Senator Humphrey

Person
Mentions
12
Relationships
2
Events
0
Documents
4

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2 total relationships
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person Edward Snowden
Correspondent
7
2
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person Edward Snowden
Communication
5
1
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No events found for this entity.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019674.jpg

This document is page 186 from the book 'How America Lost Its Secrets' (authored by Edward Jay Epstein, indicated by the file name 'Epst'), produced as part of a House Oversight investigation. The text details the intelligence fallout from Edward Snowden's 2013 data theft, including the compromise of British GCHQ operations and the inability of the U.S. to track Russian troop movements in Crimea. It discusses the transition from General Alexander to Admiral Michael Rogers at the NSA and the long-term damage assessment regarding U.S. electronic intelligence capabilities.

Book excerpt / government production
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019662.jpg

This document is page 174 from the book 'How America Lost Its Secrets' (authored by Edward Jay Epstein), bearing a House Oversight Bates stamp. It discusses Edward Snowden's presence in Russia, implying that he likely shared classified NSA/CIA information with Russian intelligence (FSB), either willingly or under duress. The text highlights the role of Anatoly Kucherena, Snowden's lawyer and FSB oversight board member, in confirming Snowden possessed unreleased materials.

Book page / government production
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020298.jpg

This document appears to be a page from a report or narrative regarding the aftermath of the Edward Snowden intelligence leaks. It discusses the skepticism of U.S. intelligence officials regarding Snowden's claims of protecting secrets, the assumption that Russia and China accessed the data ('keys to the kingdom'), and the role of Admiral Michael Rogers in rebuilding the NSA after replacing General Alexander. Note: Despite the prompt labeling this as 'Epstein-related,' the text on this specific page deals exclusively with National Security and the Snowden affair.

Report / narrative account (house oversight committee production)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020290.jpg

This page, likely from a House Oversight Committee report, analyzes the intelligence implications of Edward Snowden's presence in Russia. It discusses conflicting narratives regarding whether Snowden retained possession of NSA and CIA documents after arriving in Moscow, highlighting inconsistencies between Snowden's claims and statements made by his lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena (who is noted to have ties to the FSB). The text speculates on the FSB's access to Snowden's encrypted data, possibly through cloud storage retrieval or coercion.

Investigative report / government report
2025-11-19
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No financial transactions found for this entity. Entity linking may need to be improved.
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As Recipient
8
Total
8

Protection of secrets

From: Edward Snowden
To: Senator Humphrey

Claimed he acted to protect U.S. secrets by shielding them from adversaries.

Avowal/statement
N/A

Unknown

From: Edward Snowden
To: Senator Humphrey

Statement made three weeks after arriving in Russia.

Email
N/A

Unknown

From: Edward Snowden
To: Senator Humphrey

Statement consistent with retaining documents.

Email
N/A

Unknown

From: Edward Snowden
To: Senator Humphrey

Statement consistent with retaining documents.

Email
N/A

Unknown

From: Edward Snowden
To: Senator Humphrey

Statement consistent with retaining documents.

Email
N/A

Protection of secrets

From: Edward Snowden
To: Senator Humphrey

Claimed he acted to protect U.S. secrets by shielding them from adversaries.

Avowal/statement
N/A

Protection of U.S. secrets

From: Edward Snowden
To: Senator Humphrey

Snowden claimed he acted to protect secrets by shielding them from adversaries.

Statement/avowal
N/A

Protection of U.S. Secrets

From: Edward Snowden
To: Senator Humphrey

Snowden claimed he acted to protect U.S. secrets by shielding them from adversaries.

Avowal/statement
N/A

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