Moscow

Location
Mentions
705
Relationships
0
Events
0
Documents
251
Also known as:
Moscow Airport, Moscow Moscow Airport Moscow, Russia Yasenevo district, Moscow US Embassy in Moscow Sheremetyevo International Airport (Moscow) Gusto (Restaurant, Moscow) Chekov Theater (Moscow) U.S. Embassy in Moscow Trump Tower Moscow SVO (Sheremetyevo International, Moscow)

Relationship Network

Loading... nodes
Interactive Network: Click nodes or edges to highlight connections and view details with action buttons. Drag nodes to reposition. Node size indicates connection count. Line color shows relationship strength: red (8-10), orange (6-7), yellow (4-5), gray (weak). Use legend and help buttons in the graph for more guidance.
No relationships found for this entity.
No events found for this entity.

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020343.jpg

This document is a page from a book (Chapter 24) detailing a dinner between the narrator and director Oliver Stone in New York. The conversation focuses on Stone's film about Edward Snowden, specifically probing the financial arrangements Stone made to gain access to Snowden in Moscow, including a $1 million payment to Snowden's lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, for 'total access' disguised as book rights. The text also mentions the Sony Pictures hack and payments made to The Guardian.

Book chapter / memoir excerpt (evidence file)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020342.jpg

This document is a 'Chronology 3' from a House Oversight report detailing Edward Snowden's movements and activities in Russia between June 2013 and August 2014. It tracks his arrival from Hong Kong, his asylum process, meetings with lawyers (ACLU) and journalists (NY Times, Gellman), and his association with Sarah Harrison. While the user prompt requested an analysis of an 'Epstein-related' document, the text of this specific page pertains exclusively to the Edward Snowden timeline.

Chronology / timeline (government report exhibit)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020340.jpg

This document appears to be a page (188) from a book manuscript or investigative report regarding Edward Snowden's defection to Russia. The text analyzes the damage control efforts by the NSA and GCHQ following the breach, Snowden's life in Moscow, and questions his motives for taking specific documents that were never released to journalists. The author mentions making arrangements to travel to Moscow in October 2015 to investigate the circumstances of Snowden's arrival in Russia. The document bears a 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT' stamp.

Book manuscript / investigative report (draft)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020339.jpg

This document appears to be page 187 of a narrative report or book submitted to the House Oversight Committee (Bates stamp 020339). The text details the 2013 flight of Edward Snowden from Hong Kong to Russia, the inability of US intelligence to capture him, and the strategic fallout of the NSA leaks. It discusses intelligence tradecraft (referencing James Angleton) regarding how foreign adversaries (Russia/China) would likely obscure their involvement or the intelligence gained from the leak. Note: This specific page contains no references to Jeffrey Epstein, despite the user's prompt context.

Narrative report / book excerpt (evidence submitted to house oversight committee)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020337.jpg

This document appears to be a page from a House Oversight report or narrative detailing the timeline of Edward Snowden's leak of NSA documents in May-June 2013. It describes his movements in Hong Kong, his communications with Washington Post journalist Barton Gellman (issuing an ultimatum to publish), and the intelligence risks posed by Chinese and Russian services monitoring him. The text highlights the pressure Snowden was under to publish before his medical leave expired on June 3rd, at which point the NSA would realize he was missing.

Investigative report / narrative analysis (house oversight)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020336.jpg

This document appears to be page 184 from a book (likely by Edward Jay Epstein regarding Edward Snowden) included in a House Oversight Committee production. It details Edward Snowden's arrival in Hong Kong in May 2013, his possession of critical NSA documents, and the geopolitical risks involved, specifically regarding China and Russia. The text analyzes Snowden as a 'single point of failure' for US intelligence and discusses the potential for hostile foreign intelligence services to access the stolen data.

Book excerpt / congressional record (house oversight)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020327.jpg

This document (Page 175, Bates stamped HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020327) outlines the history of 'The Trust,' a massive Soviet counter-intelligence 'false flag' operation in the 1920s. It details how the Russian secret police created a fake underground resistance to deceive Western intelligence agencies, lure agents (like Sydney Reilly and Boris Savinkov) to their arrests, and fund their own operations using Western money. The text concludes by noting that these deceptive tactics continued into the Cold War with operations like 'WIN' in Poland and other false groups across Eastern Europe.

