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Russian spies in Irish passport scandal honored by Russia


Richard and Cynthia Murphy, Russian spies, used Irish passports
Richard and Cynthia Murphy, Russian spies, used Irish passports

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Dmitry Medvedev, the Russian president, awarded Russia’s highest honors to the spies who were discovered living and working under false Irish identities in the U.S. recently.

Among them were Richard and Cynthia Murphy, who had thoroughly adopted the suburban New Jersey lifestyle, living with two young daughters in what the Independent described as “a smartly painted house with a trim and tended garden, resplendent with hydrangeas.”

The Murphys, and their fellow spies were rumbled last year and brought back to Russia, where prime minister – and former president – Vladimir Putin said they had endured “a very difficult fate … They had to carry out a task to benefit their motherland's interests for many, many years without a diplomatic cover, risking themselves and those close to them."

"They will work, and I am sure they will have decent jobs," he said. "And I am sure they will have an interesting and bright life."

Part of that, it is now clear, is to be feted as heroes of Russia, as Kremlin spokeswoman Natalya Timakova said that the spies had been honoured along with other members of Russia's Foreign Intelligence Service.

"A ceremony took place in the Kremlin today to give the highest state awards to members of the Foreign Intelligence Service, including spies working in the United States who returned to Russia in July," she told Reuters.

However, according to court documents in the US, the spies did not pass on any actual classified information.


Nster.com


4 Comments

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Living in or coming from a poodle looking island with its severed head in the control of long occupier neighbour makes for severe dysfunctional behaviour. A people whose usurped harp flys on the Sasanach standards - proclaiming ireland as being in union with them. Next year, 2011, their queen is to arrive to cement their claim.
Wonder if it was just a recruiting ploy by the FSB? Describing their "hardshp" of living a middle-class American lifestyle (house, garden, SUV's, travel, etc.) may look pretty good to bright, young folk who don't want to join a Mafia gang and are still sharing a cramped flat with relatives and limited job prospects. Pravda?
They did not pass on any classified information. That is understandable. With traffic the way it is, it is /was difficult to actually get to any of the clandestine places of interest
Everytime a country uses Irish passports to commit murder or for use in espionage.They put the lives of Irish citizens in jeopardy.
 




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