 }}, ''The Washington Post'', July 8, 2010. Retrieved July 8, 2010.</ref> Under the plea agreements, the defendants also disclosed their true identities and all except for Vicky Peláez admitted that they were Russian citizens. | ||
On July 9, 2010, Attorney General ] said none of the ten defendants passed classified information and therefore none were charged with espionage.<ref name="CNN">{{cite news|title=Spy suspects plead guilty, will be expelled promptly|publisher=CNN|date=July 8, 2010|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/07/08/russian.spy.hearings/index.html?hpt=T1&fbid=9NuBJJ4pMx_|access-date= |
On July 9, 2010, Attorney General ] said none of the ten defendants passed classified information and therefore none were charged with espionage.<ref name="CNN">{{cite news|title=Spy suspects plead guilty, will be expelled promptly|publisher=CNN|date=July 8, 2010|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/07/08/russian.spy.hearings/index.html?hpt=T1&fbid=9NuBJJ4pMx_|access-date=July 9, 2007|archive-date=October 21, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121021140903/http://edition.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/07/08/russian.spy.hearings/index.html?hpt=T1&fbid=9NuBJJ4pMx_|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
All the defendants were sentenced to time already served. According to |
All the defendants were sentenced to time already served. According to ''The New York Times'', political leaders of the two nations made the deal even before the indictment—with US prosecutors and the defendants' lawyers playing a minimal role.<ref name="NYTBalancing">{{cite news|last=Weiser|first=Benjamin|newspaper=The New York Times|date=July 16, 2010|access-date=July 29, 2010|title=Spy Swap Forced Prosecutors into Balancing Act|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/17/nyregion/17spies.html|archive-date=October 18, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111018152655/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/17/nyregion/17spies.html?|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
==Prisoner exchange== | ==Prisoner exchange== | ||
Reuters reported on July 7–8, 2010, that the US and Russia reached a deal under which the ten individuals arrested in that country as part of the Illegals Program would be deported to Russia in exchange for individuals who Russia convicted of espionage on behalf of the US and UK. ], ], ] and ] were included in the exchange.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201103011458/https://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE66618Y20100707 |date=November 3, 2020 }}, |
Reuters reported on July 7–8, 2010, that the US and Russia reached a deal under which the ten individuals arrested in that country as part of the Illegals Program would be deported to Russia in exchange for individuals who Russia convicted of espionage on behalf of the US and UK. ], ], ] and ] were included in the exchange.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20201103011458/https://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE66618Y20100707 |date=November 3, 2020 }}, Reuters, July 7, 2010.</ref> All four served a considerable time in Russian prisons;<ref>, Reuters, July 9, 2010.</ref> at least three of the jailed individuals in Russia were convicted of ] for either the United Kingdom or the US. | ||
White House Chief of Staff ] reportedly said on July 8 that President ] approved the swap deal.<!-- dead as a doornail: <ref>{{cite news|title=US APNewsAlert |
White House Chief of Staff ] reportedly said on July 8 that President ] approved the swap deal.<!-- dead as a doornail: <ref>{{cite news|title=US APNewsAlert|url=https://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5jjHS8S3jIndU2oI6WHB_KqB-pvwAD9GR4VJ80|agency=Associated Press|date=July 8, 2010|access-date=July 8, 2010}}{{dead link|date=June 2024|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref>-->{{citation needed|date=January 2023}} An administration official was quoted as saying that Obama had not spoken to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev about the spy swap but was "fully briefed and engaged in the matter".<ref name="WPPlea" /> Broad agreement in the US was reported to exist that the agents were being deported swiftly as neither government wanted the case to damage attempts to ].<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100709191013/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/world/us_and_canada/10564994.stm |date=July 9, 2010 }}, ], July 8, 2010. Retrieved July 8, 2010.</ref> | ||
Shortly before the swap deal was reached, nuclear specialist Igor Sutyagin, one of the Russian prisoners included in the deal, was moved to a Moscow prison from a facility near the ] and then flown to ] as part of the exchange.<ref>. ''Bloomberg''. July 8, 2010.</ref> | Shortly before the swap deal was reached, nuclear specialist Igor Sutyagin, one of the Russian prisoners included in the deal, was moved to a Moscow prison from a facility near the ] and then flown to ] as part of the exchange.<ref>. ''Bloomberg''. July 8, 2010.</ref> | ||
Under a US–Russian agreement, the Russian government agreed to release the Russian prisoners and their family members for resettlement. The Russian prisoners had served a number of years in prison and some were in poor health.<ref>{{cite news |
Under a US–Russian agreement, the Russian government agreed to release the Russian prisoners and their family members for resettlement. The Russian prisoners had served a number of years in prison and some were in poor health.<ref>{{cite news|title=Spy suspects plead guilty, will be expelled promptly|publisher=CNN|date=July 8, 2010|url=http://edition.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/07/08/russian.spy.hearings/index.html?hpt=T1&fbid=9NuBJJ4pMx_|access-date=September 7, 2010|archive-date=October 21, 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121021140903/http://edition.cnn.com/2010/CRIME/07/08/russian.spy.hearings/index.html?hpt=T1&fbid=9NuBJJ4pMx_|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
On July 9, all ten suspects were deported. A government-chartered jet from ] left New York's ] and flew to ] via ], Maine for refueling and then for the swap around midday of July 9 (local time). Returning from Vienna were the four Russian prisoners—Sutyagin, Zaporozhsky, Skripal, and Vasilenko.<ref>Faulconbridge, Guy, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100801052411/http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSLDE6680KB20100709 |date=August 1, 2010 }}, |
On July 9, all ten suspects were deported. A government-chartered jet from ] left New York's ] and flew to ] via ], Maine for refueling and then for the swap around midday of July 9 (local time). Returning from Vienna were the four Russian prisoners—Sutyagin, Zaporozhsky, Skripal, and Vasilenko.<ref>Faulconbridge, Guy, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100801052411/http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSLDE6680KB20100709 |date=August 1, 2010 }}, Reuters, July 9.</ref> The aircraft landed at ] in Oxfordshire, England, to drop two of the exchanged Russian nationals and proceeded to ] on the afternoon of July 9. The Russian government ] jet returned to Moscow's ] where, after landing, the ten spies were kept away from local and international press.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/us_and_canada/10580301.stm|title=Russian spies deported from US arrive in Moscow|publisher=BBC News|date=July 8, 2010|access-date=July 8, 2010}}</ref> | ||
Later that day the Russian ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed the exchange of four convicted people for ten Russian citizens citing "humanitarian considerations and constructive partnership development".<ref>.{{dead link|date=April 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}. ]. July 9, 2010. Retrieved July 9, 2010.</ref> | Later that day the Russian ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed the exchange of four convicted people for ten Russian citizens citing "humanitarian considerations and constructive partnership development".<ref>.{{dead link|date=April 2017 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}. ]. July 9, 2010. Retrieved July 9, 2010.</ref> | ||
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===Igor Sutyagin=== | ===Igor Sutyagin=== | ||
] in the 1990s]] | ] in the 1990s]] | ||
] was an arms control researcher with the ] (ISKAN) of the ]. He was arrested in 1999, and sentenced in April 2004 to 15 years' hard labor on high treason charges. He ] on Russian nuclear submarines and missile warning systems, analysed and provided it to a British consulting firm. He steadfastly denied using any classified information and ISKAN is said to have no access to Russian classified materials.<ref>{{cite news |
] was an arms control researcher with the ] (ISKAN) of the ]. He was arrested in 1999, and sentenced in April 2004 to 15 years' hard labor on high treason charges. He ] on Russian nuclear submarines and missile warning systems, analysed and provided it to a British consulting firm. He steadfastly denied using any classified information and ISKAN is said to have no access to Russian classified materials.<ref>{{cite news|last=Sullivan|first=John|url=http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/s/igor_v_sutyagin/index.html?inline=nyt-per|title=Igor Sutyagin|work=The New York Times|access-date=July 11, 2010|archive-date=May 10, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110510070811/http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/people/s/igor_v_sutyagin/index.html?inline=nyt-per|url-status=live}}</ref> Sutyagin maintained his innocence throughout his trial and conviction, but had to plead guilty shortly before the swap to qualify for a Presidential pardon. The US ] (and ]) classified Sutyagin as a ], not a spy.<ref name="washingtonpost.com">{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/09/AR2010070904274.html|newspaper=The Washington Post|title=Igor Sutyagin: A very different Russian 'spy'|date=July 10, 2010|access-date=November 3, 2017|archive-date=September 20, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170920172254/http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/07/09/AR2010070904274.html|url-status=live}}</ref> The ''Washington Post'' commented that Sutyagin's case differed from the other released prisoners, and that his original arrest might have been to warn Russians not to cooperate with Western companies and think tanks.<ref name="washingtonpost.com" /> | ||
According to his relatives, Sutyagin phoned home on his arrival in the UK, saying that he was placed in an undisclosed location in a London suburb and that British authorities were in the process of granting him a UK visa.{{ |
According to his relatives, Sutyagin phoned home on his arrival in the UK, saying that he was placed in an undisclosed location in a London suburb and that British authorities were in the process of granting him a UK visa.{{citation needed|date=March 2023}} Later his lawyer confirmed that Sutyagin was granted ] in the UK. | ||
===Sergei Skripal=== | ===Sergei Skripal=== | ||
] was a colonel in Russia's ] (GRU), who was arrested and convicted of ] in Russia in 2006, and sentenced to 13 years in prison.<ref name=NYT20100709>Kulish, Nicholas; Baker, peter; and Barry, Ellen. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160604213143/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/10/world/europe/10russia.html |date=June 4, 2016 }}, '']'', July 9, 2010. Retrieved July 9, 2010.</ref> According to the prosecution, he had spied for the United Kingdom's ] as a ]. After the prisoner exchange in 2010, he moved to the UK and in 2018 ] with a ] in ], England.<ref name="graun">{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/mar/07/russian-spy-police-appeal-for-witnesses-as-cobra-meeting-takes-place|title=Sergei Skripal: former Russian spy poisoned with nerve agent, say police|last1=Dodd|first1=Vikram|last2=Harding|first2=Luke|last3=MacAskill|first3=Ewen|date= |
