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U.S. uncovers major Russian spy ring

old medic

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U.S. uncovers major Russian spy ring
Stewart Bell, National Post · Monday, Jun. 28, 2010
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/uncovers+Russian+ring+three+posed+Canadians/3212330/story.html


TORONTO — The FBI has arrested a Russian spy ring whose members were posing as Canadian citizens, the Department of Justice announced this afternoon.

Eight “deep cover” agents working for the Russian Federation and two others on a similar mission were arrested Sunday in New Jersey, Virginia and Boston.

An eleventh suspect remains at large.

Three of the agents had assumed identities as Canadians named Donald Howard Heathfield, Tracey Lee Ann Foley and Patricia Mills.

The agents had been sent to the U.S. Infiltrate the highest levels of U.S. Policymaking, the indictment alleges.

Most of those arrested are alleged to be “illegals,” highly-trained Russian intelligence officers who had assumed the identities of Americans in order to avoid detection.

While they were identified in indictments as having names such as Richard Murphy, Patricia Mills and Donald Howard Heathfield, those are almost certainly aliases.

A Russian illegal was arrested in Montreal in 2006. He had been living under the false identity Paul William Hampel while working for the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service, known by the acronym SVR.


 
http://www.france24.com/en/20100629-espionage-ten-arrested-spying-russia-usa-northeast-fbi-department-justice

AFP - Coded radio messages. Buried money. False identities. Hidden video cameras in hotel rooms. The complaints unveiled Monday against 11 Russian agents read like the pages of a Cold War spy thriller.
 
The Justice Department documents outline the activities and spycraft of a ring of alleged "deep-cover" long-term agents who had adopted American or Canadian identities to spy against the United States on behalf of Russia.
 
They were arrested after what the FBI counterintelligence division said was a multi-year investigation into a network of covert agents of the SVR, Russia's foreign intelligence agency, directed by SVR headquarters in "Moscow Center."
 
The FBI probe involved the use of hidden listening devices in the suspects' homes, covert video cameras in restaurants and hotel rooms and the monitoring of their email and telephone conversations.
 
Some of the surveillance detailed in the complaints dates as far back as 2000 indicating that the US authorities were aware of the activities of at least some members of the espionage ring for many years.
 
According to the complaints, the suspects were observed receiving bags and packages of money from Russian officials in the United States on numerous occasions, including from officials attached to the Russian mission to the United Nations in New York.
 
One suspect was videotaped receiving money from Russian officials in an unidentified South American country, according to the complaints, while another got a shopping bag of cash on a park bench.
 
In June 2006, two of the suspects travelled to Wurtsboro, New York, where they "dug up a package containing money that had been buried in the ground" by another suspect two years earlier.
 
The suspected agents allegedly communicated with "Moscow Center" through various methods including using drop sites, steganography -- special software to encrypt data -- and radiograms, coded radio bursts that can be picked up by a radio receiver set to the proper frequency.
 
Steganography involves using special software to hide encrypted data in pictures that are placed on public websites, according to the complaints.
 
"These images appear wholly unremarkable to the naked eye," they said, but data can be extracted and decrypted using a special software program.
 
The FBI said password-protected computer disks were seized at the suspects' homes in Boston, Seattle, and Hoboken, New Jersey, which contained a steganography program employed by the SVR.
 
The search of the Seattle apartment turned up a radio for receiving short-wave radio transmissions and spiral notebooks, "some pages of which contain apparently random columns of numbers."
 
"The spiral notebook contains codes used to decipher radiograms as they came in," the complaints said.
 
The suspects also communicated with their handlers in by setting up a private wireless network between paired laptop computers.
 
On one occasion, a suspect was observed sitting in a coffee shop with her laptop open while a minivan driven by a Russian official drove by allowing them to exchange data.
 
Safety deposit boxes turned up birth certificates used to create false identifies, including one of a Canadian man who actually died in 2005.
 
The FBI said a 2009 message to two of the suspects, Richard and Cynthia Murphy, clearly outlined their mission.
 
"You were sent to USA for long-term service trip," it said.
 
"Your education, bank accounts, car, house etc -- all these serve one goal: fulfill your main mission, i.e. to search and develop ties in policymaking circles in US and send intels (intelligence reports) to C (Moscow Center)."
 
