specific Soviet FBI recruitments. “B” also explained why the KGB had been unable to read his diskettes. “B” also asked the KGB for diamonds. The KGB subsequently purchased several diamonds for use in the “B” operation.
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89. On May 24, 1988, the KGB received a letter from “B” at an accommodation address in the District of Columbia. The envelope bore a return address of “Jim Baker” in “Chicago” and was postmarked in “MSC NO VA” on May 17, 1988. With the letter was “B”’s sixth diskette (“D-6”), which contained information about a number of matters. The diskette also contained information about a specific recent FBI Soviet recruitment operation.
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90. On Monday, May 30, 1988, a KGB officer arrived at the “PARK/PRIME” dead drop site at 9:03 pm, three minutes after the end of the prearranged dead drop exchange period. The KGB officer saw a man who apparently removed the signal, got into his car, and drove away.
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91. On July 15, 1988, the KGB received a letter from “B” at an accommodation address in the Eastern District of Virginia. The envelope bore a return address “Chicago” and was postmarked “WDC 200" on July 13, 1988. The zip codes for Washington, D.C., begin “200". The typed letter read as follows:
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I found the site empty. Possibly I had the time wrong. I work from memory. My recollection was for you to fill before 1:00 a.m. I believe Viktor Degtyar was in the church driveway off Rt. 123, but I did not know how he would react to an approach. My schedule
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40
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