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no listing. An FBI investigation of the residence listed on the return address listed revealed no one residing there named Nevil
Strachey. The postcards were enclosed in envelopes, both of which had overpaid on the postage. The FBI believes that the envelopes were sent to an address where an intermediary would then get the postcards to the FSB. One postcard was written "I will not be in your neighborhood as expected, still the work is beneficial, I know you will find it very attractive", which was likely code words telling the SVR he had recently been rejected from a chief of station position he had applied for, instead getting a management job at CIA headquarters. Another postcard intercepted in the summer of 1996 stated "I hope you will be able to join me for a ski holiday this November. A bit early but it would fit into my schedule nicely", which was code words for meeting with the SVR in
325:, who was U.S. Ambassador to Romania during the last three months of Nicholson's tenure remembers that he "wasn't keen" on having Nicholson remain at the embassy. A few years later, after Nicholson had committed espionage and been discovered, Davis said: "He must have had severe psychological problems to do what he did, having spent all those years on the side of the angels, then suddenly to flip like that." Although senior Embassy officials say they reported warnings to the CIA, the cautionary warnings, if received, were not heeded, because Nicholson was moved to another important overseas position, in Malaysia.
415:. During his time in Singapore, surveillance saw him get in a car registered to the Russian embassy. This meeting with Russian nationals was not authorized, nor did Nicholson report it to the CIA as required. Following this meeting, Nicholson returned to the United States where he was seen making a large cash deposit into his bank account, with which he both retired an outstanding car loan and transferred the remainder into three joint accounts that he held with his children. The FBI was unable to trace this cash to any legal source of income. The CIA assigned Nicholson to a management position in the
377:) while meeting with an officer of the Russian intelligence service in Kuala Lumpur on four occasions during his final months there; three of those meetings took place in the Russian Embassy in Kuala Lumpur. Those meetings were authorized by the CIA and reported by Nicholson. On June 30, 1994, one day after his last reported meeting with the SVR officer, financial records showed that $ 12,000 was wired into Nicholson's savings account at Selco Credit Union in Eugene, Oregon; the FBI was unable to trace this money to any legitimate source of income.
478:, and apparently caused less damage to US national security, Nicholson was said to be the highest ranking CIA official ever convicted of spying for a foreign power. In court, Nicholson stated he was inspired to commit espionage by looking at the case of Aldrich Ames, rather than being deterred by it. Nicholson noted Ames' professional sloppiness and that the investigation, while it ultimately caught him, had been laggard. Such a combination inspired Nicholson to believe his tradecraft was superior to Ames' and that he could elude detection.
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skipped family vacations and was often away due to travel. The children were unhappy with the constant moves, from one foreign country to another, and their father's frequent absences. His wife was unhappy and embittered. Nicholson and Laura filed for a divorce in 1992, which was finalized in 1994. He was awarded custody of his three children, as the court-appointed guardian judged that their mother's continued anger at her husband negatively affected the children.
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439:. He had a ticket to Zurich, a bundle of exposed film and a computer disk bearing classified information from CIA files. This included "information on the identities on the CIA Moscow chief and his staff, the identities and code names of CIA informants and the identities of CIA case officers." He said he planned to divulge knowledge the U.S. possessed concerning the intelligence and military capabilities of the Russian Federation."
341:. The post may have appeared as a sort of promotion, as this was a larger station than Bucharest, and a position where he met with and targeted recruitment of Russian intelligence officers. As his wife was no longer present, any personal turmoil was less apparent to his superiors, and he was free to continue his relationship with a Thai girlfriend, whom he wished to marry. He began his espionage activities in June 1994.
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400:. Nicholson claimed the need to know was for an upcoming exercise with students. According to Langley leadership, there were no lessons on Chechen separatism. Requests for changes to the training program needed to be brought before a board of review, and Nicholson did not submit any proposed changes.
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examinations administered by CIA polygraphers as part of his routine security update in
October and December 1995, when questions "Have you had unauthorized contact with a Foreign Intelligence Service?", "Since 1990, have you had contact with a Foreign Intelligence Service that you are trying to hide
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The FBI also retrieved mail sent from
Nicholson to his handlers from local public mailboxes, where he signed postcards with code words under the alias "Nevil R. Strachey." The FBI conducted a search for Nevil R. Strachey through phone books in the District of Columbia and adjacent counties but found
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The CIA was aware that such personal problems were typical, given that senior CIA officers often put careers first and family second. Divorces were common amongst officers in their mid-forties. Because of his troubled personal life, officials feared he might be a candidate for recruitment by foreign
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On
January 18, 2011, Nicholson was sentenced to eight more years in prison, having pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy to act as an agent of a foreign government and conspiracy to commit money laundering; five other charges had been dropped as part of the plea deal. Nathaniel Nicholson had been
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branch at CIA Headquarters, while keeping a close eye on him. The CIA limited his access to information on
Russian matters and Chechnya in particular, which were the primary subjects of interest to his Russian handlers. During his tenure at headquarters, he made a request to the office of technical
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Despite
Nicholson's career success, his personal life had suffered, as his constant reassignments weighed heavily on his wife and three children, eventually leading to a difficult divorce and a custody battle. Over a 23-year period, his family had moved 21 times. His workaholic habits meant that he
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in
Langley, Virginia. That position carried a pay grade of GS-15, his salary being approximately US$ 73,000. It was discovered that the identities of trainees of the classes of 1994, 1995 and 1996 had been sold to the Russians, and many of these trainees were his own students.