The suspects were urged to cultivate sources who were referred to in communications with Moscow Center by such code names as "Farmer," "Cat" and "Parrot."
 
"Your relationship with 'Parrot' looks very promising as a valid source of info from US power circles," said one message from Moscow Center.
 
Meanwhile...  back in B.C.
B.C. Premier Gordon Campbell says allegations by the head of CSIS that some B.C. politicians and municipal officials are under the influence of foreign governments are shocking and irresponsible.

Campbell says Canadian Security Intelligence Service director Richard Fadden's statements are unprofessional and call into question the inner workings of Canada's spy agency.
http://www.cbc.ca/politics/story/2010/06/23/bc-campbell-fadden-csis-reaction.html

(yes, I know it's five days old)
 
This all seems like too much at once, I want to believe what the press says but if this is all 100% true (which it never is) then why would the governments release all this information to the public/press?
 
hold_fast said:
I'm sure the US has some of the same over in Russia, though.
Of course. But if American agents were caught, their fate may not be known by the public like this.
 
Commercial/Industrial Spying is also a very demanding use of spy's. Why use your own capital funds to develop, when you can steal for next to nothing.
 
This should surprise no one. Every country does it to every other country, even to allies.

I'm sure that some Pollyannas with lace undies are wringing their hands over this....
 
I'm sure the Toronto Police would love to have a person on the inside of the Black Bloc.
 
Tango18A said:
I'm sure the Toronto Police would love to have a person on the inside of the Black Bloc.

Oh I am sure there were no shortage of plain clothes officers mixed in the groups.

In fact I saw a youtube clip with some of them.
 
How did you know they were plainclothes officers? Did they wear signs on their backs???
 
They separated from the running demonstrators to form a line with the riot police all of them also had extendable batons out and held them in the normal raised over the shoulder police way.
 
Then how does this act lend to the fact the Toronto Police would like to have an insider placed inside the Black Bloc. There isn't a single Spy/Protester ring that I know of that would have its membership/ Agenda exposed by a plainclothes officer. The pers that do these jobs are called Undercover, and you wouldn't catch them joining a line of riot control officers on Youtube, they would take a beating just to prove their temp alliance with the Black Bloc / Spy network to work their way deeper in to the network.
 
Tango18A said:
How did you know they were plainclothes officers? Did they wear signs on their backs???


Some did.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u6XgEI5dCrE
 
old medic said:
Some did.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u6XgEI5dCrE

The one at 0:18 looked like a scary version of carrot-top.
 
Cyprus police say 11th alleged Russian spy purports to be Canadian
Pete Yost,Tom Hays
New York — The Associated Press

copy at: http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/cyprus-police-say-11th-alleged-russian-spy-purports-to-be-canadian/article1622750/


A shadowy money man for a Russian spy ring whose members were assigned a decade or more ago to infiltrate American society has been captured overseas, authorities said Tuesday. He was the last of 11 suspects named in a huge bust that threatens to tear recently mending relations between the U.S. and Russia.

The 11th suspect, using the name Christopher Metsos and purporting to be a Canadian citizen, was arrested at the Larnaca airport in Cyprus while trying to fly to Budapest, Hungary, police in the Mediterranean island nation said. He was later released on bail.

Mestos, 54, was among those named in complaints unsealed Monday in federal court in Manhattan. Authorities in Cyprus said he will remain there for one month until extradition proceedings begin.

Spokesman Michalis Katsounotos said an 11th suspect, 54-year-old Christopher Robert Metsos was arrested early Tuesday based on an Interpol arrest warrant. Mr. Metsos appeared in a Larnaca court, which ordered Mr. Metsos released on $24,700 bail after surrendering his travel documents. The court also ordered Mr. Metsos to report to a Larnaca police station once a day.

The alleged spies sometimes worked in pairs and pretended to be married so they could blend in as the couple next door in a throwback to the Cold War, complete with fake identities, invisible ink, coded radio transmissions and encrypted data to avoid detection, authorities say.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Farbiarz, speaking Monday in federal court in Manhattan, called the allegations against 10 people living in the northeastern U.S. “the tip of the iceberg” of a conspiracy of Russia's intelligence service, the SVR, to collect inside U.S. information, the biggest such bust in recent years.

