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AP. 14 April 2002. Russian defense worker: CIA drugged me while I
searched for relatives.

MOSCOW -- A Russian government defense employee at the center of the
latest spy scandal with the United States was drugged and recruited by
the CIA while seeking information about long-lost relatives, he said on
state-run television Sunday.

The employee, identified only as Viktor, told RTR television he was
trying to fulfill his dying father's wish to contact relatives who fled
to the United States decades earlier and wrote a letter back. That
letter in the 1950s was ignored at the KGB's request.

Viktor's face was blacked out during Sunday's broadcast.

Russia's Federal Security Service, the main successor to the KGB, said
last week it foiled an alleged U.S. espionage effort involving Viktor.
The accusations came after a string of spy scandals in recent years and
amid preparations for a U.S.-Russian presidential summit next month.

In the interview with RTR, Viktor said he decided against contacting the
U.S. Embassy in Moscow to fulfill his father's wish last year because he
works for a Russian Defense Ministry installation and thought such a
visit would raise suspicion.

Instead, he approached an embassy in another ex-Soviet republic. The FSB
has not named which country.

Embassy employees promised to help Viktor and arranged another meeting.

"I started to understand in the middle of the conversation that they
were trying to recruit me," Viktor told RTR. "But I cannot describe how
the conversation ended or how I ended up at the Russian Embassy."

Viktor later was found on a public bench suffering from shock and
amnesia, RTR said.

The Russian Embassy sent him to Moscow, where the FSB concluded that
U.S. officers had slipped him psychotropic drugs in drinks and cookies
in an effort to extract information.

Under FSB control, Viktor then received instructions and secret packets
from the U.S. Embassy in Moscow. The Russian security service identified
Viktor's contact as Yunju Kensinger, a third secretary in the embassy's
consular department, and reported its discoveries to the U.S. Embassy.

The embassy did not respond, RTR said. Kensinger -- who allegedly never
met with Viktor but instead used secret drop points and messages in
invisible ink, according to the security service's press office -- left
Moscow last month.

CIA officials and the U.S. Embassy in Moscow have declined to comment on
the allegations, which were first reported last week.



. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

Barry Stoller
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/ProletarianNews
9-11 is Over! We Can Win!

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