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doing business, but my experience tells me the [sic] we can be actually more secure in easier modes.
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“B” then suggested an exchange procedure involving a parked car instead of a dead drop site, and a related communications procedure, but stated: “If you cannot do this I will clear this once ‘AN’ on your scheduled date (rather than the other).” He then asked the KGB to “Find a comfortable Vienna VA signal site to call me to an exchange any following Monday.” He closed the letter, “Good luck with your work”, and signed it “Ramon.”
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The package also contained a document which the KGB described as having the title which roughly translates into English as: “National Intelligence Program for 87".
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74. Thereafter, the KGB proposed to “B” a signal site in Vienna, Virginia, in the Eastern District of Virginia, on the post of a stop sign on the shoulder of Courthouse Road near its junction with Locust Street. This signal site was referred to as “V”.
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75. On September 29, 1987, the KGB deposited $100,000 into an escrow account established for “B” in a Soviet bank in Moscow.
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76. On November 10, 1987, Malakhov received a letter from “B” at his residence in the Eastern District of Virginia. The envelope bore a return address of “J. Baker” in “Chicago” and was postmarked on November 7, 1987. In the letter, “B” advised that Saturday for “AN” was not suitable, and he postponed the operation for two days, until Monday, November 16. He advised
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34
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