F.B.I. REPORTEDLY KNEW OF RUSSIAN'S ACTIVITIES

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000404280020-3
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
July 22, 2010
Sequence Number: 
20
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
October 6, 1984
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000404280020-3.pdf101.74 KB
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STAT Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/22 : CIA-RDP90-00552R000404280020-3 ARTICLE APPEARED ON PAGE_ By JUDITH CUMMrNGS "I wouldn't say they were very Speeiad to The New York Times smart people," said Alexander Polo- LOS ANGELES, Oct. 5 - A priest vets, the publisher. "I'd be surprised if The priest said he called the F.B.I. they worked for,the K.G.B. I think they said today that he told Federal agents himself and was informed that "they were just happy to play some special two years ago that a parishioner, Swet- were well acquainted with her activi- role, to get some respect from our peo- lana Ogorodnikova, was active in pro- ties." An F.B.I. affidavit, filed Tues- ple." Soviet activities. He said he had been day in Federal District Court in Los The bureau affidavit said that a -told, "We know all about her." Aneles, said g o ova was search of the couple's apartment interviewed by Mrs. often en between 1 Mrs. Ogorodnikova and her husband, turned up such. equipment as cipher Nikolay Ogorodnikov, were arrested :February. 1982 and August 1984. pads, code books, concealment devices ' tuesday on charges of participating in Bill Baker, an assistant director of and microdots, as well as bureau docu- an espionage conspiracy involving the the F.B.I.,in Washington, said that she. ments and records of payments to Mr. cooperation of an agent of the Federal had given the bureau information and Miller. Bureau of Investigation. 'could have been acting as a double Two Russian Communities - Ri!`ha rA W Millar a i-_- --t agent. I Q.B.I. Reportedly Knew Of Russian's Activities' first known instance of an agent being charged in an espionage case. ,charges of selling counterespionage se- received welfare payments of $242 a communities in Los Angeles, the Rus- crets to the Ogorodnikovs. It was the. month and $72 in food stamps for her- sian Christians and the Russian Jews. NEW YORK TIMES 6 October 1984 "She made no effort to fit in here," he said. "She was a chain-smoker, dressed like an aging punk-rocker. No, she was bragging. How could she be a K.G.B. agent who was so open about Soviet sympathies?" The publisher of a popular Russian Jewish magazine here, Almanac-Pano- rama, echoed the priest's view. for 20 years, was ar.ested Tuesday on In 1983 and 1984, Mrs. Ogorodnikova . There are two Russian immigrant The Russian couple, who came to this country in 1973, attracted considerable attention in the Russian immigrant community here for their openly pro-: Soviet views. Mrs. Ogorodnikova dis- tributed Soviet-made movies and magazines. Son Forced From School ?_ The Rev. Stephen Fitzgerald, pastor ,of the Russian Orthodox Church of the 'Holy Virgin Mary in Hollywood, said in an interview today that he learned two years ago that Mrs. Ogorodnikova had persuaded a parish family of five to re- turn to the Soviet Union. He said she ,had gotten the Soviet Consulate in San ;Francisco to pay for the move, as well as to promise a full scholarship to a Soviet university for one of the family's children. of her husband, according to a spokes- man for the Department of Public So- cial Services. Some Los Angeles County supervisors have called for an investigation of the awarding of those payments. She Called Herself an Agent todnikova identified herself to Mr. Miller as "a major" of the K.G.B, the Soviet security agency, and talked of promises from Soviet officials that her Recent emigres are said to number about 15,000, with many more the de- scendants of earlier immigrants, dat- ing principally to the period surround- ing the 1917 Communist Revolution. Both immigrant communities are centered in the aging neighborhoods of Hollywood and West Hollywood. They share Plummer Park there as a gath- ering place, primarily for the elderly, and for cultural activities. But each Russian community has its own cul- tural center, its network of social-serv- ice agencies and its own popular publi- cations, Panorama for the Jews and The California Messenger for the Christians. Father Fitzgerald said that as a re- sult, he made Mrs. Ogorodnikova with- draw her son, Matthew, from the church school. Angry, she "said we couldn't do that, that she would come back here with a hundred people and that she would tell the F.B.I," Father. Fitzgerald said. -school in return for her efforts. Bureau officials in Washington said Mr. Miller was believed to have had a sexual rela- tionship with Mrs. Ogorodnikova. I There have been three major waves Many in the Russian community of Russian immigration to Los An- 'here, said to be the largest outside of , geles: after the Russian Revolution New York, said they wondered whether and World War I, after World War II, Mr. Miller was seduced not by a profes- and from about 1973 to 1980, when the sional spy but by an ambitious free- Soviet Government relaxed immigra-' lancer. tion policies regarding Jews. The re- Father Fitzgerald, for one, rejected cent Jewish arrivals are known here as the notion that she was actually a : "the Third Wave." K.G.B. agent. "A K.G.B. groupie, ,maybe," he said. Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/07/22 : CIA-RDP90-00552R000404280020-3