The Boston Globe

Robert Hanssen, 79; spied for Russia while with FBI

- By Peter Baker

WASHINGTON — Robert P. Hanssen, a former FBI agent who spied for Moscow off and on for more than two decades during and after the Cold War in one of the most damaging espionage cases in American history, was discovered dead in his prison cell in Colorado on Monday, federal authoritie­s announced. He was 79.

The Federal Bureau of Prisons said in a statement that Mr. Hanssen was found unresponsi­ve just before 7 a.m. at the US Penitentia­ry Florence, where he was serving a life sentence. He was pronounced dead after lifesaving efforts by emergency medical workers. The statement did not identify a cause.

Mr. Hanssen’s case was considered one of the most notorious spy scandals of his generation, shocking FBI leaders and other government officials when they learned that one of their own had been feeding informatio­n to the other side with impunity for so many years. To this day, the FBI describes him as “the most damaging spy in bureau history.”

In exchange for $1.4 million in cash, bank funds, and diamonds, Mr. Hanssen passed along a torrent of secrets to Moscow, including one disclosing that the US government had dug a tunnel underneath the Soviet Embassy in Washington to eavesdrop on diplomatic and other communicat­ions. He also informed Moscow about three KGB officers who were secretly spying for the United States, two of whom were later executed.

“The magnitude of Hanssen’s crimes cannot be overstated,” Paul J. McNulty, the US attorney who prosecuted him, said Monday in response to reports of his death. “They will long be remembered as being among the most egregious betrayals of trust in US history. It was both a low point and an investigat­ive success for the FBI.”

Mr. Hanssen’s arrest, in 2001, briefly ruptured relations between the United States and Russia at a time when the two former enemies were seeking to build friendlier ties after the collapse of the Soviet Union. President George W. Bush expelled about 50 Russian diplomats, and President Vladimir Putin of Russia retaliated with a tit-for-tat expulsion of 50 American diplomats. But both sides were determined to end the matter there and not allow it to result in a more lasting rift.

The discovery of Mr. Hanssen’s espionage embarrasse­d the FBI and resulted in changes to security procedures. He told investigat­ors after his arrest that security at the bureau was so lax that it amounted to “criminal negligence,” saying that it was a simple matter to gain access to classified material on official computers with only routine security clearances.

“Any clerk in the bureau could come up with stuff on that system,” Mr. Hanssen said, according to a Justice Department report on his case in 2002. “It’s criminal what’s laid out.”

Mr. Hanssen pleaded guilty to 15 counts of espionage and conspiracy to avoid the death penalty and expressed remorse for his betrayal. “I am shamed by it,” he said during the 2002 hearing at which he was sentenced to life in prison without parole.

Since July 17, 2002, Mr. Hanssen had been in custody at Florence, the supermax facility that is considered the most secure prison in the federal system and used in recent years to house convicted terrorists. Inmates there are typically held in solitary confinemen­t for 23 hours a day.

Mr. Hanssen joined the FBI in 1976 as a special agent and went on to hold several counterint­elligence positions that gave him access to classified informatio­n. He began spying for the Soviet Union three years after joining the bureau, when he was assigned to a counterint­elligence unit in New York, by walking into the New York offices of Amtorg, a Soviet trade organizati­on that was known to be a front for the Soviet military intelligen­ce agency.

He stopped spying for several years starting in 1980, after his wife, Bonnie, walked in on him in the basement of their home in Westcheste­r County, New York, and he quickly tried to cover up his papers. He confessed to her and to a priest affiliated with Opus Dei, the conservati­ve Catholic organizati­on to which the couple belonged.

In 1985, he began spying again, providing informatio­n to the KGB. This time he did a better job of covering his tracks, using encrypted communicat­ions and other secret methods; even the Russians never knew who he was. Identifyin­g himself only by code names like B and Ramon Garcia, Mr. Hanssen turned over sensitive informatio­n said to include specific satellite intelligen­ce collection capabiliti­es.

He stopped spying again after the Soviet Union collapsed, then resumed again in 1999. His betrayal went undetected for years as he collected at least $600,000 in cash and diamonds from the KGB and its post-Soviet successor, SVR, which told him that they had set aside another $800,000 for him in a Moscow bank, according to prosecutor­s.

In the 1990s, after the arrest of Aldrich Ames, a CIA agent who had also spied for the Russians, the FBI and the CIA realized that someone else was still providing Russia with classified informatio­n, and they began “Graysuit,” a hunt for the unknown double agent. But it was not until 2000 that investigat­ors were able to narrow the search, when the FBI paid $7 million to a former Russian intelligen­ce officer for a file on the anonymous mole who called himself B — a file that included an audio recording with a voice that two FBI analysts who knew Mr. Hanssen eventually recognized.

Using fingerprin­ts, the FBI confirmed that the mole was Mr. Hanssen and surveilled him for months, even promoting him to keep better track of him. In February 2001, agents arrested him in Foxstone Park in the Washington suburb of Vienna, Va., a few blocks from his home, after he had left classified documents in a garbage bag at a “dead drop” for his Russian handlers under a wooden footbridge.

Mr. Hanssen seemed unsurprise­d at finally being caught. “What took you so long?” he reportedly asked when arrested.

Robert Philip Hanssen was born April 18, 1944, in Chicago to Vivian and Howard Hanssen, a career Chicago police officer who did intelligen­ce work for the department. An only child who was seen as nerdy and never fit in, Robert had a difficult relationsh­ip with his father, who emotionall­y abused him. He grew up obsessed with James Bond, collecting spy gadgets and even opening a Swiss bank account.

Robert received a bachelor’s degree in chemistry in 1966 from Knox College in Illinois, where he also studied Russian, but after graduation he was rejected by the National Security Agency when he applied for a position in cryptograp­hy.

He enrolled in dentistry school at Northweste­rn University, but later transferre­d to the business school, where he received a master’s degree in business administra­tion. While in dentistry school, he met and married Bonnie Wauck and converted from Lutheran to join her Roman Catholic faith. After a year working at an accounting firm, he took a position with the Chicago Police Department specializi­ng in forensic accounting. Four years later he moved to the FBI.

 ?? FBI VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Mr. Hanssen’s case shocked FBI leaders and others.
FBI VIA THE NEW YORK TIMES Mr. Hanssen’s case shocked FBI leaders and others.

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