Word: eds
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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...minutes after Ed drove away, the FBI seized three Russians in a nearby shopping center: Rudolf Chernyayev and Valdik Enger, employees of the United...
...week in default of $2 million bail apiece. They face life imprisonment if convicted. Zinyakin, who has diplomatic immunity, may simply be sent home by the Soviets at the State Department's request. As is apt to happen in the spy business, the three had been doublecrossed by Ed, actually a loyal Navy officer who went along with the Russians to entrap them. His name is being withheld, but he may have to reveal himself when the case goes to court...
...classic spy case," said an FBI man-but it was not a particularly difficult one. Ed had tipped off the FBI when Jim first phoned him. The Soviet agent, in follow-up letters, asked the officer about his naval background and his access to classified material. He then promised to pay thousands of dollars a month for "longterm cooperation," and provided money for a camera to use in photographing documents...
Through the long, cold fall and winter, Ed drove the New Jersey highways, littering them, on Soviet instructions, with orange juice, milk and peanut crunch containers into which he had crammed documents for Jim. In return, as promised, the money flowed freely. All the while the FBI screened his giveaway secrets -and kept the cash he received...
...March 11 Ed went to a phone booth on the Garden State Parkway. It rang and Jim's now familiar voice told him to look under the shelf of a nearby phone, where he found written instructions. He was to stuff his documents into a used milk container and make the drop at the base of a telephone pole on Fulner Street in South Amboy. Waiting for him there was a red coffee can containing $3,000, which brought his total payoff to $16,000. The can also held another message: "By the way, have you paid attention...