MOSCOW BUILDS CASE AGAINST DANILOFF

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000706630008-5
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
December 21, 2011
Sequence Number: 
8
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
September 10, 1986
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000706630008-5.pdf92.06 KB
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Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/21: CIA-RDP90-00965R000706630008-5 NEW YORK TIMES 10 September 1986 ON PAGE _i ' Moscow Builds Case Against 1janfloff 5 By PHILIP TAUBMAN Spedal to The New York fines MOSCOW, Sept 9 - Nicholas S . Daniloff, the indicted American corre- spondent, said today that he believed the Soviet authorities were trying to as- semble an espionage case against him dating back five years. Mr. Daniloff, who is a correspondent of the magazine U.S. News & World Re- port, told his wife that investigators had been questioning him about his work since he took up his assignment in the. Soviet Union in 1981, . The Government newspaper Izves- tia, in a detailed account of the case against Mr. Daniloff, indicated Monday that the authorities intended to link Mr. Daniloff to Paul M. Stombaugh, an American diplomat who was expelled last Mr. Daniloff'swifea Ruth, charges, said her husband told her during a 90-minute meeting at Lefortovo prison, "They are . going back over all my journalistic ac- tivities and building up a case." He said he was being interrogated four hours a day. Danibff on Summit Prospects Mrs. Daniloff said her husband seemed resigned to spending time in prison before his case was resolved. "I think he thinks it will be a long haul, but he thinks that things are esca- ,lating rather dangerously," she said, 'You know he would not like to am it torpedo the summit or U.S.-Soviet rela-' tions." Mrs. Daniloff said her husband felt that his case was political and that the investigation of espionage was a for- mality that would be used against him only if his case was not resolved and he was put on trial. Mr. Daniloff, who was arrested on Aug. 30, was indicted on Sunday. The Government press agency Tass said today that the United States was trying to turn the detention of Mr. Daniloff into an excuse not to engage in serious arms control negotiatiaoa. Tass said warnings by the Amer- icans that the Daniloff case could harm relations were a "pretext to evade, for the umpteenth time, a discussion of what really is the centerpiece Issue not only of the Soviet-U.S. relationship, but of international life in general - the need to end the arms race." "If Daniloff had not been caught spying. they would have found some other pretext," Tass said The commentary, by Boris Sha- bayev, a Tass analyst, said: "Dantloff is not the first Soviet spy se- caught red-handed by curity service and so it would have been only natural for his bosses to hold their tongues in shame to spare them- selves more embarrassment. But they have raised a deafening uplwith and are threatening Moscow ., every kind of punishment In a dispatch from Washington, the press agency also quoted Senator Dave Durenberger, a Minnesota Republican ~l who is chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, as having said Sunday on the. NBC News televi= sion program "Meet the Press" that' American intelligence agencies were not prohibited by law from using jour- nalists as informants. (On the Sunday program, Senator Durenberger noted that central a intelligence Agency against using journalists, but that there was no statute prohibiting such use. David Holliday, a spokesman for the Senate Intelligence Committee, said Tuesday that the C.I.A. rule could be waived at the request of its director, but Mr. Holliday said he knew of no instance in which this had happened. "I never know it to be done," he said "This is a very strict rule, and they adhere to it" J Last week, President Reagan, in a personal letter to Mikhail S. Gorba- chev, is said to have given assurances that Mr. Daniloff is no spy. A spokesman of the Soviet Foreign Ministry, Gennadi I. Gerasimov, said today that "Soviet-American relations should not be a hostage to the Daniloff case," which Mr. Gerasimov said was not important" "If both sides were to make an effort, it would be possible to find a solution," he said. Allusion to a Proposal He seemed to allude to a proposal he mentioned on Monday, to the effect that both Mr. Daniloff and Gennadi F. Zakharov, a Soviet spy suspect in New York, be released in the custody of their respective ambassadors pending trials. Mrs. Danffoff, after having visited her husband today, said he was looking thin and felt isolated, spending most of his time in an small cell She said that investigators from the K.G.B., the Soviet intelligence and in- ternal security agency, had told Mr. Daniloff that the death penalty was the ultimate punishment for conviction on espionage charges. It is very nasty when you are alone in your cell and people are talking to you about the death penalty," she said "He is living in a vacuum here He does not know what is going on in the outside world and it cairbe very frightening." Mrs. Daniloff said that at her hus. band's request, prism authorities had improved his diet slightly and were al- lowing him two hours of exercise daffy. She said Mr. Daniloff was being given two glasses of milk a day to go along with the soup and buckwheat ce- real he was receiving. Declassified in Part - Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2011/12/21: CIA-RDP90-00965R000706630008-5