Each of the 10 was charged with conspiracy to act as an agent of a foreign government without notifying the U.S. attorney general, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison upon conviction. Two criminal complaints outlining the charges were filed in U.S. District Court in New York.

Russia angrily denounced the U.S. arrests as an unjustified throwback to the Cold War, and senior lawmakers said some in the U.S. government may be trying to undercut President Barack Obama's warming relations with Moscow.

“These actions are unfounded and pursue unseemly goals,” the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement. “We don't understand the reasons which prompted the U.S. Department of Justice to make a public statement in the spirit of Cold War-era spy stories.”

Intelligence on Mr. Obama's foreign policy, particularly toward Russia, appears to have been a top priority for the Russian agents, prosecutors said.

The papers allege the defendants' spying has been going on for years.

One defendant was a reporter and editor for a prominent Spanish-language newspaper videotaped by the FBI contacting a Russian official in 2000 in Latin America, prosecutors said.

And in spring 2009, court documents say, conspirators Richard and Cynthia Murphy, who lived in New Jersey, were asked for information about Mr. Obama's impending trip to Russia that summer, the U.S. negotiating position on the START arms reduction treaty, Afghanistan and the approach Washington would take in dealing with Iran's suspect nuclear program. They also were asked to send background on U.S. officials travelling with Mr. Obama or involved in foreign policy, the documents say.

“Try to outline their views and most important Obama's goals (sic) which he expects to achieve during summit in July and how does his team plan to do it (arguments, provisions, means of persuasion to ‘lure' (Russia) into co-operation in US interests,” Moscow asked, according to the documents.

Moscow wanted reports that “should reflect approaches and ideas of” four sub-Cabinet U.S. foreign policy officials, they say.

One intercepted message said Cynthia Murphy “had several work-related personal meetings with” a man the court papers describe as a prominent New York-based financier active in politics.

In response, Moscow Center described the man as a very interesting target and urged the defendants to “try to build up little by little relations. ... Maybe he can provide” Murphy “with remarks re US foreign policy, ‘roumors' about White house internal 'kitchen,' invite her to venues (to major political party HQ in NYC, for instance. ... In short, consider carefully all options in regard” to the financier.

The Murphys lived as husband and wife in suburban New Jersey, first Hoboken, then Montclair, with Richard Murphy carrying a fake birth certificate saying he was born in Philadelphia, authorities said.

The complaint says Mr. Metsos traveled to the United States to pay Richard Murphy and others using clandestine — and sometimes bizarre — methods.

Mr. Metsos was surreptitiously handed the money by a Russian official as the two swapped nearly identical orange bags while passing each other on a staircase at a commuter train station in New York, Metsos said.

After giving some of the money to one of the defendants, Mr. Metsos drove north and stopped his car near upstate Wurtsboro, N.Y. Using data from a global-positioning system that had been secretly installed in his car, agents went to the site and found a partially buried brown beer bottle. They dug down about five inches and discovered a package wrapped in duct tape, which they photographed and then reburied.

Two years later, video surveillance caught two unnamed secret agents digging up the package.

One defendant in Massachusetts made contact in 2004 with an unidentified man who worked at a U.S. government research facility.

“He works on issues of strategic planning related to nuclear weapon development,” the defendant's intelligence report said.

The defendant “had conversations with him about research programs on small yield high penetration nuclear warheads recently authorized by US Congress (nuclear ‘bunker-buster' warheads),” according to the report.

One message back to Moscow from the defendants focused on turnover at the top level of the CIA and the 2008 U.S. presidential election, prosecutors said. The information was described as having been received in private conversation with, among others, a former legislative counsel for Congress. The court papers deleted the name of the counsel.

In the papers, FBI agents said the defendants communicated with Russian agents using mobile wireless transmissions between laptop computers, which has not previously been described in espionage cases brought in the U.S.: They established a short-range wireless network between laptop computers of the agents and sent encrypted messages between the computers while they were close to each other.

Aside from the Murphys, three other defendants also appeared in federal court in Manhattan — Vicky Pelaez and Juan Lazaro, who were arrested at their Yonkers, New York, residence, and Chapman, arrested in Manhattan on Sunday.

Behind the scenes, they were known as “illegals” — short for illegal Russian agents — and were believed to have fake back stories known as “legends.”

