EX-AGENT'S LAWER SPY CHARGE FAULTY

Document Type: 
Collection: 
Document Number (FOIA) /ESDN (CREST): 
CIA-RDP90-00965R000201350009-5
Release Decision: 
RIFPUB
Original Classification: 
K
Document Page Count: 
1
Document Creation Date: 
December 22, 2016
Document Release Date: 
January 19, 2012
Sequence Number: 
9
Case Number: 
Publication Date: 
October 17, 1985
Content Type: 
OPEN SOURCE
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PDF icon CIA-RDP90-00965R000201350009-5.pdf79.2 KB
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Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP90-00965R000201350009-5 4/ ART. _ .. _ ~~ ON PAGE NEW YORK TIMES 17 October 1985 Ex-Agent's' Lawyer Calls Spy Charge Faulty 6 In the second day of his closing argu- ments in Federal District Court here, Joel Levine, a lawyer for Mr. Miller, insisted that there were too many holes in the Government's argument that Mr. Miller told the bureau about his contact last year only because he knew he was being investigated. Mr. Miller is charged with conspiring with the Soviet emigre, Svetlana Ogo- rodnikov, who became his lover, to pass secret F.B.I. documents to the Soviet Union. The woman and her hus- band, Nikolay, pleaded guilty to espio- nage charges earlier and are serving prison terms. The Government asserts that Mrs. Ogorodnikov was controlled by the K.G.B., the Soviet intelligence agency, and the defense contends that Mr. Miller was trying to infiltrate the agen- cy. - M. Miller, 48 years old, a portly, be- spectacled 20-year veteran of the bu- reati who was dismissed a few hours before his arrest last Oct. 2. He faces a possible life sentence if convicted. Lawyer Assails Testimony Mr. Levine sought to cast doubt on the assertion of an F.B.I. witness that Mr. Miller realized he was being ob- served one day in September 1964. The agent, Paul DeFlores, testified that Mr. Miller saw Mr. DeFlores watching him with Mrs. Ogorodnikov in a public park. Mr. DeFlores, who said he was in the park by coincidence, testified that he and Mr. Miller looked at each other and that he saw Mr. Miller "raise his eye- brows" from 48 feet away. "If Mr. Miller was wearing his By JUDITH CUMIlr INGS Spatial to Ths New Yak Timm LOS ANGELES, Oct. 16 - The de- fense for Richard W. Miller battled to- day to convince a jury that the former agent of the Federal Bureau of Investi- gation could not have been a spy be- cause he had voluntarily disclosed his clandestine dealings with a Soviet emigre. glasses, how could Mr. DeFlores see his eyebrows," Mr. Levine asked the Jury. "If Mr. Miller wasn't wearing his glasses, how could he see Mr. De- Flores?- A day later Mr. Miller went to a su- perior at the bureau, Bryce Christen- sen, and said he had been acting on a plan of his own to infiltrate the K.G.B. by using the Ogorodnikova and that he now needed the bureau's help. Mr. Miller has contended that he was trying to become a hero. The facts in the case could be inter- preted to support either the Govern- ment's interpretation or Mr. Miller's, Mr. Levine told the jurors. But the law- yer said if they held a reasonable doubt about the Government's contention that the only reason Mr. Miller went to the bureau with his story was because he knew that he had been uncovered as a spy, then they could not convict him. The defense lawyer described his client as an "average" man "with average weaknesses" who never be- longed in the F.B.I. "He was a shoe that never fit," Mr. Levine said. Despite Mr. Miller's failings, Mr. Le- vine said, he had the spirit to make an underdog's long-shot bid at glory, in the style of American movie heroes. Mr. Miller was "not as cute as Eddie Mur- phy" or "as macho as Clint East- wood," but "he was trying to hit a home run and he did," Mr. Levine said. Throughout his arguments, Mr. Le- vine sought to persuade the jury that Mr. Miller had virtually achieved his goal of ensnaring Soviet spies but was cheated of his achievement by a bureau hierarchy that disapproved of his methods and of him. The Government chanted that Mr. Miller turned over to the Soviet Union, through Mrs. Ogorodnikov, what the prosecutor, Russell Hayman, called "the playbook of American intelligence operations worldwide." Mr. Hayman described this as the most critical of several classified documents Mr. Miller gave Mrs. Ogorodnikov for "$50,000 in gold." Mr. Miller was questioned for five days by bureau investigators, in gruel- ing sessions, Mr. Levine said, adding that before they ended Mr. Miller, in a confused state, confessed. But the law- yer said he also told his questioners, i "I'll sign anything." The confession was false and wrongfully obtained, Mr. Levine said. He told the jurors that the Govern- ment had provided no evidence that Mr. Miller had passed any classified documents to Mrs. Ogorodnikov. Declassified and Approved For Release 2012/01/19: CIA-RDP90-00965R000201350009-5