Chattanooga Times Free Press

UK embassy guard in Berlin gets prison for spying for Russia

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LONDON — A former security guard at the British Embassy in Berlin was sentenced Friday to more than 13 years in prison for putting U.K. diplomats at “maximum risk” by selling secret informatio­n to Russia.

David Ballantyne Smith admitted spying but claimed he was driven by depression and a desire to “teach the embassy a lesson” because he felt badly treated at work.

But Judge Mark Wall said Smith was motivated by hatred of the U.K. and support for Russian President Vladimir Putin.

“He was paid for his treachery, and he was motivated by his antipathy towards this country and intended to damage this country’s interests by acting as he did,” Wall said.

Passing sentence at London’s Central Criminal Court, the judge said Smith’s actions had “potentiall­y catastroph­ic consequenc­es for others.”

He sentenced Smith to 13 years and two months in prison for eight breaches of the Official Secrets Act.

Smith, 58, gave the Russian Embassy in Germany’s capital informatio­n about the activities, identities, addresses and phone numbers of British officials, prosecutor­s said. Smith also collected intelligen­ce on the operation and layout of the British Embassy, which prosecutor­s said would be useful to “an enemy, namely the Russian state.”

The judge said Smith sent the Russians photograph­s of U.K. embassy staff with annotated descriptio­ns that put them at “maximum risk.”

Prosecutor­s say the former Royal Air Force member had expressed sympathy with Russian authoritie­s and consumed online conspiracy theories and pro-Russia propaganda.

German police arrested Smith at his home near Berlin in August 2021 after a sting operation conducted with British intelligen­ce officers that included undercover operatives posing as a Russian defector and a Russian spy. He was extradited to the U.K. in April 2022.

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