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Convicted spy and former FBI Special Agent Robert Hanssen dies in prison
2023-06-06
Shouldn't have roomed with Ghislaine
[CNN] Robert Philip Hanssen, who received payments of $1.4 million in cash and diamonds for the information he gave the Soviet Union and Russia, has died, the Federal Bureau of Prisons announced Monday. He was 79 years old.

Hanssen had been in custody at Colorado’s USP Florence ADMAX since July 17, 2002.
Unless his cell is being readied for Brennan, Comey, or one of the Biden crime family, we're not leveraging the vacancy.
"On Monday, June 5, 2023, at approximately 6:55 am, inmate Robert Hanssen was found unresponsive at the United States Penitentiary (USP) Florence ADMAX in Florence, Colorado," a release from the Federal Bureau of Prisons said. "Responding staff immediately initiated life-saving measures. Staff requested emergency medical services (EMS) and life-saving efforts continued."

"Mr. Hanssen was subsequently pronounced deceased by EMS personnel," the release said.

In 2001, Hanssen pleaded guilty to 15 counts of espionage and conspiracy in exchange for the government not seeking the death penalty. He was sentenced to life in prison without possibility of parole.

Investigators accused him of compromising dozens of Soviet personnel who were working for the United States, some of whom were executed. He shared details of several US technical operations such as eavesdropping, surveillance and interception of communications. And he gave the Soviets the US plans of how it would react to a Soviet nuclear attack, both in protecting top government officials and retaliating against such an attack.

Hanssen began spying for the Soviet Union in 1979, three years after he had joined the FBI as a special agent.

The counterintelligence officer worked as a spy for nearly 15 years, during some of the most consequential times for US and Russia relations and continuing past the end of the Cold War. He took a hiatus from spying for four years in the 1980s after being convinced by his wife, Bonnie.
Did she know he went back to the work, or did he lie to her, too?
In a letter allegedly written by Hanssen to the Russians, he said that he was inspired as a teen by the memoirs of British double agent Kim Philby.

"I decided on this course when I was 14 years old," says the letter cited in the FBI’s affidavit. "I’d read Philby’s book. Now that is insane, eh!"

The FBI began surveilling Hanssen in 2000 after he was identified from a fingerprint and from a tape recording supplied by a disgruntled Russian intelligence operative.
Back when the FBI was in the business of protecting America from its enemies...
After he was caught in 2001, Hanssen told his US interrogators, "I could have been a devastating spy, I think, but I didn’t want to be a devastating spy. I wanted to get a little money and get out of it."

Hanssen apologized for his actions during his sentencing in 2002. "I am shamed by it. Beyond its illegality, I have torn the trust of so many. Worse, I have opened the door for calumny against my totally innocent wife and our children. I hurt them deeply. I have hurt so many deeply," he said.
Hurt some of them to death. That rings of the apology of the farmer to the pigs he’s sending to slaughter.
Courtesy of Frank G, the NY Post adds:
Hanssen was apprehended in February 2001 while making a "dead drop" of classified information for his Russian intelligence contacts at a park near his northern Virginia home. He pleaded guilty that July to 13 counts of espionage, one count of attempted espionage, and one of conspiracy to commit espionage.

"The FBI trusted him with some of the most sensitive secrets of the U.S. government, and instead of upholding that trust, he abused and betrayed it," the bureau said in a history of the case on its website.
Related:
Hanssen: 2023-01-05 Code Name Blue Wren: The True Story of America's Most Dangerous Female Spy
Hanssen: 2022-05-20 Inside the Hunt for Russia's ‘Fourth Man' Within the CIA
Hanssen: 2017-07-11 Miscellaneous Norwegian Defense Chief in classified report: The Armed Forces can not defend the country
Related:
Florence ADMAX: 2006-05-04 7 x 12 cell, isolation likely for Moussaoui
Related:
Florence: 2023-04-16 Ten Years After the Boston Marathon Bombing, No One Dares Discuss Why It Happened
Florence: 2023-02-05 Kenyan citizen among those sentence in US for 7 years in jail in a love scandal case
Florence: 2022-12-14 Pervert Mormon cult leader Samuel Bateman is heard ranting about killing followers in 'blood atonement' ritual for their wrongs - as he's pictured with 22 of his 23 wives
Posted by:Besoeker

#5  Somewhere I recall reading an assessment that the prolonged isolation at the SuperMax prison had caused Hanssen to lose much of his ability to speak or comprehend speech. Such a sterile, inhuman environment seems a perfect and appropriate end to this despicable creature.
Posted by: NoMoreBS   2023-06-06 12:07  

#4  Good riddance
Posted by: DarthVader   2023-06-06 10:37  

#3  FBI 'spycatcher' who brought down Robert Hanssen after he sold US nuclear secrets to Russia says he wanted to confront him 'one last time' - as traitor dies in supermax aged 79
Posted by: Skidmark   2023-06-06 08:30  

#2  Ugh. Thank you for sharing, Bangkok Billy. Stay safe out there!
Posted by: trailing wife   2023-06-06 08:09  

#1  I attended a high end debrief of this case back in 2004. He was a weird dude to say the least. Opus Dei Catholic yet Hanssen offered his best friend the opportunity to watch him have sex w/his wife. No proof he banged the stripper but sure tried to woo her w/cash and jewelry. Not 100% but the briefer said the Russians didn't know his true ID until he was arrested. Hannsen's info was way more valuable than Ames as he gave up not only names but several CONUS-based active operations that the Russians in turn used against us (the words immeasurable and incalculable were used). The Feds took the death penalty off the table as Hanssen agreed to provide a full accounting of his activities. At the time, the briefer said they knew for a fact he was still lying.
Posted by: Bangkok Billy   2023-06-06 05:27  

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