Aside from fake identities, authorities say, they used Cold War spycraft — invisible ink, coded radio transmissions, encrypted data — to avoid detection. The court papers described a new high-tech spy-to-spy communications system used by the defendants: short-range wireless communications between laptop computers — a modern supplement for the old-style dead drop in a remote area, high-speed burst radio transmission or the hollowed-out nickels used by captured Soviet Col. Rudolf Abel in the 1950s to conceal and deliver microfilm.

The FBI said it intercepted a message from SVR's headquarters, Moscow Center, to two of the 10 defendants describing their main mission as “to search and develop ties in policymaking circles in US.” Intercepted messages showed they were asked to learn about a wide range of topics, including nuclear weapons, U.S. arms control positions, Iran, White House rumours, CIA leadership turnover, the last presidential election, Congress and the political parties, prosecutors said.

“The FBI did an extraordinary job in this investigation,” U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said in a statement.

On Saturday, an undercover FBI agent in New York and another in Washington, both posing as Russian agents, met with two of the defendants, Anna Chapman at a New York restaurant and Mikhail Semenko on a Washington street corner blocks from the White House, prosecutors said. The FBI undercover agents gave each an espionage-related delivery to make. Court papers indicated Mr. Semenko made the delivery as instructed but apparently Chapman didn't.

The timing of the arrests was notable, given the efforts by Presidents Barack Obama and Dmitry Medvedev to reset U.S.-Russia relations. The two leaders met last week at the White House after Mr. Medvedev visited high-tech firms in California's Silicon Valley, and both attended the G-8 and G-20 meetings over the weekend in Canada.

Oleg Gordievsky, a former deputy head of the KGB in London who defected in 1985, said Mr. Medvedev would know the number of so-called illegal operatives in each country.

The 71-year-old ex-double agent told The Associated Press that, based on his experience and career in Russian intelligence, he estimates Moscow likely has about 40 to 50 couples operating under deep cover in the U.S.

The Murphys, Mr. Lazaro, Ms. Pelaez and Chapman were held without bail but didn't enter a plea. Another hearing was set for Thursday.

Ms. Pelaez is a Peruvian-born reporter and editor and worked for several years for El Diario/La Prensa, one of the country's best-known Spanish-language newspapers. She is best known for her opinion columns, which often criticize the U.S. government.

In January 2000, Ms. Pelaez was videotaped meeting with a Russian government official at a public park in the South American nation, where she received a bag from the official, according to one complaint.

Ms. Pelaez was born in Cusco, southeast of Lima, and Mr. Lazaro discussed plans to pass covert messages with invisible ink to Russian officials during another trip Pelaez took to South America, a complaint said.

The complaint alleges authorities overheard an unguarded Mr. Lazaro once saying in his home, “We moved to Siberia ... as soon as the war started.”

Waldo Mariscal, Ms. Pelaez's son, said his mother was innocent. “This is a farce,” he said.

Robert Krakow, an attorney for Mr. Lazaro, said after the court hearing that his client was innocent and that the information in the complaint “had no value.”

An attorney for Ms. Chapman, Robert Baum, argued the allegations were exaggerated and his client deserved bail. Prosecutors countered that Ms. Chapman was a flight risk, calling her a highly trained “Russian agent” who is “a practiced deceiver.”

Two other defendants, Michael Zottoli and Patricia Mills, were arrested at their Arlington, Virginia, residence. Also arrested at an Arlington residence was Mr. Semenko.

Mr. Zottoli, Ms. Mills and Mr. Semenko appeared before U.S. Magistrate Theresa Buchanan on Monday in Alexandria, Virginia. The hearing was closed because the case had not yet been unsealed in New York. The three did not have attorneys at the hearing, U.S. attorney spokesman Peter Carr said.

Two defendants known as Donald Howard Heathfield and Tracey Lee Ann Foley were arrested at their Cambridge, Massachusetts, residence Sunday. They appeared briefly in Boston federal court Monday. A detention hearing was set for Thursday. Lawyers could not be found or did not return calls.

With files from Reuters
 
Wow, just wow.  This takes me back to the Cold War.  But, I guess Russia and the USA still play that Grand Old Game, no?
 