] was a colonel in Russia's ] (GRU), who was arrested and convicted of ] in Russia in 2006, and sentenced to 13 years in prison.<ref name=NYT20100709>Kulish, Nicholas; Baker, peter; and Barry, Ellen. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160604213143/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/07/10/world/europe/10russia.html |date=June 4, 2016 }}, '']'', July 9, 2010. Retrieved July 9, 2010.</ref> According to the prosecution, he had spied for the United Kingdom's ] as a ]. After the prisoner exchange in 2010, he moved to the UK and in 2018 ] with a ] in ], England.<ref name="graun">{{cite web|url=https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/mar/07/russian-spy-police-appeal-for-witnesses-as-cobra-meeting-takes-place|title=Sergei Skripal: former Russian spy poisoned with nerve agent, say police|last1=Dodd|first1=Vikram|last2=Harding|first2=Luke|last3=MacAskill|first3=Ewen|date=March 8, 2018|work=The Guardian|access-date=March 8, 2018|archive-date=April 7, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180407174131/https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2018/mar/07/russian-spy-police-appeal-for-witnesses-as-cobra-meeting-takes-place|url-status=live}}</ref> A responding police officer and two random passersby (one of whom was the only death of the five poisoned) who found the discarded bottle were accidentally poisoned as well. | ||
===Aleksandr Zaporozhsky=== | ===Aleksandr Zaporozhsky=== | ||
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===Gennady Vasilenko=== | ===Gennady Vasilenko=== | ||
Gennady Semyonovich Vasilenko ({{lang-rus|Геннадий Семёнович Василенко}}) is the only person swapped from the Russian side who was not convicted on espionage (high treason) charges. He was a KGB officer who worked for external intelligence and counter-intelligence departments during the 1970s and 1980s. In 1988, presumably having been fingered by a Russian mole in the FBI, ],<ref name=Komm11>{{cite news |
Gennady Semyonovich Vasilenko ({{lang-rus|Геннадий Семёнович Василенко}}) is the only person swapped from the Russian side who was not convicted on espionage (high treason) charges. He was a KGB officer who worked for external intelligence and counter-intelligence departments during the 1970s and 1980s. In 1988, presumably having been fingered by a Russian mole in the FBI, ],<ref name=Komm11>{{cite news|url=http://www.kommersant.ru/doc.aspx?DocsID=1412011|script-title=ru:Кого обменяли на разведчиков|date=July 10, 2010|access-date=July 16, 2010|language=ru|work=]|archive-date=July 14, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100714182446/http://www.kommersant.ru/doc.aspx?DocsID=1412011|url-status=live}}</ref> he fell under suspicion of being a double agent. Vasilenko was not convicted but instead sacked from the KGB. He was arrested in 2005 and charged with an attempted murder. Due to lack of evidence this charge was dropped. Instead, he was sentenced to three years for possession of illegal firearms and explosive materials.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://lenta.ru/news/2006/09/20/verdict/|language=ru|access-date=July 15, 2010|date=September 20, 2006|script-title=ru:Бывшего сотрудника 'НТВ-Плюс' сослали в колонию за хранение оружия|trans-title=Former NTV+ employee sent to prison<!--колония-поселение, open prison--> for firearms possession|archive-date=July 14, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100714141326/http://lenta.ru/news/2006/09/20/verdict/|url-status=live}}</ref> In 2009, Vasilenko was convicted and sentenced again for allegedly trying to bribe facility officials.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://kommersant.ru/doc.aspx?DocsID=1419606|script-title=ru:Разведчика выдал актив|date=July 15, 2010|access-date=July 15, 2010|language=ru|publisher=Kommersant.ru|archive-date=July 19, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100719173721/http://www.kommersant.ru/doc.aspx?DocsID=1419606|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
According to media reports (which cite anonymous sources in Russian intelligence),<ref>{{cite news |
According to media reports (which cite anonymous sources in Russian intelligence),<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.rosbalt.ru/2010/07/13/753359.html|date=July 13, 2010|access-date=July 16, 2010|script-title=ru:Странный срок 'шпиона' Василенко|language=ru|publisher=Rosbalt.ru|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100716190448/http://www.rosbalt.ru/2010/07/13/753359.html|archive-date=July 16, 2010}}</ref> Vasilenko was included in the list for the swap due to a personal request from a CIA officer who knew Vasilenko when he was posted in the US under diplomatic cover from 1976 to 1981.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/heart-of-darkness-02-03-2001/|date=March 7, 2001|access-date=July 16, 2010|title=Heart of Darkness|publisher=]}}</ref><ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100716164935/http://www.thedailybeast.com/blogs-and-stories/2010-07-12/the-spy-swaps-mystery-man? |date=July 16, 2010 }}, ''The Daily Beast'', July 12, 2010.</ref> | ||
===Others held by Russia=== | ===Others held by Russia=== | ||
Alexander Sypachev ({{lang-rus|Александр Сыпачев}}) was a colonel in the Russian intelligence service who was arrested after delivering a report to a secret location in 2002. He was sentenced to eight years for spying for the CIA. He was reported to have been considered for a swap<ref name="news.yahoo.com">{{cite web|url=https://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100708/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_us_spy_swap_candidates_glance_1 |
Alexander Sypachev ({{lang-rus|Александр Сыпачев}}) was a colonel in the Russian intelligence service who was arrested after delivering a report to a secret location in 2002. He was sentenced to eight years for spying for the CIA. He was reported to have been considered for a swap<ref name="news.yahoo.com">{{cite web|url=https://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100708/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_us_spy_swap_candidates_glance_1|access-date=July 24, 2010}}{{dead link|date=June 2016|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> but was not among the four Russians released. | ||
Six others were considered for exchange as an even 11:11 swap, but were not exchanged in Vienna.<ref name="news.yahoo.com" /> | Six others were considered for exchange as an even 11:11 swap, but were not exchanged in Vienna.<ref name="news.yahoo.com" /> | ||
Line 268: | Line 266: | ||
==Aftermath of the swap== | ==Aftermath of the swap== | ||
After the Russian agents were returned to Russia, they were delivered to the SVR headquarters. They were not technically arrested, and relatives could visit them. However, they were not allowed to leave the facility until after the debriefing process, which took several weeks, as the Russian authorities appeared to suspect that betrayal—by any of the agents themselves or not—could be a plausible explanation for their exposure.{{ |
After the Russian agents were returned to Russia, they were delivered to the SVR headquarters. They were not technically arrested, and relatives could visit them. However, they were not allowed to leave the facility until after the debriefing process, which took several weeks, as the Russian authorities appeared to suspect that betrayal—by any of the agents themselves or not—could be a plausible explanation for their exposure.{{citation needed|date=March 2023}} | ||
According to her lawyer, Vicky Peláez was placed in a Moscow apartment provided by Russian authorities. She turned down a US$2,000 per month offer from the Russian government and planned to return to Peru.{{ |
According to her lawyer, Vicky Peláez was placed in a Moscow apartment provided by Russian authorities. She turned down a US$2,000 per month offer from the Russian government and planned to return to Peru.{{citation needed|date=March 2023}} | ||
On June 28, 2010, the UK revoked Anna Chapman's UK citizenship.<ref>{{cite news |
On June 28, 2010, the UK revoked Anna Chapman's UK citizenship.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/UK-News/Russian-Spy-Anna-Chapman-Loses-British-Citizenship-And-Has-Passport-Confiscated/Article/201007215664659?lpos=UK_News_Carousel_Region_2&lid=ARTICLE_15664659_Russian_Spy_Anna_Chapman_Loses_British_Citizenship_And_Has_Passport_Confiscated|title=Russian Spy Anna Chapman Loses British Citizenship And Has Passport Confiscated|publisher=Sky News|date=July 13, 2010|access-date=July 13, 2010|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100716171855/http://news.sky.com/skynews/Home/UK-News/Russian-Spy-Anna-Chapman-Loses-British-Citizenship-And-Has-Passport-Confiscated/Article/201007215664659?lpos=UK_News_Carousel_Region_2&lid=ARTICLE_15664659_Russian_Spy_Anna_Chapman_Loses_British_Citizenship_And_Has_Passport_Confiscated|archive-date=July 16, 2010}}</ref> | ||
On July 13, 2010, Russian intelligence sources were quoted as saying that the deported Russian agents would undergo a rigorous series of tests, including a lie detector, to establish whether any of them acted as a double agent.<ref>{{cite news |
On July 13, 2010, Russian intelligence sources were quoted as saying that the deported Russian agents would undergo a rigorous series of tests, including a lie detector, to establish whether any of them acted as a double agent.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/7888151/Russias-SVR-to-grill-10-deported-spies-for-three-weeks-to-flush-out-double-agent.html|work=The Daily Telegraph|date=July 13, 2010|access-date=July 18, 2010|title=Russia's SVR 'to grill 10 deported spies for three weeks to flush out double agent'|location=London|first=Andrew|last=Osborn|archive-date=July 16, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100716202951/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/7888151/Russias-SVR-to-grill-10-deported-spies-for-three-weeks-to-flush-out-double-agent.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
The spy affair attracted media attention, including Chapman being described as "glamorous" and US ] ] joking shortly after the swap on a television chat show to comedian ] when asked "Do we have any spies that hot?" by saying "Let me be clear. It wasn't my idea to send her back."<ref name="Guard1" /><ref name="BidenJay">{{Cite web |
The spy affair attracted media attention, including Chapman being described as "glamorous" and US ] ] joking shortly after the swap on a television chat show to comedian ] when asked "Do we have any spies that hot?" by saying "Let me be clear. It wasn't my idea to send her back."<ref name="Guard1" /><ref name="BidenJay">{{Cite web|url=http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xdzh3t_biden-tells-jay-leno-us-got-good-de_news|title="Biden tells Jay Leno US got good deal in spy swap"|access-date=January 17, 2015|archive-date=February 16, 2015|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150216024703/http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xdzh3t_biden-tells-jay-leno-us-got-good-de_news|url-status=live}}</ref> Joe Biden also said of the Russian agents: "And the ten, they've been here a long time, but they hadn't done much."<ref name="BidenJay" /> | ||
