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Extraction Summary

6
People
5
Organizations
4
Locations
2
Events
3
Relationships
3
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Government report / investigative report (house oversight committee)
File Size:
Summary

This document appears to be page 133 of a House Oversight Committee report regarding Edward Snowden. It details his arrival in Russia, the orchestration of his asylum press conference at Sheremetyevo airport, and his life in Moscow, including internet appearances at SXSW and TED. The report alleges that Snowden's lawyer, Kucherena, received $1 million from Open Road Films (distributors of the Oliver Stone movie) as a proxy payment, and argues that Snowden's privileged treatment by Putin implies active cooperation with Russian intelligence.

People (6)

Name Role Context
Edward Snowden Subject/Defector
US defector seeking asylum in Russia, alleged to be cooperating with Russian authorities.
Vladimir Putin President of Russia
Provided sanctuary to Snowden; participated in a telethon with him.
Harrison Associate
Sarah Harrison (implied); sat at the table with Snowden at the airport and left in the limousine with him.
Kucherena Lawyer/Associate
Anatoly Kucherena (implied); Snowden's Russian lawyer who acted 'without compensation' but received $1M for book rights.
Lindsay Mills Partner
Snowden's partner from Hawaii who was granted a visa to live with him in Moscow.
Oliver Stone Filmmaker
Director of the 'Snowden' movie.

Organizations (5)

Name Type Context
Open Road Films
Distributor for Oliver Stone's 'Snowden' movie; paid Kucherena $1M.
RT television
Russian state media present at the airport press conference.
South by Southwest
Conference where Snowden made internet appearances.
TED
Conference where Snowden made internet appearances.
House Oversight Committee
Inferred from footer 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT'.

Timeline (2 events)

August 1, 2013
Snowden received Russian identification papers.
Moscow
Two days after arrival
First public appearance/Press conference at Sheremetyevo airport.
Sheremetyevo airport
Snowden Harrison Russian Officials

Locations (4)

Location Context
Sheremetyevo airport
Moscow airport where Snowden held his first press conference in the transit lounge.
City where Snowden resettled.
Country providing asylum.
Where Lindsay Mills lived before joining Snowden.

Relationships (3)

Edward Snowden Political Asylum/Cooperation Vladimir Putin
Document alleges Snowden received perks because he agreed to cooperate with Putin.
Kucherena Legal Representation Edward Snowden
Kucherena acted without compensation from Snowden.
Edward Snowden Romantic Partner Lindsay Mills
She lived with him in Moscow.

Key Quotes (3)

"great."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020285.jpg
Quote #1
"No."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020285.jpg
Quote #2
"Time of the Octopus"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020285.jpg
Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,989 characters)

133
entirely in the hands of Putin’s Russia. He would also have to be fully candid with the Russian
authorities about what was of great value to Putin: the secret documents he had acquired.
Two days later, Snowden made his first public appearance in Russia. It had been, like
previous press conferences with US defectors to Russia, carefully managed, First, Snowden
arrived by limousine at the international transit lounge of Sheremetyevo airport. He was seated at
a table with Harrison. As Snowden spoke no Russian, a Russian translator was provided. The
small audience included hand-picked Russian officials, including some Putin’s close associates.
They were ushered through passport control by security men to the otherwise cordoned-off
lounge. The cameras for RT television and other Russian channels were already in place. When
everyone had taken their seats, Snowden announced in a quiet voice that was seeking asylum in
Russia. Ten minutes later, Snowden and Harrison were escorted back to the limousine which
drove off to an unannounced destination.
Snowden received Russian identification papers on August 1, 2013 that allowed him to
resettle in Moscow. Not only was he provided with a residence but he was allowed to set up in it
a broadcasting studio that could be used for Internet appearance at well-attended events around
the world, such as South by Southwest, TED, and other Internet conferences. Snowden was,
according to Kucherena, was also furnished with bodyguards. To help earn his keep, he was
employed at an unidentified Moscow cyber-security firm. To complete his resettlement, Lindsay
Mills, whom he had left behind in Hawaii, was given a 3-month visa and was allowed to
temporarily live with him in Moscow. This afforded him a life style which Snowden described in
an interview as “great.”
Kucherena, although he was acting without compensation from Snowden, later received the
stunning sum of one million dollars from Open Road Films, the distributor for Oliver Stone’s
“Snowden” movie, for the rights to his not completed novel called “Time of the Octopus,” a
story based on his story of Snowden’s stay at the airport.
It would strain credibility that such privileges would be awarded to an intelligence defector
who had refused to cooperate with Russian authorities. In Snowden’s case, he was even allowed
to participate in a Putin’s telethon on state-controlled television. On it, he was called on to ask
Putin if the Russian government violated the privacy of Russian citizens in the same way that the
American government violated rights of its citizens. Putin, smiling at Snowden’s presumably
vetted question, answered in a single word: “No.”
In the Moscow scenario, Snowden received sanctuary, support, perks and high-level treatment
by Putin himself because he agreed to cooperate. If Snowden had not paid the price of admission,
either in Russia or before his arrival, he would not have been accorded this privileged status.
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020285

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