Ottawa probes spy ties
Stewart Bell, National Post
29 June 2010
http://www.nationalpost.com/news/Ottawa+probes+ties/3217743/story.html
Canada has launched an investigation to determine whether suspected members of a Russian spy ring operating in the United States were using Canadian travel documents.

The FBI says four Russian spies on a “deep-cover” mission in the northeast Unites States were posing as Canadians, including alleged ringleader Christopher Metsos, who was arrested in Cyprus on Tuesday.

But aside from announcing the passport probe, Ottawa has kept silent since the arrests were made public on Monday. Foreign Affairs Minister Lawrence Cannon declined to say whether he would take the matter up with Moscow.

“This is an American investigation. We continue to work with our allies on the issue. As the investigation is ongoing we have no comment at this time,” said Melissa Lantsman, the Minister’s press secretary.

The Liberal public safety critic, Mark Holland, called that response “unacceptable and a little disturbing” and urged the government to tell Canadians how it was responding.

“In the past the government would immediately take up the matter with the other government, ask for an apology, ask for an explanation and achieve assurances that this would never happen again,” Mr. Holland said.

“And in the interim you expect, on a broad level, the Canadian public to be kept in the loop. I think that’s a pretty modest and reasonable expectation in a situation like this.”

Ten suspected spies were arrested altogether in four states. Mr. Metsos, 54, will be extradited. Moscow admitted at least some were Russian citizens but denied they had harmed U.S. interests. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said he hoped the incident would not harm relations between Moscow and Washington.

Among those picked up following the lengthy counter-intelligence investigation was Anna Chapman, a New York socialite who had posted seductive photos of herself on her Facebook page along with her succinct thoughts.

Also arrested was a man who went by the name Donald Howard Graham Heathfield, an identity he apparently stole from a Montreal infant who died in 1962. York University in Toronto said a man with that same name and date of birth studied at the campus between 1992 and 1995, earning a degree in economics.

Two years later, he turned up in Shanghai, helping France’s prestigious École Nationale des Ponts et Chaussées and the local Tongji University set up a program to encourage French businessmen to expand into China.

“France has got the brightest and best people but they are not business-minded,” he told the AFP news agency at the time. “They prefer to get a salary for life and have time to play with their toys.”

The alleged spy moved to the U.S. in 1999. Harvard University confirmed that a Donald Heathfield graduated from the John F. Kennedy School of Government in 2000 with a Master in Public Administration degree.

At the time of his arrest, the alleged spy was working at Global Partners Inc. in Boston. “Don is the developer of Future Map, a unique software system and methodology that provides the conceptual framework for constructing and visualizing a comprehensive, holistic, systemic picture of anticipated future events,” reads his company biography.

According to the FBI, his wife was also a Russian agent who posed as a Canadian named Tracey Lee Ann Foley and worked as a real estate agent in Boston. Her website calls her “a native of Montreal” and says she was educated in Switzerland, Canada and France.

But when FBI agents searched her safety deposit box, they found photos taken when she was in her twenties. On one of the negatives, investigators found the name TACMA, a Soviet brand of film.

The FBI alleges they are not Canadians but highly trained agents of Russia’s foreign spy agency, Sluzhba Vneshney Razvedki (SVR), who had been sent to the United States to live under false identities.

Investigators caught them communicating with SVR headquarters in Moscow through messages encoded in digital photographs on the Internet. One of the messages sent to Russia concerned a U.S. nuclear warhead program.

Professor Martin Rudner said the case has the hallmarks of a long-term mission designed to penetrate U.S. policy circles, including the couples’ base of operations in Boston, home to influential universities and non-governmental organizations.

“If any of these individuals had acquired a profile in policy they may have been able to actually get appointments in a future administration,” said Prof. Rudner, Distinguished Research Professor Emeritus at Carleton University in Ottawa.

“And one could image that in the foreseeable future one of these people, having had influence in various NGOs and universities on policy, is offered a position in government, and that would be a real penetration of a mole.”

He said the operation should be a wake-up call to bolster Canada’s counter-intelligence program, which he said has taken a back seat to counterterrorism since the 9/11 attacks. An SVR was arrested in Montreal four years ago. He had been posing as a Canadian named Paul Hampel. Two other agents were caught in Toronto in 1996. They had stolen the identities of dead Canadian children.

 
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