In July 2010, while visiting ] in ], Russian prime minister ] told reporters,<ref> . {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100727034651/http://www.rosbalt.ru/2010/07/24/756563.html |date=July 27, 2010}} Rosbalt.ru, July 24, 2010.</ref><ref name="MT1"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100726214854/http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/putin-sings-with-deported-spies/411027.html |date=July 26, 2010 }}. '']'', July 26, 2010.</ref> without specifying the date, that he had had a meeting with the agents, specifically acknowledging that Chapman was among them; he said that they had had "a tough life" and been turned in as a result of "betrayal"; he also sang with the agents to live music some songs, including "From Where the Motherland Begins" (What the Motherland Begins With or What Does the Motherland Start With).<ref>. |
In July 2010, while visiting ] in ], Russian prime minister ] told reporters,<ref> . {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100727034651/http://www.rosbalt.ru/2010/07/24/756563.html |date=July 27, 2010}} Rosbalt.ru, July 24, 2010.</ref><ref name="MT1"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100726214854/http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/putin-sings-with-deported-spies/411027.html |date=July 26, 2010 }}. '']'', July 26, 2010.</ref> without specifying the date, that he had had a meeting with the agents, specifically acknowledging that Chapman was among them; he said that they had had "a tough life" and been turned in as a result of "betrayal"; he also sang with the agents to live music some songs, including "From Where the Motherland Begins" (What the Motherland Begins With or What Does the Motherland Start With).<ref>. ], July 25, 2010.</ref><ref>. {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110611210839/http://www.wtop.com/?nid=105&sid=2011072 |date=June 11, 2011 }}</ref> Putin declined to evaluate their work<ref name="MT1" /> saying that it was not up to him to evaluate but up to specialists and the "ultimate consumers of the information of such type, the Supreme Commander—the president of the Russian Federation."<ref> . '']'', July 26, 2010.</ref> | ||
The defector and former GRU agent, ], was scornful of both the agents and the agencies that sent them.<ref>Samokhvalova, Lana (July 26, 2010). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171117065734/https://www.unian.net/politics/383986-viktor-suvorov-putinskaya-razvedka-skomorohi-shutyi-i-polnyiy-razval-gosudarstva.html |date=November 17, 2017 }} ]s, jesters and a complete decay of the state]. ]. Accessed January 19, 2023.</ref> | The defector and former GRU agent, ], was scornful of both the agents and the agencies that sent them.<ref>Samokhvalova, Lana (July 26, 2010). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171117065734/https://www.unian.net/politics/383986-viktor-suvorov-putinskaya-razvedka-skomorohi-shutyi-i-polnyiy-razval-gosudarstva.html |date=November 17, 2017 }} ]s, jesters and a complete decay of the state]. ]. Accessed January 19, 2023.</ref> | ||
In mid-August 2010, Sir ], former Director-General of ] (1996–2002), voiced an opinion that the very existence of a ring of Russian "illegals" was no laughing matter: "The fact that they're nondescript or don't look serious is part of the charm of the business. That's why the Russians are so successful at some of this stuff. They're able to put people in those positions over time to build up their cover to be useful. They are part of a machine. ... And the machine is a very professional and serious one."<ref name="StLander"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200701055751/https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-10986334 |date=July 1, 2020 }}. |
In mid-August 2010, Sir ], former Director-General of ] (1996–2002), voiced an opinion that the very existence of a ring of Russian "illegals" was no laughing matter: "The fact that they're nondescript or don't look serious is part of the charm of the business. That's why the Russians are so successful at some of this stuff. They're able to put people in those positions over time to build up their cover to be useful. They are part of a machine. ... And the machine is a very professional and serious one."<ref name="StLander"> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200701055751/https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-10986334 |date=July 1, 2020 }}. ], August 17, 2010.</ref> | ||
In October 2010, Russian President ] recognized those "intelligence agents who worked in the United States and returned to Russia in July" together with other members of the Russian ] for their service to the motherland in ceremonies held at the Kremlin.<ref>Schwirtz, Michael. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160601083706/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/19/world/europe/19russia.html |date=June 1, 2016 }}, '']'', October 18, 2010. Retrieved October 18, 2010.</ref> | In October 2010, Russian President ] recognized those "intelligence agents who worked in the United States and returned to Russia in July" together with other members of the Russian ] for their service to the motherland in ceremonies held at the Kremlin.<ref>Schwirtz, Michael. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160601083706/http://www.nytimes.com/2010/10/19/world/europe/19russia.html |date=June 1, 2016 }}, '']'', October 18, 2010. Retrieved October 18, 2010.</ref> | ||
In November 2010, an unidentified Kremlin official told ''Kommersant''<ref name="KommAlleg" /> that an ] plan for the alleged defector "Colonel Shcherbakov" was already in the works: "We know who he is and where he is." The source added that "a Mercader" was sent after Shcherbakov—a reference to assassin ] who murdered ] in Mexico with an ice axe in 1940.<ref>{{cite news|last=Parfitt |
In November 2010, an unidentified Kremlin official told ''Kommersant''<ref name="KommAlleg" /> that an ] plan for the alleged defector "Colonel Shcherbakov" was already in the works: "We know who he is and where he is." The source added that "a Mercader" was sent after Shcherbakov—a reference to assassin ] who murdered ] in Mexico with an ice axe in 1940.<ref>{{cite news|last=Parfitt|first=Tom|newspaper=The Guardian|date=November 11, 2010|access-date=November 14, 2010|title=Russian assassin 'sent to kill double agent who betrayed Anna Chapman'|url=https://www.theguardian.com/world/2010/nov/11/kremlin-assassin-anna-chapman-traitor|location=London}}</ref><ref>Loiko, Sergei L. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101124123224/http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-russia-spy-20101112,0,945201.story |date=November 24, 2010 }}, '']'', November 12, 2010. Retrieved November 12, 2010.</ref> The newspaper article's author later said that the statement could have been made in jest ("spy humour").<ref name="FTAlleg" /><ref> . {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110825125047/http://radio.vesti.ru/fm/doc.html?id=406267 |date=August 25, 2011}}. ''Вести FM'', November 12, 2010.</ref> On November 13, 2010, US intelligence analyst ] suggested that, assuming Shcherbakov was in the US, he must be under FBI protection.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101117073835/http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/defector-may-have-been-recruited-years-ago/422950.html |date=November 17, 2010 }}. '']'', November 14, 2010.</ref> | ||
In November 2010, the Interfax news agency cited an unidentified "Russian intelligence source" as saying that "Colonel Alexander Poteyev, a former deputy head of the U.S. division of Directorate S (illegal intelligence) within the SVR" was the subject of both internal and criminal investigations, with the criminal case likely to have been opened as per Article 275 of the RF ] (high treason).<ref name="InterfPotInvest">{{cite news |
In November 2010, the Interfax news agency cited an unidentified "Russian intelligence source" as saying that "Colonel Alexander Poteyev, a former deputy head of the U.S. division of Directorate S (illegal intelligence) within the SVR" was the subject of both internal and criminal investigations, with the criminal case likely to have been opened as per Article 275 of the RF ] (high treason).<ref name="InterfPotInvest">{{cite news|url=http://www.interfax.ru/politics/txt.asp?id=165370&sw=%CF%EE%F2%E5%E5%E2&bd=17&bm=10&by=2010&ed=17&em=11&ey=2010&secid=0&mp=0&p=1|publisher=]|date=November 17, 2010|access-date=November 17, 2010|script-title=ru:Дело Потеева|trans-title=Poteyev's case|language=ru|archive-date=June 29, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110629141737/http://www.interfax.ru/politics/txt.asp?id=165370&sw=%CF%EE%F2%E5%E5%E2&bd=17&bm=10&by=2010&ed=17&em=11&ey=2010&secid=0&mp=0&p=1|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="NewsruPotInvest">{{cite news|url=http://newsru.com/russia/17nov2010/poteev.html|publisher=]|date=November 17, 2010|access-date=November 17, 2010|script-title=ru:Предателя из разведки полковника Потеева ждет тайный суд|trans-title=Secret trial for the SVR traitor|language=ru|archive-date=November 20, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101120015334/http://www.newsru.com/russia/17nov2010/poteev.html|url-status=live}}</ref> Poteyev's identity (full name: ''Александр Николаевич Потеев'', Aleksandr Nikolayevich Poteyev) was confirmed by other ex-KGB and ex-SVR sources.<ref name="RegnumPotInfo">{{cite news|url=http://www.regnum.ru/news/polit/1347078.html|publisher=]|date=November 17, 2010|access-date=November 17, 2010|script-title=ru:Экс-сотрудник КГБ СССР о предателе полковнике Потееве: фото|trans-title=Ex-KGB speaks of traitor Colonel Poteyev|language=ru|archive-date=November 18, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101118231151/http://www.regnum.ru/news/polit/1347078.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://cicentre.net/wordpress/index.php/2010/11/18/russian-spies-surrendered-by-a-belarusian-in-the-united-states|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210302040414/http://cicentre.net/wordpress/index.php/2010/11/18/russian-spies-surrendered-by-a-belarusian-in-the-united-states|url-status=dead|archive-date=March 2, 2021|publisher=CI&CT News|date=November 18, 2010|access-date=November 19, 2010|title=Russian Spies Surrendered by a Belarusian in the United States}}</ref><ref name="NovGazAlKnew">{{cite news|url=http://www.novayagazeta.ru/data/2010/131/00.html|publisher=]|date=November 22, 2010|access-date=November 24, 2010|script-title=ru:Предателя знали все|trans-title=The Traitor Was Known To Everyone|language=ru|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101125090347/http://www.novayagazeta.ru/data/2010/131/00.html|archive-date=November 25, 2010}}</ref> The revelations in the Russian media about the 'treachery' within the SVR were seen by commentators as a sign of an ongoing struggle within the RF top bureaucracy for control over the administratively autonomous agency that had been ].<ref name="ArgNedFradk">{{cite news|url=http://www.argumenti.ru/talks/n264/84322/|publisher=]|date=November 17, 2010|access-date=November 24, 2010|script-title=ru:Глава СВР может покинуть свой пост в новогодние праздники|trans-title=SVR Chief May Quit Round New Year|language=ru|archive-date=November 22, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101122083058/http://www.argumenti.ru/talks/n264/84322|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="NewsrProvoc">{{cite news|url=http://newsru.com/russia/24nov2010/svr_fsb.html|publisher=]|language=ru|date=November 24, 2010|access-date=November 24, 2010|title=The Times: Путин спровоцировал войну между ФСБ и разведкой. Агенты бегут за границу|trans-title=The Times: Putin Has Provoked War Between FSB and SVR. Agents Flee to the West|archive-date=November 26, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101126164929/http://www.newsru.com/russia/24nov2010/svr_fsb.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|author=]|date=November 17, 2010|script-title=ru:ерои и предатели для внутреннего потребления|trans-title=Heroes and traitors for internal consumption|url=http://ej.ru/?a=note&id=10560|script-work=ru:Ежедневный Журнал|work=Yezhednevnyy Zhurnal|trans-work=Daily Journal|access-date=November 25, 2010|archive-date=November 20, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101120010902/http://www.ej.ru/?a=note&id=10560|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
