and cryptograms, intelligence support for the Strategic Defense Initiative, submarines, and other classified material.
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The next day, the KGB observed that “B” had removed the signal from the “PARK/PRIME” site, indicating he had removed the package.
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87. On April 4, 1988, the KGB received an envelope from “B” at an accommodation address in the Eastern District of Virginia. The envelope bore a return address of “Jim Baker” in “Alexandria” and was postmarked in Northern Virginia, on March 31, 1988. The envelope contained a note from “B” reading: “use 40 TRACK MODE, this letter is not a signal.”
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The term “use 40-track mode” refers to a technical process for re-formatting a computer diskette in order to conceal data by putting the data onto specific tracks on the diskette. Unless a person uses the correct codes to decrypt such a diskette, the diskette would appear to be blank.
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88. On April 6, 1988, the KGB received a package from “B” at an accommodation address in the Eastern District of Virginia. The envelope bore a return address of “Jim Baker” in “Fairfax” and a postmark of “MSC NO VA” (Merrifield Service Center, Northern Virginia, in the Eastern District of Virginia) on April 5. The package contained a fifth diskette (“D-5”). On the diskette, “B” provided what the KGB characterized as “everything” about a particular KGB officer, additional information about a KGB defector named Victor Sheymov, and information about two
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39
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