New spy case shows Russia up to old tricks but targeting US economy this time
Three men accused in the latest
Russian spy case didn't hide behind fake identities and weren't stealing
military secrets. The evidence even suggests they were annoyed that
their assignment wasn't more like a James Bond film.
Their
alleged plot to dig up "economic intelligence" on possible banking
penalties and alternative energy sources may not be the stuff of
Hollywood movies, but U.S. authorities insist the case is proof that
Russian spying is thriving in America more than two decades after the
end of the Cold War.
It also
shows the time and resources the U.S. still throws at those suspected of
being Putin-era spies, using methods developed before many of them were
born: listening bugs, hidden cameras and intercepted phone calls.
"Russian spies continue to seek
to operate in our midst," U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara warned after the
arrests last week. Russian Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander
Lukashevich countered by accusing U.S. authorities of manufacturing a
spy scandal as part of its "anti-Russian campaign."
Annemarie McAvoy, a Fordham Law professor and former federal prosecutor, said the latest case shouldn't be taken lightly.
"We
have to be concerned about the economic warfare end of this. That's
what worries me," she said, noting the recent crippling cyberattack on
Sony Pictures involving the movie "The Interview."
She
said the arrests might demonstrate that the spy game has changed as
countries seek information to poise themselves to attack businesses and
the economy. "It's not looking for military secrets. That's almost passe
now," McAvoy said.
The case
against Evgeny Buryakov, Igor Sporyshev and Victor Podobnyy comes less
than five years after the arrest of 10 covert agents — a sleeper cell
referred to as "The Illegals" by the SVR, the foreign intelligence
agency headquartered in Moscow — who led ordinary lives for several
years in the United States using aliases. All 10 pleaded guilty in
federal court in Manhattan to conspiracy charges and were ordered out of
the country as part of a spy swap for four people convicted of
betraying Moscow to the West.
Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn
brought another spy case in 2013, accusing Alexander Fishenko, a
naturalized U.S. citizen from Kazakhstan who made millions off his Texas
export firm, of being a secret agent for the Russian military.
Fishenko, who pleaded not guilty, is scheduled to go to trial later this
year.
Not everyone views the latest case as a scary new wrinkle in spy tactics.
"What
is interesting about this case, just like the 2010 sleeper spy case, is
how little these accused Russian spies are accomplishing. Either the
FBI is just getting the low-hanging fruit, or the Russian foreign
intelligence agency isn't doing its job very well," said Kimberly
Marten, a political scientist at Barnard College, Columbia University.
Prosecutors
say the latest investigation exposed espionage by Sporyshev and
Podobnyy, who held low-level diplomatic positions, and Buryakov, a Bronx
resident with a valid visa, a position in the Manhattan branch of a
Russian bank and a LinkedIn profile.
U.S.
prosecutors say that under orders from Moscow, Sporyshev's main duty
was to give Buryakov assignments to gather intelligence on potential
U.S. sanctions against Russian banks and efforts here to develop
alternative energy resources. They say Sporyshev and Podobnyy would
analyze the information and report back to the SVR behind the walls of a
Russian Federation office in New York they thought was secure but
apparently was bugged.
In a
secretly recorded conversation, Podobnyy let down his guard and
complained to Sporyshev that their work was nothing like "movies about
James Bond," according to the papers.
"Of course, I wouldn't fly helicopters, but pretend to be someone else at a minimum," he said.
Sporyshev griped that he too thought he "at least would go abroad with a different passport."
The
court papers also detail demands on Buryakov from SVR to come up with
questions for a Russian "news organization" — believed to be Tass — to
ask about the inner workings of the U.S. stock market.
The conversation was an exception
to how the pair normally did business, prosecutors said. Typically,
they would speak on the phone in code to set up meetings in outdoor
settings, with "Buryakov passing a bag, magazine or slip of paper to
Sporyshev," court papers said.
Some
of the meetings took place near Buryakov's red-brick home on a quiet
block in the Riverdale section of the Bronx, not far from a monolithic
high-rise used to house Russian diplomats.
Neighbors
said 39-year-old Buryakov, his wife and two children largely kept to
themselves. They recalled a man sitting in a car on the block for hours
at a time — in hindsight, they say, probably surveillance — but were
surprised when the FBI raided the home last Monday.
"I
got home from work and saw all these cars, about 10 of them, blocking
the street. One blocked my driveway," said Damian McShane, who lives
across the street. "We didn't know what was happening."
A
judge ordered Buryakov held without bail. Podobnyy and Sporyshev, whose
diplomatic status gave them immunity, have returned to Russia.
Tass
reported that Russian diplomats had visited Buryakov in a federal
lockup in lower Manhattan and found conditions of his confinement
"satisfactory." A Russian spokesman told the news agency that Buryakov
"vehemently denies the alleged offenses."
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