Historical narrative / investigative report exhibit
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020326.jpg

This document appears to be a page from a narrative text or book (possibly by Edward Jay Epstein given the subject matter and first-person reference to Angleton) submitted as evidence to the House Oversight Committee. It details the methodology of intelligence recruitment, specifically comparing it to corporate headhunting and explaining the concept of 'false flag' operations used by Russian intelligence (SVR). The text provides a historical example of the 'Trust' deception operation initiated by the Soviets in 1921 to manipulate Western intelligence and anti-Communist exiles.

Book excerpt / narrative report (submitted as evidence to house oversight)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020324.jpg

This document details the history of KGB infiltration within the NSA during the Cold War, specifically focusing on defectors like Victor Norris Hamilton and moles like Sgt. Jack Dunlap. It describes the fates of these individuals, ranging from defection to Moscow and institutionalization to mysterious deaths, and outlines the methods used by the KGB to recruit and exploit them for secret intelligence.

Historical report page / book excerpt
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020323.jpg

This document discusses the asymmetrical intelligence capabilities between the NSA and Russian intelligence services (SVR/KGB) circa 2013 and historically. It details Russia's efforts to counter NSA dominance through espionage and defection, highlighting the historical case of NSA defectors William Martin and Bernon Mitchell in 1960.

Government report or book page
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020314.jpg

This document appears to be a page from a book (Chapter Twenty) included in a House Oversight file. It discusses intelligence failures, specifically comparing the 1994 discovery of CIA mole Aldrich Ames to the later security breach by Edward Snowden. It highlights a prescient 1996 NSA report that warned networking computers would make the agency vulnerable to a 'system administrator' acting as a mole.

Book excerpt / congressional oversight record
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020313.jpg

This document, stamped 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT', appears to be a narrative report discussing the aftermath of the Edward Snowden data breach on the NSA. It details the efforts of new Director Admiral Michael Rogers to address low morale and rebuild intelligence capabilities in June 2014. The text mentions comments from former directors Michael Hayden and Michael McConnell regarding the severity of the damage and the reliance on outside contractors.

Report / investigation narrative (house oversight committee document)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020302.jpg

This document appears to be page 150 of a report (likely House Oversight Committee based on the footer) discussing historical intelligence failures and Russian espionage capabilities. It details how the SVR/KGB successfully penetrated US intelligence (NSA/CIA) over decades, including a specific incident where CIA officers knowingly passed Russian disinformation to Presidents Reagan, Bush, and Clinton. The text concludes by referencing the Edward Snowden breach as a modern example of these vulnerabilities.

Report / narrative account (likely congressional record or book excerpt)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020301.jpg

This document, page 149 of a House Oversight production, details the 2010 FBI arrest of Russian sleeper agents (the 'Illegals Program') and the subsequent compromise of the CIA's mole, Poteyev. It describes concerns within the NSA regarding potential SVR penetration at Fort Meade and the logistical impossibility of vetting all employees against insider threats. The text explains how an FBI sting operation against agent Anna Chapman inadvertently revealed Poteyev's identity, necessitating his urgent exfiltration from Russia to the U.S. via Belarus.

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

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020300.jpg

This document appears to be a page from a narrative report or book regarding Russian intelligence operations, specifically the SVR's 'Illegals Program.' It details how a source named Poteyev informed the CIA about sleeper agents, including Anna Chapman, and discusses the high costs of FBI surveillance required to monitor these individuals ($10,000/day). The text concludes with a 2010 warning from Poteyev that Russian military intelligence was seeking to activate these agents for a sensitive assignment.

Investigative report / manuscript / testimony
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020299.jpg

This document is a page from a book or report (Chapter 18: The Unheeded Warning) marked as House Oversight evidence. It details the history of Alexander Poteyev, a high-level SVR colonel recruited by the CIA in the 1990s who provided warnings in 2010 about Russian espionage. The text explains the SVR's strategy of using 'illegal' sleeper agents in the US to bypass FBI surveillance of diplomatic staff and service moles within US intelligence agencies.

