A WIDER NET CATCHES SPIES IN RECORD NUMBERS FOR U.S.

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000303050024-6
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 22, 2010
Sequence Number: 
24
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
December 23, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000303050024-6.pdf103.58 KB
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STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/22 : CIA-RDP90-00552R000303050024-6 'WED ON Pkt WASHINGTON TIMES 23 December 1985 A wider net catches spies va record numbers for U.S. Ex-clerk at FBI accused of selling data to Soviets By Bill Gertz THE WASHINGTON TIMES A courier with access to top- secret congressional hearings will be arraigned today before a U.S. Dis- trict Court judge on charges of at- tempting to sell secret documents to the Soviets. Randy Miles Jeffries, 26, a former FBI identification section clerk, met Friday night at the Holiday Inn Mo- tel at 14th Street and Massachusetts Avenue NW with an FBI agent who pretended to be a Soviet intelligence officer, according to court papers filed during a detention hearing Sat- urday. Mr. Jeffries' arrest followed a grand jury indictment Friday in Bal- timore of Ronald Pelton, a former National Security Agency Soviet af- fairs specialist, on six counts of espi- onage. He is said to have sold NSA communications data to the Soviets for $35,000. Mr. Pelton is scheduled to be ar- raigned today before U.S. District Judge Herbert F. Murray in Balti- more. Soviet GRU military intelligence service officers are known to oper- ate out of the Soviet Embassy's naval and military office on Belmont Road in Northwest Washington, where FBI agents first saw Mr. Jeffries on Dec. 14, an FBI statement said. Sergei Bokhan, a senior GRU of- ficial, defected to the United States last May from the Soviet Embassy in Athens and has been cooperating with U.S. intelligence officials, but officials would not say if there was a connection to Mr. Jeffries' arrest. Mr. Jeffries told the agent he had already delivered "60 pages of sam- ple copies" of transcripts of closed sessions of the House to the Soviets, the papers stated. of the security police were tried and sentenced to terms of between 14 and 25 years. Their superior at the Interior Ministry was sentenced to 25 years for instigating the crime. Mrs. Byrdy's conclusion of sui- cide in this year's death was chal- lenged by human-rights organiza- tions and Father Poplawski's Eastern Orthodox Church. Contri- buting to the skepticism was the be- lief by human-rights monitors that Mrs. Byrdy gave neither a full nor accurate report in the trial last year of the four men charged with the murder of Father Popieluszko. Keston College says Mrs. Byrdy was subjected to "official pressure" to minimize the extent of the injuries inflicted upon the second priest. "In this instance, with the victim being a member of a minority group, there is not as much official concern or weight of public opinion as in the case of Rev. Popieluszko," re- searchers at Keston College say. The Polish Orthodox church is po- litically and geographically isolated in eastern Poland and claims fewer than 600,000 members. Before official denials of the mur- der were made, both the head of the Polish Orthodox church, Arch- bishop Bazyli, and church spokeman Jerzy Thfiluk confirmed that Father Poplawski was murdered, but said the church would refrain from any official statements until the govern- ment investigation was completed. Even then, a source from the Bialystok area said that Polish police had not even tried to ascertain Fa- ther Poplawski's whereabouts or movements in the week between his disappearance and the finding of his body." Two motives have been put forth by a variety of sources who accuse the secret police of targeting Father Poplawski. One is that the government wants to cause an ecumenical rift between Roman Catholics and the Polish Orthodox church by sowing discord between the groups. Those who sug- gest this motive note that Roman Catholics are among the strongest supporters of the trade union Soli- darity, which the government has tried to suppress, and after the death was initially ruled a suicide, rumors began circulating that he was killed for "attacking Solidarity." [In a weekend leadership meet- ing, a senior government official said Polish authorities intend to crack down harder on Solidarity and opposition activists who are "threatening the country's political stability," Reuters reported yester- day. [PAP, the official Polish news agency, said the warning was issued by Deputy Interior Minister Wlady- slaw Pozoga at a two-day meeting of the Central Commmittee of Poland's Communist Party. [Mr. Pozoga accused Opposition activists and their Western support- ers of trying to discredit the party and its security apparatus, disrupt preparations for the congress and "sustain the myth of the former Soli- darity free trade union."] Keston College sources report, however, that in a sermon delivered shortly before his death, the Orthodox priest had warned his con- gregation that Solidarity was in con- stant danger of infiltration by secret police. . A second motive, say human- rights monitors, may lie in the deter- mination of Father Poplawski to overcome the delaying tactics of Polish authorities to whom his church had to apply for building and renovation permits. "Communist governments often use the granting and revoking of land permits as a means of control- ling and ultimately destroying the strength of the local church," the Rev. Jeffrey Collins of Christian Reponse International said in an ear- lier interview. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/22 : CIA-RDP90-00552R000303050024-6