Ten people have been arrested in the US and charged with spying for Russia.
They were allegedly part of an operation where agents posed as ordinary citizens, some living together as couples for years.
They are accused of conspiracy to act as unlawful agents of a foreign government, a crime which carries up to five years in prison.
Nine of them also face a charge of conspiracy to launder money, which carries a 20-year prison sentence.
An 11th suspect remains at large, according to the US justice department.
Alleged intercepted messages in court documents suggest they were asked to find information on topics including nuclear weapons, US arms control positions, Iran, White House rumours, CIA leadership turnover, and political parties.
The US Department of Justice says eight of the suspects allegedly carried out "long-term, 'deep-cover' assignments" on US soil, working in civilian jobs so as not to arouse suspicion.
They were allegedly trained by the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR) to infiltrate policy-making circles and collect information, according to court papers filed in the US court for the southern district of New York.
They were told to befriend US officials and send information using various methods to Russian government handlers.
US officials said the spy-ring was discovered in a "multi-year investigation" by FBI agents who posed as Russian handlers and gleaned information from two of the suspects.
Investigators say some of the agents had been using false identities since the early 1990s, using codes and engaging in advanced computer operations, including posting apparently innocent pictures on the internet which contained hidden text.
The FBI also reported observing older techniques, such as money being buried next to a beer-bottle marker and "brush pasts" in parks, where agents swap identical bags as they pass each other.
"You were sent to USA for long-term service trip," says one purported message to two of the suspects that was intercepted by US intelligence.
"Your education, bank accounts, car, house etc - all these serve one goal: fulfil your main mission, ie to search and develop ties in policymaking circles in US and send intels."
Generally, spies were allegedly tasked with becoming "Americanised" to be able to do this, with some pursuing university degrees, holding jobs, and joining relevant professional associations, court documents said.
The group allegedly got close to a scientist involved in designing bunker-busting bombs and a top former intelligence official. ...
Five of the suspects briefly appeared in a Manhattan federal court on Monday, where a judge ordered them to remain in prison until a preliminary hearing set for 27 July.
These included a couple known as "Richard Murphy" and "Cynthia Murphy", who were arrested in Montclair, New Jersey; Vicky Pelaez and a man known as "Juan Lazaro," who were arrested in Yonkers, New York state; and Anna Chapman, who was arrested in Manhattan, New York City.
Another three - Mikhail Semenko and a couple known as "Michael Zottoli" and "Patricia Mills" - appeared in a federal court in Alexandria, Virginia, after being arrested in Arlington, Virginia.
The final two people - a couple known as "Donald Howard Heathfield" and "Tracey Lee Ann Foley" - were arrested in Boston, Massachusetts, and appeared in a federal court in the city.
A suspect known as "Christopher R Metsos" remains at large. ...
via BBC News - Suspected Russian spies charged in US.
Comment on WRH:
"...why such a hurry with the arrests? Uncovered foreign spy equals to winning a lottery! You could pass through this person any information or rather disinformation you want. They are arrested only in some sort of extreme conditions. This story is rather political anti-Russian hype. Maybe the pres looked into Medvedev's eyes and saw there something, he did not expect."
Russian spies are everywhere and the period at the end of this sentence is a microphone.
PS. Steganography is the art and science of writing hidden messages in such a way that no one, apart from the sender and intended recipient, suspects the existence of the message, a form of security through obscurity.
1 comment:
Look at the scare quotes around everybody's names. For all we know at this stage, "Richard Murphy" really _is_ Richard Murphy.
Is this the new way to arrest American citizens on trumped-up charges? I can just imagine the police interrogation:
"So, it says here you are a Soccer Mom and you help out at the local YWCA, 'Mrs Cynthia Murphy' ... if that is your real name!"
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