On December 1, 2010, commentator and researcher ] quoted a "former intelligence official close to the ]" (NSA) as saying that the FBI and the NSA were conducting a counterintelligence probe at the NSA headquarters at ], Maryland, in a top-secret hunt for a Russian agent, believing that the spy ring was likely acting as conduits for information coming from "one or more Russian spies that NSA is convinced reside at Fort Meade and possibly other ] offices, like ]".<ref>], {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101205013700/http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/dec/1/inside-the-ring-843880610/ |date=December 5, 2010 }}, '']'', December 3, 2010 (paper edition), p. 8.</ref> Bill Gertz's report prompted the Russian intelligence expert ] to question the quasi-official version about Poteyev's responsibility.<ref>Andrei Soldatov (December 7, 2010). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101210045935/http://www.ej.ru/?a=note&id=10624 |date=December 10, 2010 }} {{lang|ru|Ежедневный Журнал}} .</ref> In a '']'' interview, aired by ] about the same time, Russian prime minister Putin maintained that the Russian agents "deserved unconditional respect"; according to him, no harm had been done to US interests, and that they would only become operational "in crisis periods, say, in case of a breakup of the diplomatic relations."<ref name="MTLarryPut">{{cite news |
On December 1, 2010, commentator and researcher ] quoted a "former intelligence official close to the ]" (NSA) as saying that the FBI and the NSA were conducting a counterintelligence probe at the NSA headquarters at ], Maryland, in a top-secret hunt for a Russian agent, believing that the spy ring was likely acting as conduits for information coming from "one or more Russian spies that NSA is convinced reside at Fort Meade and possibly other ] offices, like ]".<ref>], {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101205013700/http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/dec/1/inside-the-ring-843880610/ |date=December 5, 2010 }}, '']'', December 3, 2010 (paper edition), p. 8.</ref> Bill Gertz's report prompted the Russian intelligence expert ] to question the quasi-official version about Poteyev's responsibility.<ref>Andrei Soldatov (December 7, 2010). {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101210045935/http://www.ej.ru/?a=note&id=10624 |date=December 10, 2010 }} {{lang|ru|Ежедневный Журнал}} .</ref> In a '']'' interview, aired by ] about the same time, Russian prime minister Putin maintained that the Russian agents "deserved unconditional respect"; according to him, no harm had been done to US interests, and that they would only become operational "in crisis periods, say, in case of a breakup of the diplomatic relations."<ref name="MTLarryPut">{{cite news|url=http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/putin-opens-up-to-larry-king/425533.html|work=]|date=December 3, 2010|access-date=December 4, 2010|title=Putin Opens Up to Larry King|archive-date=December 3, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101203232918/http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/putin-opens-up-to-larry-king/425533.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
On December 16, 2010, prime minister Putin, when answering the question during a televised call-in show about whether he ever signed assassination orders,<ref> , ''Argumenty Nedeli'', December 16, 2010.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vesti.ru/doc.html?id=414468&cid=7 |
On December 16, 2010, prime minister Putin, when answering the question during a televised call-in show about whether he ever signed assassination orders,<ref> , ''Argumenty Nedeli'', December 16, 2010.</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.vesti.ru/doc.html?id=414468&cid=7|script-title=ru:Путин: в России нет спецподразделений по ликвидации предателей|trans-title=Putin: there are no special forces in Russia to eliminate traitors|publisher=Vesti.ru|date=December 16, 2010|access-date=2013-08-18}}</ref> said that hit squads had long been abolished in Russia; speaking specifically of the turncoat allegedly responsible for exposing the ten sleeper agents, he denounced him as a "brute" and a "pig" saying that "the traitors will croak all by themselves", adding that a traitor's life is miserable and regrettable.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180406040855/https://www.vesti.ru/doc.html?id=414412 |date=April 6, 2018 }}. ''Vesti.ru'', December 16, 2010.</ref><ref name="MosTimeTandem">{{cite news|last=Abdullaev|first=Nabi|newspaper=]|date=December 17, 2010|access-date=December 18, 2010|title=Tandem Always Watching, Putin Says|url=http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/tandem-always-watching-putin-says/427008.html#no|archive-date=December 18, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101218072222/http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/tandem-always-watching-putin-says/427008.html#no|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Telegr">{{cite news|newspaper=The Telegraph|date=December 16, 2010|access-date=December 18, 2010|title=Vladimir Putin: Russian secret services don't kill traitors|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/8207750/Vladimir-Putin-Russian-secret-services-dont-kill-traitors.html|location=London|archive-date=December 20, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101220153637/http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/europe/russia/8207750/Vladimir-Putin-Russian-secret-services-dont-kill-traitors.html|url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://newsru.com/russia/17dec2010/putin_2.html|script-title=ru:СМИ: Путин во время 'прямой линии' забыл о Медведеве и удивлял грубой лексикой|trans-title=Media: Putin during the 'straight line' forgot about Medvedev and surprised with rude language|publisher=NEWSru.com|date=December 17, 2010|access-date=2013-08-18|archive-date=December 20, 2010|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101220103120/http://www.newsru.com/russia/17dec2010/putin_2.html|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
On May 3, 2011 in Moscow, Alexander Poteyev was indicted on high treason and desertion charges and later put on trial '']''.<ref name="BBCIndict">{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-13270583|publisher=BBC|date=May 3, 2011|access-date=May 18, 2011|title=Russia charges US spy ring 'traitor' Poteyev|archive-date=May 6, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110506003605/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-13270583|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Izv1">{{cite news|url=http://www.izvestia.ru/investigation/article3154817/|work=]|date=May 4, 2011|access-date=May 18, 2011|script-title=ru:Дешевый предатель Потеев|trans-title=Cheap Traitor Poteyev|language=ru|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110523002542/http://www.izvestia.ru/investigation/article3154817/|archive-date=May 23, 2011 |
On May 3, 2011, in Moscow, Alexander Poteyev was indicted on high treason and desertion charges and later put on trial '']''.<ref name="BBCIndict">{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-13270583|publisher=BBC|date=May 3, 2011|access-date=May 18, 2011|title=Russia charges US spy ring 'traitor' Poteyev|archive-date=May 6, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110506003605/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-13270583|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Izv1">{{cite news|url=http://www.izvestia.ru/investigation/article3154817/|work=]|date=May 4, 2011|access-date=May 18, 2011|script-title=ru:Дешевый предатель Потеев|trans-title=Cheap Traitor Poteyev|language=ru|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110523002542/http://www.izvestia.ru/investigation/article3154817/|archive-date=May 23, 2011}}</ref> On June 27, 2011, he was found guilty ''in absentia'' on both charges and sentenced to 25 years of imprisonment;<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-13932149|date=June 27, 2011|access-date=2011-06-28|title=Russian convicted of treason in sleeper agent case|publisher=BBC News|archive-date=August 4, 2019|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190804175310/https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-13932149|url-status=live}}</ref> the judge's verdict said that Poteyev was recruited by the CIA in 1999.<ref name="Pot1999">{{cite news|url=http://newsru.com/russia/28jun2011/poteev.html|date=June 28, 2011|access-date=2011-06-28|script-title=ru:Дело Потеева: предатель нанес ущерб в 50 млн долларов, но не смог обмануть начальство украинской любовницей|trans-title=Poteev case: a traitor caused $50 million in damage, but could not deceive the authorities with a Ukrainian mistress|publisher=NEWSru|archive-date=July 1, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110701102146/http://www.newsru.com/russia/28jun2011/poteev.html|url-status=live}}</ref> His court-appointed advocate said that Poteyev's ] from the US government might have reached $55 million.<ref name="Izv55">{{cite news|newspaper=Izvestia|date=June 27, 2011|access-date=June 30, 2011|script-title=ru:Потеев предал Анну Чапман и ее товарищей за $55 млн|trans-title=Poteev betrayed Anna Chapman and her comrades for $55 million|url=http://www.izvestia.ru/news/493011|location=Moscow|archive-date=July 3, 2011|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110703025246/http://www.izvestia.ru/news/493011|url-status=live}}</ref> | ||
In July 2012, new details about the agents' activities were revealed that suggested that some of them planned to recruit their children to become agents.<ref name="Spykids" /> | In July 2012, new details about the agents' activities were revealed that suggested that some of them planned to recruit their children to become agents.<ref name="Spykids" /> | ||
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==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Reflist |
{{Reflist}} | ||
==External links== | ==External links== |
Latest revision as of 03:46, 7 January 2025
Russian espionage program in the US uncovered in 2010 This article is about the Russian spy network in the United States. For the type of spy called "Illegals", see Non-official cover and Resident spy.
Illegals Program | |
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Ten Russian agents apprehended on June 27, 2010 |
The Illegals Program (so named by the United States Department of Justice) was a network of Russian sleeper agents under unofficial cover. An investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) culminated in the arrest of ten agents on June 27, 2010, and a prisoner exchange between Russia and the United States on July 9, 2010.
