February
1,
2017: 6:32 PM
ET
CNN's Evan Perez and Simon
Ostrovsky contributed to this report.
There's
a purge of spies underway in Moscow, where two high-ranking
Russian security service agents, a cybersecurity
expert and a fourth man have been charged with
treason for passing along secrets to American intelligence,
according to a lawyer defending one of the
men.The
men were charged "with treason in favor of the United States," said
Ivan Pavlov,
the
lawyer for one of the defendants.
So
far, the counterintelligence raid is targeting computer security professionals
-- men
once trusted with Russian government secrets about hacking operations.The
crackdown comes shortly after the U.S. intelligence officials in October
officially accused
Russia of using hackers to try steering the presidential election to Donald Trump.
American officials have never stated that Russian government insiders gave them
information that led to that accusation.
Several
national experts, who do not have direct knowledge of American intelligence operations,
suspect that Russian government insiders did leak information and that this
Russian crackdown is a result of that. Russia's
Inter fax news agency, which quoted anonymous sources, said both FSB officers
are accused of passing confidential information to the CIA. However,
other media reports in Russia, also quoting unnamed sources, claim these men
have been arrested for taking part in a hacking ring that targeted Russian officials.
The
two government agents were arrested in December and were officials in the FSB
-- the nation's top security agency that was once known as the KGB. One was Sergei
Mikhailov, head of the FSB Information Security Centre. The other was his deputy,
Dmitry Dokuchayev. Russian media outlets have been reporting the treason charges
in recent days, citing anonymous sources.
Russian
security teams also arrested an employee of Russian internet security firm Kaspersky
Lab. Ruslan Stoyanov was the head of the company's computer incidents
investigation
team, where he oversaw hacking investigations. In
a statement, Kaspersky said he was under investigation "for a period
predating his
employment at Kaspersky Lab." He had joined the company in July 2012, according
to his LinkedIn profile. Kaspersky also insisted it has "no political ties
to any
government."
Pavlov
would not disclose the identity of his client, the fourth man arrested. Pavlov told
CNN that the charges against his client include providing help to "several special
services of the United States."
Under
Article 275 of the Russian Criminal Code, treason is punishable by 12 to 20 years
in prison.The
Kremlin has declined to confirm any details of the case. U.S. officials would
not comment
on the reported arrests.Several
American security experts, including those formerly employed by the U.S. National
Security Agency, fear for the safety of these prisoners. Paul
Rosenzweig, once the Department of Homeland Security's deputy assistant
secretary
for policy, recently speculated that these men could be killed for providing information
to the United States.
"Their
blood may be on our hands," Rosenzweig wrote last week in a widely read
national
security blog.
.
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