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Prosecutors believed that he had sold the identities of all US intelligence officers stationed in Russia, as well as the identities of his trainees at the CIA school. He told the court that he had intended for the money he received from the
Russians to benefit his children.
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Another piece of information that linked
Nicholson to his activities was that a US mole inside the FSB had informed the CIA that a top priority for Russian intelligence was to gather information on activities and movements of Chechen rebels. While an instructor at
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from the CIA?" revealed a high probability of deception or were marked as "inconclusive". The CIA examiner noted that
Nicholson appeared to be trying to manipulate the test by taking deep breaths on the control questions, which he stopped after a verbal warning.
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In his career with the CIA, Nicholson was assigned duties throughout the world. He worked for the CIA as an operations officer specializing in intelligence operations against foreign intelligence services, including the intelligence services of the
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class. While they both were shy people who formed an attachment, they had different outlooks on life. She later admitted she was a half-hippie who had some countercultural leanings and concerns against US involvement overseas, whereas he was taking
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classes in an attempt to go into his father's line of work. When Nicholson graduated OSU in 1973, he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Army. Cooper, who was younger, abandoned a possible return to school, in order to marry Nicholson.
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services for a briefcase-type camera, which is often used to clandestinely copy documents. According to the job description at the time, Nicholson had no need for any camera in order to fulfill his obligations at the counterterrorism office.
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His wife was unhappy with military life, and moving from post to post. After the birth of their first child, in 1978, Nicholson quit the Army and moved his family to Kansas City, Kansas, to work for
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Nicholson later admitted to providing the Russian intelligence service with national defense information, including photographic negatives, between June 1994 and his arrest on November 16, 1996.
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That same month he was scheduled to travel to Europe on official CIA business to meet with European intelligence officers. Nicholson told the CIA he planned to take a personal vacation to
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officer, Nicholson found it difficult to make friends, due to his innate shyness and the constant relocation of his father's change in duty station. He attended Desert High School at
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against the Vietnam War, but Nicholson refused to participate, partly because few friends had invited him to participate to begin with but also out of respect for his father.
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At the end of 2008, Nicholson's youngest son Nathaniel was arrested; prosecutors said Jim Nicholson had used his son to collect more than $ 47,000 from Russian officials in
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for past spy work: between December 2006 and December 2008 Nathaniel had met with representatives of the Russian Federation six times, including twice at a consulate in
348:, Virginia (also known as "The Farm"), teaching CIA trainees intelligence tradecraft. In July 1996, he was assigned as a branch chief in the Counterterrorism Center,
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intelligence agencies. During two years of great personal distress, from 1992 to 1994, Nicholson was the Deputy Chief of Station/Operations Officer in
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in February 1994 which, in the words of CIA veteran and author Tennent Bagley, had "exposed extraordinary slackness of CIA security procedures."
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during 1992–1994, as Deputy Chief of Station/Operations Officer, Nicholson might have been recruited by the Russian intelligence service (
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Nicholson's recruitment to the SVR appears to have occurred in the wake of a much-publicized arrest of the senior CIA officer and Moscow
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sentenced in December 2010 to five years on probation after making a deal with prosecutors to help build the case against his father.
321:. At this point, Nicholson's personal family problems and his workaholic lifestyle raised red flags, and ensuring security concerns.
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The FBI affidavit implies that the investigation of Nicholson's espionage for Russia was triggered following his failure of three
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From 1994 to July 1996, Nicholson worked as an instructor at the classified CIA's Special Training Center at
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in November ("a bit early" was likely code words that their meetings traditionally convened in December).
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in California, from grades nine through eleven. His family moved again, and he attended grade twelve at
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Nicholson was then placed under surveillance by the FBI. Nicholson was watched during his travels to
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Nicholson was comfortable with Army life and performed well, as a captain and company commander in a
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prison in Colorado, and was incarcerated there until his release on November 24, 2023.
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Nicholson joined the CIA in October 1980, and entered a top-secret training program at
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Sentenced to 31 years and 7 months imprisonment; Released after 27 years
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Conspiracy to act as an agent of a foreign government (18 U.S.C. § 951)
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Espionage against the United States, FBI investigation and convictions
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Conspiracy to commit international money laundering (18 U.S.C. § 1956)
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815:"C.I.A. Traitor, Saying He Wanted Cash for Family, Gets 23 Years"
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afterwards. On November 16, 1996, the FBI arrested Nicholson at
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Harold James "Jim" Nicholson was born on November 17, 1950, in
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Risen, James; Richter, Paul; Morain, Dan (November 22, 1996).