The arrested spies were Russian nationals who had been planted in the US by the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (known by its Russian abbreviation, SVR), most of them using false identities. Posing as ordinary American citizens, they tried to build contacts with academics, industrialists, and policymakers to gain access to intelligence. They were the target of a multi-year investigation by the FBI. The investigation, called Operation Ghost Stories, culminated at the end of June 2010 with the arrest of ten people in the US and an eleventh in Cyprus. The ten sleeper agents were charged with "carrying out long-term, 'deep-cover' assignments in the United States on behalf of the Russian Federation."
The suspect arrested in Cyprus skipped bail the day after his arrest. A twelfth person, a Russian national who worked for Microsoft, was also apprehended about the same time and deported on July 13, 2010. Moscow court documents made public on June 27, 2011, revealed that another two Russian agents, who Russia alleges were known to the FBI, managed to flee the US without being arrested.
Ten of the agents were flown to Vienna on July 9, 2010, soon after pleading guilty to charges of failing to register as representatives of a foreign government. The same day, the agents were exchanged for four Russian nationals, three of whom had been convicted and imprisoned by Russia for espionage (high treason) on behalf of the US and UK.
On October 31, 2011, the FBI publicly released several dozen still images, clips from surveillance video, and documents related to its investigation in response to Freedom of Information Act requests.
FBI arrests and criminal charges
Using forged documents, some of the spies assumed stolen identities of Americans, enrolled at American universities, and joined professional organizations as a means of further infiltrating government circles. Two of the individuals used the names of Richard and Cynthia Murphy and resided in Hoboken, New Jersey, in the mid-1990s, before purchasing a nearby home in suburban Montclair. Another couple named in court documents were journalist Vicky Peláez and Mikhail Vasenkov (using the alias Juan Lazaro) in Yonkers, New York. The court filings allege that couples were arranged in Russia to "co-habit in the country to which they are assigned", going as far as having children together to help maintain their deep covert status.
The criminal complaints later filed in various federal district courts allege that the Russian agents in the US passed information back to the SVR by messages hidden inside digital photographs, written in disappearing ink, ad hoc wireless networks, and shortwave radio transmissions, as well as by agents swapping identical bags while passing each other in the stairwell of a train station. Messages and materials were passed in such places as Grand Central Terminal and Central Park.
The Russian agents were tasked by "Moscow centre" to report about US policy in Central America, US interpretation of Russian foreign policy, problems with US military policy, and "United States policy with regard to the use of the Internet by terrorists".
According to the media reports, planning by the FBI to have the "illegals" arrested began in mid-June 2010, but the action was hastened reportedly by some members of the group intending to travel outside the US as well as by Anna Chapman's growing concern about having been exposed. Vladimir Guriyev was planning to travel to France and possibly Russia, Bezrukov was planning to travel outside the US with his son, and Chapman, in a telephone call to her father the day before the arrest, said she suspected that she may have been discovered and planned to leave for Moscow in mid-July 2010.
US authorities arrested ten of the agents involved on June 27, 2010, in a series of raids in Boston, Montclair (New Jersey), Yonkers, and Northern Virginia. They charged the individuals with money laundering and failing to register as agents of a foreign government. No charges were made that the individuals involved gained access to classified material, though contacts were made with a former intelligence official and with a scientist involved in developing bunker buster bombs.
One of the suspects, using the name of Christopher R. Metsos, was detained on June 29, 2010, while attempting to depart from Cyprus for Budapest, but was released on bail and then disappeared.
There was no evidence that the convicted agents knew each other beyond their respective spouses; military analyst Pavel Felgenhauer believed that they consequently did not constitute a "spy ring".
Shortly after the arrests, The Guardian commented: "The FBI operation represents the biggest penetration of SVR communications in recent memory. The FBI read their emails, decrypted their intel, read the embedded coded texts on images posted on the net, bugged their mobile phones, videotaped the passing of bags of cash and messages in invisible ink from one agent to another, and hacked into their bogus expenses claims. ... The tradecraft used by the alleged SVR ring was amateurish, and will send shivers down the spine of the rival intelligence organisations in Russia. This was bungling on a truly epic scale. No secrets about bunker-busting bombs were actually obtained, but the network was betrayed. ... To have a spy ring uncovered before they could actually do any serious spying is doubly embarrassing."
Coinciding with the day of the prisoners' swap, the death of the prominent Russian defector Sergei Tretyakov, who died in the US on June 13, 2010, was reported on July 9, 2010. A Florida medical examiner's report, released on September 20, 2010, cited an accident and a tumour as the cause of death. In response to allegations in the media that he might have tipped off the US authorities about some of the "illegals", Tretyakov's co-author Pete Earley, citing anonymous "well-informed" sources, said in July 2010 that Tretyakov had not been privy to the case of Russian "illegals".
The November 11, 2010, issue of span broadsheet Kommersant carried an article that, with reference to unnamed Russian government sources, contained allegations that the "illegals" were fingered by a senior SVR officer named "Colonel Shcherbakov" (according to an unnamed ex-CIA source, his full name may be Александр Васильевич Щербаков, Alexander Vasilievich Shcherbakov). The latter, according to the newspaper's sources, headed the "American" unit of the SVR department in charge of "illegals" and left Russia for the US "three days prior to Dmitry Medvedev's June visit to the U.S." According to other media outlets' sources, the name "Shcherbakov" was fictitious, and a number of experts and commentators judged many allegations in the article to be dubious or improbable. Nevertheless, some comments made the following day by Russian president Medvedev were interpreted as an indirect confirmation of a high-level defection in the Russian intelligence apparatus. On November 15, 2010, Interfax cited unnamed sources within Russian intelligence as alleging that the real name of the defector who was primarily responsible for uncovering the ten convicted agents was Aleksandr Poteyev (reportedly, his full name is Александр Николаевич Потеев, Aleksandr Nikolayevich Poteyev), who was a colonel in the SVR and was deputy head of the American department within Directorate "S" of SVR ("S" oversees illegals). According to Interfax's unnamed source, a person called Shcherbakov had indeed held a senior position in the SVR and "defected about two years ago".
Agents apprehended by FBI on June 27, 2010
Anna Chapman
Main article: Anna ChapmanAnna Chapman—maiden name Anna Vasil'evna Kushchenko (Russian: Анна Васильевна Кущенко)—was arrested with nine others in 2010. According to US authorities, her former name is Anya Kushchenko, and she is a Volgograd native. (According to some reports, she was born in Ukraine.) Her father was employed in the Russian embassy in Nairobi, Kenya. She received her master's in economics degree from the Peoples' Friendship University of Russia in Moscow. She later worked in London at NetJets, Barclays Bank, and other companies.
On July 5, 2010, One India reported that Chapman may have been recruited to become an agent when she was in the United Kingdom, citing Oleg Gordievsky and Alex Chapman as sources, and that an urgent probe was underway in the UK to ascertain whether Chapman organized sleeper cells in the United Kingdom.
Her LinkedIn social networking site profile said she was CEO of PropertyFinder Ltd, a website selling real estate internationally. Chapman posted photos of herself on the Odnoklassniki ("Classmates") social networking website in Russia where she stated "Russia, Moscow. My favorite place on earth, my native capital!" She also posted photos and profiles on the Facebook and LinkedIn social networking websites.
Chapman's prior meetings with her Russian handlers were on Wednesdays; not face to face; solely to pass information via encrypted private computer networks at Barnes & Noble or at Starbucks. Thus her suspicion was aroused when an FBI informant, posing as a Russian consular officer named "Roman", on Saturday, June 26 asked her to come to New York from Connecticut, where she was spending the weekend. Her suspicions increased when "Roman" turned out to be a man she did not know who asked her to deliver a fake United States passport to another sleeper agent in a face-to-face meeting. The task of transferring a fake US passport to another Russian agent in a face-to-face meeting was beyond anything that the Moscow Center had previously assigned to her.
After the meeting with "Roman", Chapman bought a new cell phone and two telephone cards. She called her father in Moscow and another individual in New York, both advising her not to transfer the passport. The FBI monitored the calls.
Chapman turned in the passport to the 1st Precinct police station in New York but was questioned by the FBI and arrested.
According to her American lawyer, Robert Baum, while in the US jail, she feared she would be deported. When her deportation became imminent, she said she would go to live in London on her UK passport, but it was subsequently revoked. After her deportation to Russia, in July 2010, Robert Baum reiterated that his client wished to stay in the US. He also said that she was "particularly upset" by the revocation of her UK citizenship and exclusion from the country.
On August 8, 2010, the United Kingdom's tabloid Sunday Express cited an unidentified "source close to MI6" as saying, "There was a deal on the table just before she caught her connecting flight to Moscow. The secret service intercepted her on her flight back from America to Vienna, where her plane landed to refuel. MI6 were keen to know about other 'illegals'—Russian spy cells—hiding in the United Kingdom, so they made her an offer. In return they offered to give her back British citizenship and allow her to settle in London. Anna was having none of it though and told them in no uncertain terms that she wished to return to Russia."
In September 2010, German magazine Der Spiegel reported that Chapman said the SVR had forbidden her from saying anything about her activities in the US.
Mikhail Anatolyevich Vasenkov (Juan Lazaro) and Vicky Peláez
Main articles: Mikhail Vasenkov and Vicky Peláez Mikhail A. Vasenkov(Juan Lazaro)Vicky Peláez
Vicky Peláez, a Peruvian national and US citizen, and Mikhail Anatolyevich Vasenkov (Russian: Михаил Анатольевич Васенков, alias Juan Lazaro), a Russian citizen, were arrested at their home in Yonkers, New York. Both admitted being Russian agents. The couple have a son together, and Peláez also has a son from a previous marriage.
According to a report by The Wall Street Journal in early August 2010, the real Juan Lazaro died of respiratory failure in 1947 in Uruguay at age 3, with Vasenkov having presumably used the dead toddler's birth certificate to build a persona. According to a file kept by the Peruvian Interior Ministry that The Wall Street Journal cited, Vasenkov flew on March 13, 1976, from Madrid to Lima on a Uruguayan passport in the name of Juan Jose Lazaro Fuentes. He bore a letter on a Spanish tobacco company's stationery that said they had hired him for a market survey in Peru. Two years later, he submitted copies of the passport and a 1943 Uruguayan birth certificate with a letter asking Peru's military dictator Francisco Morales Bermúdez (the country was then run by a US-friendly junta) for Peruvian citizenship, which Peru granted in 1979.
