Why Weren't the Russian 'Spies' Charged with Espionage?

Because they didn't find out anything secret.

BY JOSHUA E. KEATING | JUNE 29, 2010

Yesterday, federal prosecutors unsealed criminal complaints against 11 people who were allegedly part of a Russian spy ring. According to the prosecution, the suspects lived in the United States under false names while trying to penetrate "policy-making circles" on behalf of Russia's SVR, the successor to the KGB specializing in foreign intelligence. The defendants were charged with "conspiracy to act as an agent of a foreign government without notifying the U.S. attorney general," an offense that carries a maximum sentence of five years in prison. Why weren't they charged with espionage, which can often bring a life sentence or even the death penalty?

Probably because they never found out very much. U.S. law defines espionage as transmitting or attempting to transmit "any document, writing, code book, signal book, sketch, photograph, photographic negative, blueprint, plan, map, model, note, instrument, appliance, or information relating to the national defense" to a foreign government with the intent to harm the United States or give advantage to the foreign nation. Because federal prosecutors have not charged the "illegals," as they were known because they had no official credentials, with espionage, they either never got their hands on anything -- or it can't yet be proven that they did.

With details about messages in invisible ink and buried money caches, the criminal complaint might read like a Cold War-era spy thriller, but it's still unclear what exactly, any of the defendants are supposed to have found out. The closest thing to espionage in the charges is a meeting at a seminar between defendant Donald Howard Heathfield and a U.S. government official who "works on issues of strategic planning related to nuclear weapon development," but it doesn't appear that Heathfield learned any classified information.

Although prosecutors might still file additional charges, the activities of these so-called spies don't appear to be on the same level as clear-cut espionage cases like those of Robert Hanssen, the FBI agent who sold classified information to the Soviet Union and Russia over more than two decades, and Aldrich Ames, the CIA case officer whose leaks to Moscow led to the deaths of at least 10 U.S. agents in the Soviet Union. Both men are currently serving life sentences in federal prison.

Violating the Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA), which requires that agents representing the interests of a foreign power register with the Justice Department, is a far lesser offense and one that rarely merits much media attention. Prominent FARA cases include Iraqi-American businessman Samir Vincent, who admitted to acting as an unregistered agent of Saddam Hussein's government during the U.N. "oil-for-food" scandal, and former President Jimmy Carter's brother Billy, who was forced to register as a foreign agent to avoid charges that he was paid $220,000 by Muammar al-Qaddafi's government to curry favor for Libya in Washington. The scandal, and a resulting congressional investigation, came to be known as "Billygate."

Thanks to Plato Cacheris, partner at the law firm of Trout Cacheris and former attorney for Robert Hanssen and Aldrich Ames.

Shireley SHEPARD/AFP/Getty Images

 SUBJECTS:
 

Joshua E. Keating is associate editor at Foreign Policy.

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LAVBO0321

4:26 AM ET

June 30, 2010

Very Interesting

Two reasons they may not have bee charged;
1. No evidence found so far.
2. Politics.

Most people have no idea what an 'illegal' is. Most reports have gotten it wrong. A Russian spy, comes to the United States, enters the country under false documents or even comes in over our open boarder illegally. Very normal back during the cold war before the whole illegal immigration issue came to be. They live and work as Americans or become naturalized after time. Their missions are the most insidious. Influencing policy makers, reconnaissance, sabotage, and worse.

They are the ones who operate under non-official cover, meaning they don't work out of embassies or consulates. They have no ties to the Russian Federation. But of course the only way to find them is by watching the known diplomatic immunity intelligence officers working out of the embassies. Interesting that during this day and age of the internet, they would be so stupid as to do that now.

This case is history in the making.

 

ASHOK2718

4:04 PM ET

July 1, 2010

You seem to know a lot about FSB

hmmmmmm I wonder how ?

But yeah I agree that people like the one above get paranoid after watching lots of faux News or by reading those dammed war books.

A/c to them any 'unamerican' person is suspect and the definition of unamerican varies too much.

@ LOBO i know you will read or write a book about this.

 

WILLM

4:08 PM ET

July 1, 2010

WillB

Today in the US we have two passport holders working for the US government giving information to the second passport nation about US policies. There is nothing new in this arrest. It is political and grand standing.

 

RSAFSOZ

4:48 PM ET

July 2, 2010

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