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enabled him to acquire a staff position in Army intelligence.
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Smith, W. Thomas (July 1, 2003). "Nicholson, Harold James".
777:"C.I.A. Traitor Severely Hurt U.S. Security, Judge Is Told"
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Although his case received far less publicity than that of
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on June 5, 1997. He did not get a life without parole or
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for $ 300,000 and was sentenced to 23 years 7 months of
957:. November 18, 1996. - Press release announcing arrest
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Nicholson was convicted of selling US intelligence to
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For the British diplomat, author, and politician, see
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Undated photograph of Nicholson, released by the CIA
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264:. He served in the "Screaming Eagles", the Army's
1841:People convicted under the Espionage Act of 1917
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657:"Suspected CIA Turncoat Was a Spy on the Way Up"
145:Conspiracy to commit espionage (18 U.S.C. § 794)
16:American spy incarcerated in a US federal prison
611:Encyclopedia of the Central Intelligence Agency
1816:American people convicted of spying for Russia
845:"Application and Affidavit for Search Warrant"
741:"Twice convicted ex-CIA spy gets 8 more years"
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881:"Ex-CIA Spy Renewed Russian Contact via Son"
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749:. Associated Press. January 19, 2011.
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629:Shedding Light on Cold War Mysteries.
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309:From 1990 to 1992, he was the CIA
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1745:Vladimir Mikhaylovich Petrov
813:Weiner, Tim (June 6, 1997).
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185:Foreign Intelligence Service
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1846:Inmates of ADX Florence
961:"UPDATE – SPY CATCHING"
302:, from 1987 to 1989 in
266:101st Airborne Division
237:Oregon State University
1595:John Alexander Symonds
1420:Harold James Nicholson
1274:Christopher John Boyce
218:Edwards Air Force Base
173:Harold James Nicholson
32:Harold James Nicholson
1658:Stephen Joseph Ratkai
919:. Bureau of Prisons.
854:. December 11, 2008.
1196:Nadezhda Ulanovskaya
975:. November 19, 1996.
893:. January 29, 2009.
539:United States portal
506:along with his son.
113: 1973;
1379:John Anthony Walker
1329:Clayton J. Lonetree
1269:David Sheldon Boone
1191:Alexander Ulanovsky
1156:William Ward Pigman
627:Tennent H. Bagley.
615:Infobase Publishing
1831:Incarcerated spies
1750:Fyodor Raskolnikov
1585:Michael John Smith
1319:Andrew Daulton Lee
1309:Robert Lee Johnson
1221:Harry Dexter White
1056:Whittaker Chambers
819:The New York Times
781:The New York Times
268:. His training in
222:Novato High School
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1489:Portland spy ring
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1041:Elizabeth Bentley
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323:John R. Davis Jr.
262:intelligence unit
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1426:Illegals Program
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1605:John Vassall
1580:Goronwy Rees
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1324:Robert Lipka
1314:Karl Koecher
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1146:Victor Perlo
1141:William Perl
1131:Boris Morros
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973:PBS Newshour
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1755:Alfred Redl
1711:Elsewhere /
1610:Arthur Wynn
1550:Klaus Fuchs
1540:David Crook
1464:Guy Burgess
1393:Post-Soviet
1284:Jack Dunlap
1259:Rudolf Abel
1231:Nathan Witt
1206:Harold Ware
1181:Saville Sax
1111:Donald Hiss
1081:Klaus Fuchs
1051:Boris Bukov
901:January 22,
865:December 2,
829:January 25,
791:January 25,
714:December 9,
426:Switzerland
1805:Categories
1497:Lona Cohen
1479:Kim Philby
1354:Myra Soble
1349:Jack Soble
1091:Harry Gold
1076:Noel Field
1061:Lona Cohen
757:August 25,
704:loyola.edu
596:References
504:conspiracy
346:Camp Peary
284:Camp Peary
75:Occupation
56:1950-11-17
1663:Fred Rose
1570:John Peet
1507:Ethel Gee
1151:J. Peters
1036:Joel Barr
1016:In the US
886:USA Today
671:April 11,
413:Singapore
385:polygraph
315:Bucharest
259:U.S. Army
214:Air Force
1633:Sam Carr
1251:Cold War
1031:John Abt
927:June 12,
921:Archived
895:Archived
856:Archived
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751:Archived
746:Fox News
665:Archived
525:See also
519:supermax
409:Malaysia
405:Thailand
398:Chechnya
371:Malaysia
339:Malaysia
125:Children
90:Released
1440:In the
969:Archive
963:at the
951:Archive
394:Langley
319:Romania
300:Bangkok
241:fencing
187:(SVR).
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82:officer
78:Former
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488:Mexico
465:Oregon
449:Russia
433:Zurich
296:Manila
209:. The
181:spying
95:Spouse
69:, U.S.
1674:Japan
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