In 1983, "Juan Lazaro" married Vicky Peláez. Peláez was a television reporter in Peru, and a columnist at El Diario La Prensa in New York City. In her writings, Peláez often criticized US policy in Latin America, and supported liberation movements in those countries. In 1985, Peláez and "Lazaro" moved to New York with her son from a previous relationship.
"Juan Lazaro" wrote a 1990 article for a European publication that spoke "glowingly" of the Shining Path guerrilla movement. He was described as a "journalist and anthropologist" in the 1998 book Women and Revolution: Global Expression, for which he was a contributing author. Vasenkov studied at the New School for Social Research and taught a class on Latin American and Caribbean Politics at Baruch College for one semester during the 2008–2009 school year as an adjunct professor. According to The New York Times June 29, 2010, report, Vasenkov was a vocal opponent of American foreign policy in class: "He maintained that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan were a money-making ploy for corporate America. He praised President Hugo Chávez of Venezuela and disparaged President Álvaro Uribe of Colombia as a pawn for paramilitary groups that have broad control over drug trafficking." At least one student complained about Vasenkov's teaching and he was let go at the end of the semester. The department chairman reported that Vasenkov's instruction was not up to standard, resulting in his teaching for only one semester, but that he recalled no controversy over any anti-American views.
US officials reported that on June 27, 2010, Vasenkov confessed to being a spy and that "Juan Lazaro" was not his real name, though he declined to give his true identity. He additionally stated he was not born in Uruguay, and that Peláez delivered letters to Russian authorities on his behalf. It was later reported that Lazaro's real name is Mikhail Vasenkov. In November 2010, Russian broadsheet Kommersant published Russian anonymous sources' allegations that while in US custody, Vasenkov had three ribs and a leg broken by investigators trying to extract more information from him—a claim assessed by experts as highly improbable. The Kommersant article also cited unnamed Russian government sources as saying that Vasenkov was presented with the SVR personal file on him obtained through a senior SVR defector ("Colonel Shcherbakov"), whereafter he was forced to own up to his real name.
On August 7, 2010, The Wall Street Journal cited Vasenkov's American lawyer, Genesis Peduto, as saying that his client indicated to him on the phone that he wanted to leave Moscow for Peru: "He doesn't want to stay in Russia. He says he's Juan Lazaro and he's not from Russia and doesn't speak Russian. He wants to be where his wife is going, to her native country, where it will be easier for Juan Jr. to visit. His family comes first." In December 2013, Vicky Pelaez left Russia and returned home to Peru; Vasenkov moved there in January 2014.
Vasenkov died in April 2022.
Andrey Bezrukov and Yelena Vavilova (Donald Heathfield and Tracey Lee Ann Foley)
Andrey Bezrukov [ru](Donald Heathfield)Yelena Vavilova
(Tracey Lee Ann Foley)Main article: Donald Heathfield and Tracey Foley
Andrey Bezrukov (Russian: Андрей Безруков, alias Donald Howard Heathfield) and Yelena Vavilova (Russian: Елена Вавилова, alias Tracey Lee Ann Foley) admitted being both Russian citizens and Russian agents. They used Canadian identities stolen for them by the KGB, and lived in Canada for several years.
When arrested, Bezrukov and his cover wife Yelena Vavilova had a home in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Heathfield had earned an M.P.A. degree from the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University, where he was described as a "joiner". Heathfield claimed to have been the son of a Canadian diplomat and to have studied at a school in the Czech Republic. A fellow graduate of the Kennedy School noted that Heathfield kept careful track of his nearly 200 classmates, who included President of Mexico Felipe Calderón. The couple was arrested on June 27, 2010.
On July 16, 2010, after his arrest and deportation, Harvard revoked Heathfield's degree on grounds of his misrepresentation of his identity on his application.
Bezrukov was a professional member of the World Future Society, described by the Boston Herald as "a think tank on future technologies that holds conferences featuring top government scientists". Leon Fuerth, a former national security advisor to US Vice President Al Gore, spoke at the World Future Society 2008 conference in Washington, D.C., along with George Washington University professor William Halal. In a July 2, 2010, Wall Street Journal article, Fuerth is quoted acknowledging he met Heathfield after a speech he gave. In the same article, Halal described his relationship to Heathfield as benign; "I would bump into him at meetings of Federal agencies, think tanks, and the World Future Society. I have no information that's of any security value ... Everything I gave Don was published widely and readily available on the Internet". Bezrukov was chief executive of Future Map, a consulting company involved in government and corporate preparedness systems.
Bezrukov's cover wife, Yelena Vavilova (as Tracy Foley), worked for Redfin, a real estate firm in Somerville, Massachusetts. She claimed she was from Canada, but also traveled on a British passport.
The agents have two sons, Alexander and Timothy, who were, at the time of their parents' arrest, aged 16 and 20. The sons said they had no inkling of their parents' real identities. However, US officials claimed the parents had revealed their true identities to the elder son long before the arrest. In July 2012, referring to "current and former U.S. officials", The Wall Street Journal reported that the couple had groomed their son, Tim Foley, for a future spy career. He was 20 when his parents were arrested, and had just finished his second year at George Washington University in Washington, D.C.. He and his younger brother traveled to Russia in July 2010 to meet their parents after their deportations. Both were unable to return to the US. The sons, while born in Canada and considering themselves Canadian, and not feeling at home in Moscow, were unable to regain their Canadian citizenship, and were denied visas for Canada, France, and the United Kingdom. They were consequently unable to take up university places they were offered. By 2018, both sons had won court cases in the Federal Court of Appeal to affirm their Canadian citizenship; the ruling was affirmed by the Supreme Court of Canada on December 19, 2019. The decision, Canada (Minister of Citizenship and Immigration) v Vavilov, set an important administrative law precedent. In March 2018, Alexander (going by his mother's surname of Vavilov) received a Canadian passport and moved back to Canada, while awaiting the Supreme Court verdict.
The FBI lead agent against the spy couple was Peter Strzok.
As of August 2019, the couple was living in Moscow; Bezrukov was teaching at a university and doing consulting work for an oil company while Vavilova "also has a consultancy role at a company", according to an article published by The Guardian. According to her website, she has also published two novels.
Vladimir and Lidiya Guryev (Richard and Cynthia Murphy)
Vladimir Guryev(Richard Murphy)Lidiya Guryeva
(Cynthia Murphy)
Vladimir Guryev (Russian: Владимир Гурьев, alias Richard Murphy) and Lidiya Guriyeva (Russian: Лидия Гурьева, alias Cynthia Murphy) were Russian agents in New Jersey.
Lidiya Guriyeva attended school in the United States, receiving two undergraduate degrees from New York University and an MBA from Columbia Business School. In 2009, Cynthia Murphy developed contacts in New York City financial circles as a means to obtain details about the global gold market. Lidiya was trying to cultivate a relationship with Alan Patricof, a venture capitalist who co-chaired Hillary Clinton's 2008 presidential bid, with her handlers telling her to "try to build up relations little by little". Lidiya Guriyeva was Vice President of Morea Financial Services in New York.
Vladimir Guryev supplied money and equipment to Kutsik (see below) in a 2004 meeting in Columbus Circle, New York and 2009, where $150,000 and a flash drive were given. When the computer program was inoperative, Guryev supplied Kutsik with a laptop computer that Guryev brought from Moscow.
Vladimir and Lidiya Guriyeva were arrested at their home at 31 Marquette Road in Montclair, New Jersey. The couple have two young daughters, aged 11 and 9 at the time of their parents' arrest. Vladimir Guriyev used a false birth certificate that claimed he was born in Philadelphia, while his wife said that she was born in New York City as "Cynthia A. Hopkins". The two earlier lived in an apartment in Hoboken, New Jersey, after arriving in the United States in the mid-1990s. They then purchased a suburban Montclair home for $481,000 in 2008. When they purchased it, the couple argued with their handlers as to who would officially own the house, with the ultimate decision being that it would be owned by "Moscow Center".
Professor Nina Khrushcheva, who served as Vladimir's faculty adviser at The New School for three years starting in 2002, said in July 2010 that she found it difficult to figure out the purported Philadelphia native: "I was always puzzled by the inconsistency between a completely American name and completely Russian behaviour. ... He had a thick Russian accent and an incredibly unhappy Russian personality."
Vladimir Guryev was criticized by his wife for his poor information gathering; she suggested that he pursue individuals with connections to the White House. The couple was also tasked with obtaining information about US policy in Afghanistan, the nuclear program of Iran, and the latest Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty talks. Shortly after the couple's arrest, one of their neighbors quipped: "They couldn't be spies. Look what she did with the hydrangeas."
Mikhail Kutsik and Nataliya Pereverzeva (Michael Zottoli and Patricia Mills)
Mikhail Kutsik(Michael Zottoli)Nataliya Pereverzeva
(Patricia Mills)
Mikhail Kutsik (Russian: Михаил Куцик; cover name Michael Zottoli) and Natalya Pereverzeva (Russian: Наталья Переверзева; cover name Patricia Mills) were agents in Seattle, Washington, and, later, Arlington, Virginia. They appear to be in their 40s. Kutsik came to the US in 2001, and Pereverzeva came in 2003, according to the FBI. He claimed to be American but had a thick accent and she claimed to be Canadian but neighbors said she sounded Yugoslavian. They lived in the Seattle, Washington, area for about two years and both attended the University of Washington, Bothell, where they earned bachelor's degrees in business. Zottoli worked for several different jobs over the years including telecom company accountant, car salesman, and teleconference firm employee. Pereverzeva was a stay-at-home mom who cared for their toddler son named Kenny; a second son was born in late 2009. After Kutsik lost his job in 2009, they moved with their children to Arlington, Virginia, later that year. After their parents were arrested, arrangements were made to send the children to Russia.
