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  Cryptome Spy Photos 8

 

17 September 2006 -- 8 of a Series

Cryptome


Captions by Associated Press
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The former head of the British Intelligence service Stella Rimington poses in her office in London, Dec.14, 2004 (AP Photo/Dave Caulkin)

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Counterespionage expert Stephen Lander is seen in his office Thursday, Nov. 23, 1995 in London. Lander, 48, will succeed Stella Rimington, as head of MI5, Britain's domestic intelligence service, Prime Minister John Major announced Thursday. Lander will lead MI5 as it enters a new era of fighting drug smuggling and organized crime, in addition to its traditional counter-intelligence work. (AP Photo/Michael Stephens)

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Chairman of Britain's Joint Intelligence Committee John Scarlett arrives at London's High Court, Tuesday Sept. 23, 2003. It was announced Thursday May 6, 2004, that Scarlett will become the next chief of Britain's Secret Intelligence Service, MI6. (AP Photo/Adam Butler)

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John Scarlett, British Chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee, left, with Sir David Omand, Co-ordinator of Security and Intelligence at Downing Street, leave the Royal Courts of Justice in London, Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2003. They provided testimony at the Hutton Inquiry which is probing the death of weapons adviser Dr. David Kelly. (AP Photo/Dave Caulkin)

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A fake rock that allegedly had been used by a purported British spy ring in Moscow seen in this image shown on Russian Televsion in Moscow, Thursday, Jan. 26, 2006. Russia's main KGB successor agency said Thursday that a spy gadget hidden in a fake rock that allegedly had been used by a purported British spy ring in Moscow was a highly sophisticated device, as complex as space technology. (AP Photo/RTR-Russian Television Channel) ** TV OUT **

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A young man, allegedly a British embassy staff member, makes his way toward electronic equipment concealed in a rock, to receive intelligence information provided by Russian agents, in a park outside Moscow in this image from television documentary shown on Rossiya television on Sunday, Jan. 22, 2006. Russia's main intelligence agency said Monday that it had uncovered spying activities by four British diplomats. The announcement came one day after Russian state-run television broadcast footage allegedly showing British diplomats engaged in undercover espionage activities in Moscow last year. (AP Photo/RTR Russian Channel) ** IMAGE FROM TV TV OUT **

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Greek Public Order Minister Giorgos Voulgarakis holds a diagram showing how government mobile phone calls were diverted through spy software to unknown recipients, during a press conference in Athens on Thursday, Feb. 2, 2006. The Greek government said that Prime Minister Costas Caramanlis' mobile phone was under surveillance by an unknown individual or individuals for nearly a year up to March 2005. Other surveillance targets included the ministers of defense, foreign affairs and public order, as well as the armed forces and police leadership. (AP Photo/Thanassis Stavrakis)

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National Intelligence Director John Negroponte prepares for an interview with The Associated Press at his office in the New Executive Office Building near the White House in Washington Friday, February 3, 2006. Negroponte said Friday that U.S. spy agencies have not had a fix on where Osama bin Laden is hiding for some time. (AP Photo/J. Scott Applewhite)

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In this photo provided by Symantec, Amit Yoran is seen in this file photo, date unknown. The new chief of the CIA's venture capital organization, In-Q-Tel, wants to make the fanciful spy gadgetry it develops through investments more broadly available to all U.S. intelligence agencies. Yoran, who resigned as the government's cybersecurity chief in 2004, is taking over as In-Q-Tel's chief executive after the surprise departure of longtime CEO Gilman Louie. (AP Photo/Symantec, HO)

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Employees of the National Security Agency sit in the Threat Operations Center on Wednesday, Jan. 25, 2006, in Fort Meade, Md. President Bush is travelled to the heavily-secured site of the super-secret spy agency in suburban Maryland to give a speech behind closed doors and meet with employees in advance of Senate hearings on the much-criticized domestic surveillance. (AP Photo/Evan Vucci)

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Georgy Zhzhenov, a prominent Russian film and theater actor, is seen in Moscow in this June 1, 1997 photo. Zhzhenov, who survived torture and years of hard labor in the Stalinist Gulag on trumped-up charges of spying for the United States, died Thursday, according to his theater troupe. He was 90. (AP Photo/ RIA Novosti, Galina Kmit) ** NO SALES NO ARCHIVES EDITORIAL USE ONLY NOT FOR USE AFTER JAN 8 2006 BLACK AND WHITE ONLY **

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** FILE ** A Sept. 12, 2005 file artist rendering of Michael Ray Aquino of New York, left, and Leandro Aragoncillo of Woodbury, N.J., foreground right, during their arraignment before Judge Patty Schwartz at U.S. District Court in Newark, N.J. By the time the FBI was convinced one of its own intelligence analysts was a spy, investigators found evidence the accused employee had spent months rummaging through the bureau's computers to read and print secret reports unrelated to his office work. The FBI analyst, Leandro Aragoncillo, 47, is negotiating to plead guilty to charges he revealed secrets to officials in the Philippines. Prosecutors said he sometimes used the FBI's own computers to e-mail secret reports there. (AP Photo/Andrea Shepard, Files)