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

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00552R000404690004-6
Release Decision: 
RIPPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
August 9, 2010
Sequence Number: 
4
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
October 6, 1984
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00552R000404690004-6.pdf102.48 KB
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Sanitized Copy Approved for Release 2010/08/09 :CIA-RDP90-005528000404690004-6 A'~TI CLF APPEARED ON PtiGE NEW YORK TIMES 6 October 1984 ~'.B.I. Reportedly Knew Of Russian's Activities! "She made no effort to fit in here," he said. "She was achain-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- Tama, echoed the priest's view. By JUDITH CUNNINGS "I wouldn't say they were very ? sum cc nu . ew Ycrk Tim< smart people," said Alexander Polo- LOS ANGELES, Oct. 5 - A nest - vets, the publisher. "I'd be surprised if p -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 Toes- . ple." ' Soviet activities. He said he had been day in Federal District Court in Los I The bureau affidavit said that a ?told, "We know all about her." ,Angeles, said Mrs. Ogorodnikova was 1 search of the couple's apartment `Mrs. Ogorodnikova and her husband, interviewed by agents often between 1~ ~~ ^p such ..equipment as cipher 1`Tikolay Ogorodnikov, were an-ested : February: l9ffi 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 ha~e been acting as a double Richard W. Miller, a bureau agent ~ ,agent. Two Russian Communities >for 20 years, was ar.-~.sted Tuesday on ' , In 1983 and 1984, Mrs. Ogorodnikova , There are two Russian immigrant charges of selling counterespionage se- : ,received welfare payments of $242 a i communities in Los Angeles, the Rus- .crets to the Ogorodnikovs. It was the ; month and $72 in food stamps for her- scan Christians and the Russian Jews. First known instance of an agent being :self and her son, claiming the absence Recent emigres are said to number charged in an espionage case. of her husband, according to a spokes- about 15,000, with many more the de- ??The Russian couple, who came to this' man for the Department of Public So- scendants of earlier immigrants, dat- dountry in 1973, attracted considerable cial Services. Some Los Angeles ing principally to the period sun-ound- ,attention in the Russian immigrant County supervisors have called for an ing the 1917 Communist Revolution. 'communi here for their o nl ro- investigation of the awarding of those tY ~ y p ents. Both immigrant communities are Soviet views. Mrs. Ogorodnikova dis-? ~ ~~ centered in the aging neighborhoods of tributed Soviet-made movies and' ??_ She Called Herself an Agent Hollywood and West Hollywood. T'hey'. magazines. According to the bureau, Nis. Ogo- share Plummer Park there as a gath- Son Forced From School i-odnikova identified herself to Mr. eying place, primarily for the eIderly,. 1: `Miller as "a major" of the K.G.B, the and for cultural activities. But each _ -The Rev. Stephen Fitzgerald, pastor ~ ?Soviet security agency, and talked. of Russian community has its own cul- ~of the Russian Orthodox Church of the : promises from Soviet officials that her ~ center, its network of social-serv- 'Holy Virgin Mary in Hollywood, said in; ? son could attend a prestigious Soviet ice agencies and its own popular publi- aninterview today that he learned two . ?school in return for her efforts. Bureau cations, Panorama for the Jews and years ago that Mrs. Ogorodnikova had ~ officials in Washington said Mr. Miller The California Messenger for the persuaded a parish family of five to re- "was believed to have had a sexual rela- Christians. turn to the Soviet Union. He said she ' tionship with Mrs. Ogorodnikova. There have been three major waves ,had gotten the Soviet Consulate in San Many in the Russian community of Russian immigration to Los .An- :Francisco to pay for the move, as well here, said to be the largest outside of ~ geles: after the Russian Revolution as to promise a full scholarship to a 'New York, said they wondered whether and World War I, after World War II, ; Soviet utiversity for one of the family s ?~. Miller was seduced not by a profes- and from about 1973 to 1980, when the ~ehildren. ~ b b b' ' f t t Father Fitzgerald said that as a re- sult, he made Nis. Ogorodnikova with- draw her son, Matthew, from the church school. Angry, she "said we couldn't do that, that she would come hack here with a hundred people and that she would tell the F.B.I," Father. Fitzgerald said. sion spy u ree- y an am i ~ous Soviet Government relaxed immigra- lancer. lion 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 2010/08/09 :CIA-RDP90-005528000404690004-6