Kutsik and Pereverzeva pleaded guilty to "conspiring to act as an unregistered agent of a foreign country". They appeared to be an ordinary married couple with two young children. However, US authorities allege that they had both been spying for Russia in the US since at least 2004. They received specially coded radio transmissions at their high-rise Seattle apartment, and the FBI secretly entered their home, where they found random numbers used to decode the "radiograms". Kutsik received money from Guriyev (Murphy) in Columbus Circle, New York in 2004 while Pereverzeva stood as lookout. In 2006, the FBI photographed them visiting the area of Wurtsboro, New York, where they dug up a bundle of cash in a field that Metsos placed there two years earlier. Kutsik visited New York again in 2009, where he evidently received $150,000 in cash and a flash drive from Murphy. Kutsik communicated with the SVR using a laptop that Guryev brought from Moscow after the computer program supplied to him did not function.
Kutsik and Pereverzeva were arrested on June 27, 2010, at their Arlington, Virginia, home. Both had family living in Russia and prosecutors argued that bail be denied under the circumstances.
On January 13, 2011, Russia's oil pipeline monopoly, Transneft, confirmed that Natalya Pereverzeva was appointed an adviser for foreign economic relations to the company's president, Nikolai Tokarev.
Mikhail Semenko
Mikhail Semenko (Russian: Михаил Семенко) was one of the two agents who "operated under their true names". He is reported to have studied for one year at the Harbin Institute of Technology. He also attended school and received graduate degrees in the United States at Seton Hall University, one of the degrees being from the Whitehead School of Diplomacy. He is fluent in English, Mandarin, Russian, and Spanish. He later worked for the Conference Board in New York City in 2009, and for 2009–2010 reportedly worked at Travel All Russia, an Arlington, Virginia, travel agency, helping Chinese and Hispanic travelers plan trips. He appeared to be in his late 20s; his neighbors said that he was a stylish man who drove a Mercedes S500 car and spoke Russian to his girlfriend.
Semenko was first noted by the FBI on June 5 when he used a computer in a restaurant to send encrypted messages, presumably to a car parked in the restaurant lot that had Russian diplomatic plates and was driven by a Russian official who was known to have transferred money to other Russian sleeper agents in 2004.
On or about June 26, 2010, Semenko met with an undercover FBI agent purporting to be a Russian agent and accepted $5,000, which he delivered to a drop site in an Arlington, Virginia park. The drop was made at 11:06 a.m. and Semenko was arrested at his residence in Arlington, Virginia, a suburb of Washington, DC, later that day.
Other presumed agents of the Illegals Program
"Christopher Metsos" (Pavel Kapustin)
The man known by the name of "Christopher Metsos" was alleged to be the money man and main go-between behind the Illegals Program and the SVR.
On June 29, 2010, acting on an Interpol notice, police arrested the 55-year-old man at the Larnaca International Airport in Cyprus as he was about to board a jet for Budapest. He was released after posting €27,000 (equivalent to US$33,777) bail and told to report to a police station thereafter but skipped out and apparently fled the country.
According to the information from US authorities shortly after his flight, "Metsos", who traveled on a Canadian passport and claimed to be Canadian, regularly traveled to the US to deliver money to his fellow Russian spies; he would typically drop off money at New York City area locations including a coffee shop, restaurant and subway station. According to his Cypriot lawyer, "Metsos" had no discernible Russian accent and described himself as a Canadian resident who divorced 15 years prior and had a son living in Paris.
On July 26, 2010, it was reported by the media that Passport Canada, upon conducting a review, revoked the travel document issued to Christopher Metsos.
A court verdict read in Moscow on June 27, 2011, identified "Metsos" as Pavel Kapustin (Павел Капустин), a Russian espionage professional, who was exfiltrated upon being released on bail in Cyprus.
Alexey Karetnikov
On July 13, 2010, the US government disclosed that a 12th, previously undisclosed, person was being held in custody and was said by the media to be implicated in the same federal probe. Later that day, the person was identified as Alexey Karetnikov, a 23-year-old former entry-level software tester at Microsoft, who was apprehended on June 28, 2010, in Seattle. He was charged with immigration violations and consented to deportation in lieu of further court proceedings; he was sent to Russia on July 13, 2010. Law enforcement officials said on the day of his deportation that Karetnikov had no direct ties to the other deported persons, although his name came up in the broader investigation.
On July 22, 2010, Newsweek published the comments of Karetnikov's fellow dormitory resident, who said that Karetnikov impressed him as "very oily" and "very Russian"; according to the anonymous source, Karetnikov spoke surprisingly poor English but was "sophisticated" and knew a lot about Microsoft.
Communication techniques
The Russian agents used private Wi-Fi networks, flash memory sticks and text messages concealed in graphical images to exchange information. Custom steganographic software developed in Moscow was used where concealed messages were inserted into otherwise innocuous files. This program was initiated by using the Control-Alt-E keys and entering a 27-character password, which the FBI found written down. Coded bursts of data sent by a short wave radio transmitter were also used. Other methods included employing invisible ink and exchanging identical bags in public places.
In January 2010, Anna Chapman used her laptop at a New York coffee shop on 47th Street to electronically transfer data to a Russian official driving by. Two months later, Chapman used a private Wi-Fi network, possibly at a Barnes & Noble store on Greenwich Street in New York, to communicate with the same Russian official, who was nearby. Chapman used a range extender for her laptop.
Court proceedings
On June 27, 2010, FBI Special Agent Amit Kachhia-Patel submitted a sealed complaint alleging a violation of Title 18, United States Code, section 951 (conspiracy to act as unregistered agents of a foreign government). An arrest warrant was issued for Anna Chapman and Mikhail Semenko by Magistrate Judge Ronald L. Ellis.
As of July 6, 2010, The New York Times reported that federal and local prosecutors were seeking a rapid conclusion to the case, to avoid a trial that might disclose sensitive information about information-gathering techniques. The proposed deal would have the defendants deported to Russia after pleading guilty to lesser charges.
On the morning of July 7, Reuters Moscow correspondent Guy Faulconbridge broke the news of the spy swap. He reported that Igor Sutyagin—jailed in 2004 for passing secrets to a British company that Russian prosecutors said was a front for the CIA—was to be swapped as part of a deal with the United States to bring home the Russian agents.
In a hearing held in federal court in Manhattan on July 8, 2010, before Judge Kimba Wood, all ten defendants pleaded guilty to a single charge each of secretly conspiring to act as agents of the Russian government. While the charge could carry up to five years in prison, The Washington Post described the pleas as a first step in what could be the largest prisoner swap between the United States and Russia since the days of the Cold War. Under the plea agreements, the defendants also disclosed their true identities and all except for Vicky Peláez admitted that they were Russian citizens.
On July 9, 2010, Attorney General Eric Holder said none of the ten defendants passed classified information and therefore none were charged with espionage.
All the defendants were sentenced to time already served. According to The New York Times, political leaders of the two nations made the deal even before the indictment—with US prosecutors and the defendants' lawyers playing a minimal role.
Prisoner exchange
Reuters reported on July 7–8, 2010, that the US and Russia reached a deal under which the ten individuals arrested in that country as part of the Illegals Program would be deported to Russia in exchange for individuals who Russia convicted of espionage on behalf of the US and UK. Igor Sutyagin, Alexander Zaporozhsky, Sergei Skripal and Gennadiy Vasilenko were included in the exchange. All four served a considerable time in Russian prisons; at least three of the jailed individuals in Russia were convicted of spying for either the United Kingdom or the US.
White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel reportedly said on July 8 that President Barack Obama approved the swap deal. An administration official was quoted as saying that Obama had not spoken to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev about the spy swap but was "fully briefed and engaged in the matter". Broad agreement in the US was reported to exist that the agents were being deported swiftly as neither government wanted the case to damage attempts to reset their relationship.
Shortly before the swap deal was reached, nuclear specialist Igor Sutyagin, one of the Russian prisoners included in the deal, was moved to a Moscow prison from a facility near the Arctic Circle and then flown to Vienna as part of the exchange.
Under a US–Russian agreement, the Russian government agreed to release the Russian prisoners and their family members for resettlement. The Russian prisoners had served a number of years in prison and some were in poor health.
On July 9, all ten suspects were deported. A government-chartered jet from Vision Airlines left New York's LaGuardia Airport and flew to Vienna International Airport via Bangor, Maine for refueling and then for the swap around midday of July 9 (local time). Returning from Vienna were the four Russian prisoners—Sutyagin, Zaporozhsky, Skripal, and Vasilenko. The aircraft landed at RAF Brize Norton in Oxfordshire, England, to drop two of the exchanged Russian nationals and proceeded to Washington Dulles International Airport on the afternoon of July 9. The Russian government Yakovlev Yak-42 jet returned to Moscow's Domodedovo airport where, after landing, the ten spies were kept away from local and international press.
Later that day the Russian ministry of Foreign Affairs confirmed the exchange of four convicted people for ten Russian citizens citing "humanitarian considerations and constructive partnership development".
Prisoners held by Russia involved in the exchange
Igor Sutyagin
Igor Sutyagin was an arms control researcher with the Institute for US and Canadian Studies (ISKAN) of the Russian Academy of Sciences. He was arrested in 1999, and sentenced in April 2004 to 15 years' hard labor on high treason charges. He collected open-source data on Russian nuclear submarines and missile warning systems, analysed and provided it to a British consulting firm. He steadfastly denied using any classified information and ISKAN is said to have no access to Russian classified materials. Sutyagin maintained his innocence throughout his trial and conviction, but had to plead guilty shortly before the swap to qualify for a Presidential pardon. The US Department of State (and Amnesty International) classified Sutyagin as a political prisoner, not a spy. The Washington Post commented that Sutyagin's case differed from the other released prisoners, and that his original arrest might have been to warn Russians not to cooperate with Western companies and think tanks.
According to his relatives, Sutyagin phoned home on his arrival in the UK, saying that he was placed in an undisclosed location in a London suburb and that British authorities were in the process of granting him a UK visa. Later his lawyer confirmed that Sutyagin was granted leave to remain in the UK.
