By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
sauce.co.kesauce.co.kesauce.co.ke
  • News
  • Grapevine
  • Politics
  • Security
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Media
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Reading: Notorious FBI Double-Agent Robert Hanssen Dead
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
sauce.co.kesauce.co.ke
Font ResizerAa
  • News
  • Grapevine
  • Politics
  • Security
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Media
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Search
  • News
  • Grapevine
  • Politics
  • Security
  • Business
  • Technology
  • Media
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
  • Advertise
© 2022 Foxiz News Network. Ruby Design Company. All Rights Reserved.
Home » News » Notorious FBI Double-Agent Robert Hanssen Dead

Notorious FBI Double-Agent Robert Hanssen Dead

Last updated: June 6, 2023 12:30 pm
Jessicah Mwambia 3 years ago
Share
4 Min Read
SHARE

Robert Hanssen, the notorious FBI double agent who secretly fed Russia some of America’s deepest secrets in the 1980s and 1990s, died in a top-security prison Monday, prison officials said.

Offering himself to Soviet military intelligence in 1985, Hanssen traded government secrets and the identities of US moles in the Soviet and Russian governments in exchange for diamonds and hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Because he was in the FBI’s crucial New York counterintelligence department, tasked with chasing down foreign spies, he was able to cover his tracks as he ostensibly investigated Moscow’s agents in the United States.

He was finally caught at a dead drop for exchanging messages with his Russian handlers in suburban Virginia just outside Washington on February 18, 2001.

A year later he was sentenced to life in prison with no possibility of parole.

Hanssen, 79, was found unresponsive early Monday in the ultra-high-security US prison in Florence, Colorado, and was later pronounced dead, according to a prison statement.

The FBI called him “the most damaging spy in bureau history.”

Hanssen joined the FBI in 1976 after first serving as a policeman in Chicago.

Nine years later he took a position in counterintelligence in the New York City office, where agents invested huge amounts of time tracking and trying to recruit Soviet officials at the United Nations.

Instead, within a short time he offered his services to the other side under the name “Ramon Garcia” and even his handlers did not know his true identity.

At the time that he was caught, he was considered the most damaging mole ever to pass US secrets to a foreign government, with thousands of classified US documents handed over to the Soviets, and later to the Russians.

Those included US nuclear war plans, software for tracking spying investigations, and the identities of US sources in Moscow, including Dmitri Polyakov or “Tophat,” a Soviet general who fed his country’s secrets to the United States between the 1960s and 1980s.

Polyakov was arrested in 1986 and executed several years later.

Believed to have been motivated by money and intrigue rather than ideology, Hanssen reaped some $1.4 million in cash and diamonds for his betrayals.

While for several years the FBI and CIA knew there was a well-placed informant in their ranks, Hanssen was for a long time not a top suspect.

He had a wife and six children, lived frugally, and mixed closely with Washington’s conservative Catholic elite.

US investigators eventually turned more attention to Hanssen with small bits of information provided by a Russian defector.

He was secretly tracked and recorded in his office for months before being caught at the Virginia dead drop.

In May 2002 he pleaded guilty to 15 counts of espionage in exchange for a prosecution agreement not to seek the death penalty.

“I apologize for my behavior. I am shamed by it.” Hanssen said at his sentencing.

“I have opened the door for calumny against my totally innocent wife and children,” he said. “I’ve hurt so many deeply.”

You Might Also Like

Venezuela Declares State of Emergency After Powerful Twin Quakes

SHA Suspends M.P. Shah Hospital From Its Provider Network Pending Investigations

Court Declines to Stop Bonfire Co-Founder From Using 48 Phone Lines in Divorce Case

Dettol Pulls Controversial Advert After Backlash Over ‘Toxic Men’ Comparison

Police Barricade Major Roads Into Nairobi Ahead of June 25 Commemorations

Share This Article
Facebook Twitter Whatsapp Whatsapp Email
Previous Article Unga, sugar, rice, cooking oil and bread prices to go up. Brace yourselves
Next Article Police Commission nullifies IG Koome’s promotion of senior officers. Here’s why

Latest stories

  • Venezuela Declares State of Emergency After Powerful Twin Quakes
  • SHA Suspends M.P. Shah Hospital From Its Provider Network Pending Investigations
  • Court Declines to Stop Bonfire Co-Founder From Using 48 Phone Lines in Divorce Case
  • Dettol Pulls Controversial Advert After Backlash Over ‘Toxic Men’ Comparison
  • Police Barricade Major Roads Into Nairobi Ahead of June 25 Commemorations
  • Gachagua Accuses Murkomen of Sponsoring Goons, Questions Security Intelligence Claims
  • Nairobi Assembly Approves Raila Odinga Monument at Supreme Court Roundabout
  • One Suspect Released as Eight Students Face Murder Charges Over Utumishi Girls Dormitory Fire
  • IEBC Sets August 10, 2027 as General Election Date

You Might Also Like

Gachagua Accuses Murkomen of Sponsoring Goons, Questions Security Intelligence Claims

2 days ago

Nairobi Assembly Approves Raila Odinga Monument at Supreme Court Roundabout

2 days ago

One Suspect Released as Eight Students Face Murder Charges Over Utumishi Girls Dormitory Fire

2 days ago

IEBC Sets August 10, 2027 as General Election Date

2 days ago

Pages

  • About us
  • News
  • Privacy Policy
  • sauce.co.ke

Find Us on Socials

sauce.co.kesauce.co.ke
Follow US
All rights reserved. A publication of Mercury Communications KE