218:...it must have been the '70s. But it was very informal... There were no photographs, there was just talking... He would ask me something and I would tell him something.. verbal information.. He had a few questions about current events... First, it was just a conversation between the two of us... He would ask my opinion on this and that... Then, he would maybe ask me, 'Well, what does your unit think about it?' Or, 'What does the American government think about it?'
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about three or four weeks later I said to him, 'You gotta help me one more time, and I'll give it back to you when I have a chance.' ...And that was the end of it. Then he talked to me a couple times. Always like this. Then he says, 'Well, you know, I'll tell you what. You don't owe me any money... And if you need some more, I can give you some more... Don't worry about it. You're going to have to have a few things, this and that.' And this is how it started.
285:, for a preliminary hearing. During the hearing, Metropolitan Iriney admitted to having loaned Trofimoff money, but denied having links to the KGB. He did admit, however, that, "The KGB was everywhere, also in the Church." The Metropolitan also admitted to having, "a very strong, personal relationship," with his female housekeeper, Gudula Walker.
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interrogation center was being compromised by a mole, codenamed, "Markiz". He handed over KGB records that showed classified documents that exceeded 80 volumes – 50,000 pages taken over 25 years. Mitrokhin didn't have a name, but he was able to produce a vague sketch of the traitor. Furthermore, the
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No, not in the beginning... I said I needed money. And I told him my wife bought some furniture and I can't pay for it, I don't know how to get the money. And he says, 'I tell you what, I'll loan it to you.' So he gave me, I think, 5,000 marks and then, it wasn't enough, because I needed more, and
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In 1999, Col. Trofimoff boasted that he routinely smuggled every classified document he could obtain home to be photographed with a special camera and tripod. The film was passed on to KGB agents during meetings in
Austria. According to former KGB General
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Trofimoff further explained that, in 1987, Metropolitan Iriney ordered him to cease his espionage work for the KGB. According to
Trofimoff, "...he told me to destroy the camera, so I smashed it with a hammer and I threw it in the garbage, far away."
243:(DM) per week. The payments were always made in used bills and when Trofimoff needed more money toward a down payment on his house, the Metropolitan "went to his contact in Moscow" and returned with 90,000 DM. This sum was then worth 40,000
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Beginning in the 1960s, Trofimoff and the
Metropolitan met often and maintained a close personal relationship. In a 1999 conversation with an undercover FBI agent, Trofimoff described his recruitment as follows,
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As
Germany's espionage laws possess a five-year statute of limitations, Dr. Bode refused to file charges. As a result, both Colonel Trofimoff and Metropolitan Iriney were released.
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Soviet files he delivered described the spy as a "career
American intelligence officer" and the courier who carried the secrets as a Russian Orthodox "clergyman".
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Trofimoff's indictment states that, after learning that his foster brother was chronically short of funds, Iriney "recruited him into the service of the
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in 1978. According to
Kalugin, "He did good work, particularly in recruiting Markiz. I wanted to thank him for what he had done."
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Igor
Vladimirovich Susemihl was born in 1919, the son of an agronomist. When he was six years old, his family moved to
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with his wife and children. Deacon Igor later received an
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agent, Trofimoff had admitted that his "brother," Metropolitan Iriney, had recruited to spy for the U.S.S.R.
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Metropolitan Iriney then returned to his duties as
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Trofimoff further explained that Metropolitan Iriney paid him a standard amount of 7,000
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Joint Interrogation Center, a clearing house for Soviet and Eastern Bloc defectors.
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Russian Orthodox clergy who spied for the Soviet Union
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The Imperfect Spy: The True Story of a Convicted Spy
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