Sergei Skripal
Sergei Skripal was a colonel in Russia's Military Intelligence Service (GRU), who was arrested and convicted of high treason in Russia in 2006, and sentenced to 13 years in prison. According to the prosecution, he had spied for the United Kingdom's MI6 as a double agent. After the prisoner exchange in 2010, he moved to the UK and in 2018 Skripal and his daughter Yulia were poisoned with a nerve agent in Salisbury, England. A responding police officer and two random passersby (one of whom was the only death of the five poisoned) who found the discarded bottle were accidentally poisoned as well.
Aleksandr Zaporozhsky
Alexander Zaporozhsky was an operative in Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service. He was sentenced in 2003 to 18 years for secret cooperation with the United States. He was released as part of the swap after serving seven years.
Gennady Vasilenko
Gennady Semyonovich Vasilenko (Russian: Геннадий Семёнович Василенко) is the only person swapped from the Russian side who was not convicted on espionage (high treason) charges. He was a KGB officer who worked for external intelligence and counter-intelligence departments during the 1970s and 1980s. In 1988, presumably having been fingered by a Russian mole in the FBI, Robert Hanssen, he fell under suspicion of being a double agent. Vasilenko was not convicted but instead sacked from the KGB. He was arrested in 2005 and charged with an attempted murder. Due to lack of evidence this charge was dropped. Instead, he was sentenced to three years for possession of illegal firearms and explosive materials. In 2009, Vasilenko was convicted and sentenced again for allegedly trying to bribe facility officials.
According to media reports (which cite anonymous sources in Russian intelligence), Vasilenko was included in the list for the swap due to a personal request from a CIA officer who knew Vasilenko when he was posted in the US under diplomatic cover from 1976 to 1981.
Others held by Russia
Alexander Sypachev (Russian: Александр Сыпачев) was a colonel in the Russian intelligence service who was arrested after delivering a report to a secret location in 2002. He was sentenced to eight years for spying for the CIA. He was reported to have been considered for a swap but was not among the four Russians released.
Six others were considered for exchange as an even 11:11 swap, but were not exchanged in Vienna.
Political ramifications
While there was speculation that the arrests of the alleged spies, which occurred barely 72 hours after President Medvedev's White House visit, might cast a shadow over President Barack Obama's effort to improve relations between the US and Russia, on June 30, 2010, the US administration said that it would not expel Russian diplomats and it expressed no indignation that Russia had apparently been caught spying on it.
On June 29, 2010, The Guardian's comment said: "Revelations about spy rings are the last thing a politician like Medvedev, who presents himself as a moderniser, needs"; in its July 1, 2010, issue, The Economist wrote: "The revelations have caused embarrassment in Moscow, not so much because Russia was caught spying on America, but because it did it so clumsily. Old KGB spies this week lamented the decline in professional standards. But the scandal has rather more serious domestic implications too. It punctures the mystique that helped allow the security services to gain such clout under Vladimir Putin, Russia's former president and present prime minister and a former KGB spy. The story discredits him and his circle of siloviki, the former and present members of the security services. Being laughed at is worse than being feared."
On February 1, 2011, Ireland's cabinet made a decision to expel a Russian diplomat from the country—the first time since 1983, after the Irish government, based on an investigation conducted by the Garda Síochána Special Detective Unit (SDU), concluded that the Russian security agent based at the Russian embassy in Rathgar gathered details from six genuine Irish passports that were then effectively cloned in Russia for the US-based spies. Ireland's Department of Foreign Affairs said, "The Government, by today's action, has once again made clear that it will not tolerate the fabrication and use of forged Irish passports by agents of a foreign State." On February 4, 2011, the Irish press identified the expelled diplomat as Alexander Smirnov, first secretary in the Russian embassy's consular section. On February 2, 2011, Russia threatened retaliation.
Aftermath of the swap
After the Russian agents were returned to Russia, they were delivered to the SVR headquarters. They were not technically arrested, and relatives could visit them. However, they were not allowed to leave the facility until after the debriefing process, which took several weeks, as the Russian authorities appeared to suspect that betrayal—by any of the agents themselves or not—could be a plausible explanation for their exposure.
According to her lawyer, Vicky Peláez was placed in a Moscow apartment provided by Russian authorities. She turned down a US$2,000 per month offer from the Russian government and planned to return to Peru.
On June 28, 2010, the UK revoked Anna Chapman's UK citizenship.
On July 13, 2010, Russian intelligence sources were quoted as saying that the deported Russian agents would undergo a rigorous series of tests, including a lie detector, to establish whether any of them acted as a double agent.
The spy affair attracted media attention, including Chapman being described as "glamorous" and US Vice President Joe Biden joking shortly after the swap on a television chat show to comedian Jay Leno when asked "Do we have any spies that hot?" by saying "Let me be clear. It wasn't my idea to send her back." Joe Biden also said of the Russian agents: "And the ten, they've been here a long time, but they hadn't done much."
In July 2010, while visiting Crimea in Ukraine, Russian prime minister Vladimir Putin told reporters, without specifying the date, that he had had a meeting with the agents, specifically acknowledging that Chapman was among them; he said that they had had "a tough life" and been turned in as a result of "betrayal"; he also sang with the agents to live music some songs, including "From Where the Motherland Begins" (What the Motherland Begins With or What Does the Motherland Start With). Putin declined to evaluate their work saying that it was not up to him to evaluate but up to specialists and the "ultimate consumers of the information of such type, the Supreme Commander—the president of the Russian Federation."
The defector and former GRU agent, Viktor Suvorov, was scornful of both the agents and the agencies that sent them.
In mid-August 2010, Sir Stephen Lander, former Director-General of MI5 (1996–2002), voiced an opinion that the very existence of a ring of Russian "illegals" was no laughing matter: "The fact that they're nondescript or don't look serious is part of the charm of the business. That's why the Russians are so successful at some of this stuff. They're able to put people in those positions over time to build up their cover to be useful. They are part of a machine. ... And the machine is a very professional and serious one."
In October 2010, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev recognized those "intelligence agents who worked in the United States and returned to Russia in July" together with other members of the Russian SVR for their service to the motherland in ceremonies held at the Kremlin.
In November 2010, an unidentified Kremlin official told Kommersant that an assassination plan for the alleged defector "Colonel Shcherbakov" was already in the works: "We know who he is and where he is." The source added that "a Mercader" was sent after Shcherbakov—a reference to assassin Ramón Mercader who murdered Leon Trotsky in Mexico with an ice axe in 1940. The newspaper article's author later said that the statement could have been made in jest ("spy humour"). On November 13, 2010, US intelligence analyst David Wise suggested that, assuming Shcherbakov was in the US, he must be under FBI protection.
In November 2010, the Interfax news agency cited an unidentified "Russian intelligence source" as saying that "Colonel Alexander Poteyev, a former deputy head of the U.S. division of Directorate S (illegal intelligence) within the SVR" was the subject of both internal and criminal investigations, with the criminal case likely to have been opened as per Article 275 of the RF Criminal Code (high treason). Poteyev's identity (full name: Александр Николаевич Потеев, Aleksandr Nikolayevich Poteyev) was confirmed by other ex-KGB and ex-SVR sources. The revelations in the Russian media about the 'treachery' within the SVR were seen by commentators as a sign of an ongoing struggle within the RF top bureaucracy for control over the administratively autonomous agency that had been part of the USSR KGB.
On December 1, 2010, commentator and researcher Bill Gertz quoted a "former intelligence official close to the National Security Agency" (NSA) as saying that the FBI and the NSA were conducting a counterintelligence probe at the NSA headquarters at Fort Meade, Maryland, in a top-secret hunt for a Russian agent, believing that the spy ring was likely acting as conduits for information coming from "one or more Russian spies that NSA is convinced reside at Fort Meade and possibly other DoD offices, like DIA". Bill Gertz's report prompted the Russian intelligence expert Andrei Soldatov to question the quasi-official version about Poteyev's responsibility. In a Larry King Live interview, aired by CNN about the same time, Russian prime minister Putin maintained that the Russian agents "deserved unconditional respect"; according to him, no harm had been done to US interests, and that they would only become operational "in crisis periods, say, in case of a breakup of the diplomatic relations."
On December 16, 2010, prime minister Putin, when answering the question during a televised call-in show about whether he ever signed assassination orders, said that hit squads had long been abolished in Russia; speaking specifically of the turncoat allegedly responsible for exposing the ten sleeper agents, he denounced him as a "brute" and a "pig" saying that "the traitors will croak all by themselves", adding that a traitor's life is miserable and regrettable.
On May 3, 2011, in Moscow, Alexander Poteyev was indicted on high treason and desertion charges and later put on trial in absentia. On June 27, 2011, he was found guilty in absentia on both charges and sentenced to 25 years of imprisonment; the judge's verdict said that Poteyev was recruited by the CIA in 1999. His court-appointed advocate said that Poteyev's remuneration from the US government might have reached $55 million.
In July 2012, new details about the agents' activities were revealed that suggested that some of them planned to recruit their children to become agents.
See also
- Rudolf Abel, Gary Powers, and Frederic Pryor – swapped in 1962
- Russian influence operations in the United States
- Russian spies in the Russo-Ukrainian War
- The Americans – a 2013 period drama TV series about Soviet deep-cover agents inspired by the events of the Illegals Program
- Allegiance – a TV series
- Little Nikita – a 1988 movie starring Sidney Poitier and River Phoenix, about Soviet deep cover agents.
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Elena Vavilova's book offers rare insight into the Soviet deep-cover 'illegals' programme
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{{cite web}}
: Missing or empty|title=
(help) - Calmes, Jackie. "Obama and Medvedev Talk Economics" Archived March 8, 2017, at the Wayback Machine, The New York Times, June 24, 2010. Retrieved July 7, 2010.
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External links
- Official Press Release from the United States Department of Justice Office of Public Affairs (includes copies of both indictments)
- Operation Ghost Stories: Inside the Russian Spy Case at the FBI
- "Criminal Complaints From the Justice Department" at The New York Times
- Profile: Russia's 'spies' in the suburbs, BBC News, July 2, 2010, includes related stories and video
- Collected news and commentary at The Guardian
- Collected news and commentary at The New York Times
- Anna Chapman, One Last Look at The Smoking Gun, July 28, 2010, includes mugshots of the other spies
- The Illegals: Russia's Elite Spies
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