Book excerpt / report (house oversight committee exhibit)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020297.jpg

This document appears to be page 145 of a House Oversight Committee report discussing the intelligence fallout from Edward Snowden's leaks. It details the impact on US foreign relations (specifically with Germany regarding Chancellor Merkel's phone), the potential sharing of 'Level 3' NSA documents with Russia and China, and the resulting loss of US and British intelligence capabilities in monitoring adversaries. Note: While the user requested an 'Epstein-related' analysis, this specific page contains no references to Jeffrey Epstein or his network; it is entirely focused on national security and the Snowden affair.

Government report / investigative narrative (house oversight committee)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020296.jpg

This document appears to be page 144 of a book or report (likely by Edward Jay Epstein) analyzing the timeline of NSA document leaks attributed to Edward Snowden. It questions how Snowden could continue releasing documents via Wikileaks and The Intercept (regarding French presidents and Israeli operations) years after supposedly destroying his files in Hong Kong, suggesting potential involvement or approval by Russian intelligence services. The text details specific leaks from June and July 2015 and cites interviews with intelligence officials.

Book manuscript / investigative report page
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020295.jpg

This document, marked as House Oversight material, analyzes the Snowden leaks specifically regarding the surveillance of German Chancellor Angela Merkel. It argues that the document revealing the spying on Merkel was not part of the original cache Snowden gave to Greenwald and Poitras in Hong Kong, suggesting it was released later from Moscow or via another source. The text details James Bamford's forensic analysis of the drive, which found no mention of Merkel, leading to speculation about how *Der Spiegel* obtained the information.

Investigative report / house oversight committee record
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020294.jpg

This document page, bearing a House Oversight footer, details intelligence community concerns regarding Edward Snowden's stay in Hong Kong in 2013. It discusses the high probability that Chinese and Russian intelligence services accessed the stolen NSA files on Snowden's laptops through technical or human means while he was at the Mira Hotel and other residences. The text also covers subsequent leaks published after Snowden arrived in Moscow, specifically the revelation via Der Spiegel that the NSA had monitored German Chancellor Angela Merkel's cell phone.

Government report / congressional record (house oversight)
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020293.jpg

This document is page 141 of a larger report (likely House Oversight Committee based on the footer) analyzing Edward Snowden's activities and claims regarding NSA data. The text scrutinizes Snowden's narrative that he destroyed all NSA documents in Hong Kong before traveling to Russia, highlighting inconsistencies with statements made by his lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena, and questioning the logic of destroying valuable 'bargaining chips.' It details Snowden's media strategy, including interviews arranged by Ben Wizner with various outlets like the Washington Post and NBC News.

Investigative report / congressional oversight document
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020292.jpg

This document page, bearing a House Oversight stamp, details the legal maneuvering surrounding Edward Snowden's NSA leaks. It focuses on the involvement of ACLU lawyer Ben Wizner, who was brought in by journalists Laura Poitras and Glenn Greenwald to represent Snowden. The text outlines the legal challenges Wizner faced in seeking amnesty for Snowden, particularly distinguishing Snowden's actions from previous whistleblowers and managing the narrative regarding whether classified documents were taken to Russia.

Narrative report / manuscript excerpt
2025-11-19

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020291.jpg

This document discusses the implications of Edward Snowden's arrival in Moscow, suggesting he likely shared NSA documents with Russian intelligence, which outweighed the diplomatic cost of a cancelled summit between Obama and Putin. It details the geopolitical tension involving Sergei Lavrov and Hillary Clinton's State Department, and notes a later narrative shift where Snowden claimed he brought no secret files to Russia during an interview with James Risen.

Report or book excerpt
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

HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_020289.jpg

This document page (137) from a House Oversight file details the aftermath of Edward Snowden's flight to Russia, specifically focusing on whether he retained sensitive NSA documents. Through interviews with his lawyer Anatoly Kucherena (conducted by Sophie Shevardnadze in 2013 and the author in 2015), it is confirmed that Snowden did not give all documents to journalists in Hong Kong but retained a second, more sensitive set of files while in Russia.

Report / narrative manuscript / investigative file
2025-11-19
Total Received
$0.00
0 transactions
Total Paid
$0.00
0 transactions
Net Flow
$0.00
0 total transactions
No financial transactions found for this entity. Entity linking may need to be improved.
As Sender
0
As Recipient
0
Total
0
No communications found for this entity. Entity linking may need to be improved.

Discussion 0

Sign in to join the discussion

No comments yet

Be the first to share your thoughts on this epstein entity