Privacy Policy
Home | Money | Entertainment | Links | Advertise | Search | Cartoons | Contact | Shop October 06, 2008
Web
NewsMax.com
Powered by
 
FBI Agent 'Sent Spies to Their Death' for Cash and Diamonds
NewsMax.com wires
Wednesday, Feb. 21, 2001
Robert Hanssen, a 56-year-old FBI veteran and father of six, faces charges stretching back more than 15 years, contained in a 110-page affidavit that details payments to Swiss bank accounts and in diamonds.

They include identifying former Soviet KGB double agents who were working for the United States.

"I think one of the worst parts is agents killed in the line of duty," said Louis Freeh, the FBI's director, who described the arrest as a coup for the bureau. "This case is a grave and tragic moment for us."

FBI agents said Hanssen helped to cross-check and confirm intelligence sold by Aldrich Ames, thought to be the most damaging mole in CIA history. Ames, who was arrested six years ago, is serving a life sentence for revealing more than 100 operations and betraying about 30 agents, 10 of whom were executed.

Hanssen, who is said to have offered his services to the former Soviet Union in 1985, gave details about KGB double agents who had already been compromised by Ames.

"When these two KGB officials returned to Moscow they were tried and executed," said FBI Director Freeh. "Two were executed and one was in prison and later released."

John Ashcroft, the U.S. attorney general, said, "The arrest should remind us that our free society is an international target in a dangerous world."

Hanssen, known to his Russian handlers by the code name Ramon, is accused of passing on secrets about electronic surveillance techniques. The four handlers did not know where he worked because he was able to use his experience to prevent both sides from following him.

High security clearance and sensitive assignments gave Ramon, who is thought to have been operating alone, access to details of U.S. security operations. In the end, KGB documents that fell into the hands of FBI-CIA officers investigating a mole in their ranks led them to Hanssen, who was due to retire in two months.

While he was supposed to have been operating as a counter-espionage officer spying on the spies in New York and Washington, he was actually working for first the Soviet Union and then Russia.

"In short, the insider betrayed his trust," Freeh said. "The FBI entrusted him with some of its most sensitive matters and the U.S. government relied upon him for his service and integrity. The crimes alleged are an affront not only to his fellow FBI employees but to the American people."

The Russian Embassy in Washington declined to comment, but a security services spokesman in Moscow suggested that publicity about the case was politically motivated.

Plato Cacheris, a prominent Washington lawyer who is representing Hanssen, said: "He's quite upset, emotional. It's a serious matter, an FBI agent charged with espionage."

Cacheris, whose previous clients have included Ames and Monica Lewinsky, spoke after Hanssen appeared in court in Alexandria, Va., dressed in a black shirt and grey trousers. "We'll have to see what the quality of the case is. As far as I know he is of good character," Cacheris said.

He said that Hanssen, who has been working recently for the State Department and is only the third FBI agent to have been accused of espionage, intends to plead not guilty. Hanssen could face the death penalty if he is convicted.

Nancy Cullen, a neighbor of the Hanssen family, who live in a $300,000 split-level brick and cedar home in a Washington suburb, said: "We just can't believe it ... a dog and six kids and a regular routine.

"Part of the routine that made us feel guilty was that every Sunday they would pack up the van and go to church. They're just a great family." Hanssen's wife, Bonnie, teaches religious education part time at a Catholic school.

"They didn't appear to be unusual in any way," said another neighbor. "They did nothing to raise a red flag or make me suspicious."

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2001

Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
Hanssen Case
Russia

Related Products:
Through the Eyes of the Enemy

Home | Money | Entertainment | Links | Advertise | Search | Cartoons | Contact | Shop
All Rights Reserved © 2008 NewsMax.Com