William Kampiles
William Kampiles | |
---|---|
Born | 1955 (age 60–61) |
Nationality | American |
Known for | Cold War |
William Peter Kampiles (born 1955) was a Central Intelligence Agency employee during the Cold War.
Biography
Bored with his low-ranking status as a CIA clerk, he stole a top-secret KH-11 spy satellite manual from his employers in 1977. Afterwards, he resigned from his job, flew to Greece, and sold the manual to the Soviet embassy in Athens in return for $3,000. Kampiles subsequently returned to the United States and informed his former CIA bosses of what he had done, in the mistaken belief that he would be recruited as a double agent; instead, he was charged with espionage by the US Government, put on trial in 1978, and convicted. He was originally sentenced on November 17, 1978, to 40 years imprisonment; however, his prison sentence was later reduced to 19 years, and he was released on 16 December 1996, after serving 18 years as Federal Prison inmate "04028-164".[1][2]
See also
- Samuel Loring Morison - An intelligence analyst who provided KH-11 photographs to the Jane's Fighting Ships publication and was convicted of espionage.
- James Hall III – An Army warrant officer and intelligence analyst in Germany who sold eavesdropping and code secrets to East Germany and the Soviet Union from 1983 to 1988.
- George Trofimoff – a then retired Army Reserve colonel, who was charged in June 2000 with spying for the KGB and the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service (or SVR) for over 25 years.
- John Anthony Walker – An American communications specialist who was convicted of spying
- Aldrich Ames - an ex-CIA agent convicted of spying for Russia
- Noshir Gowadia - an ex-employee of Northrop who sold classified B-2 stealth technology to China
- Robert Hanssen an ex-FBI agent who spied for the Soviet Union for over 15 years
References
- ↑ "The Kampiles Case" (HTML). JonathanPollard.org. Retrieved 30 December 2010.
- ↑ "Record of William Peter Kampiles" (HTML). Inmate Locator. Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved 30 December 2010.