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Six Bulgarian spies jailed for feeding information to Russia

Six Bulgarian spies jailed for feeding information to Russia

Six Bulgarian spies have been sentenced by a London judge to prison terms of up to nearly 11 years for carrying out a sophisticated spying operation for Russia.
The group that used Hollywood code names discussed kidnapping or killing Kremlin opponents as they targeted reporters, diplomats and Ukrainian troops in the UK, Germany Austria, Spain and Montenegro between 2020 and 2023, prosecutors said, on Monday.
No-one was physically harmed but the group put lives in jeopardy, prosecutors said.
"It is self-evident that a high price attaches to the safety and interests of this nation," Justice Nicholas Hilliard said.
"The defendants put these things at risk by using this country as a base from which to plan the various operations.
"Anyone who uses this country in that way, in the circumstances of this case, commits a very serious offence."
Ringleader Orlin Roussev, who operated out of a former guesthouse in the English seaside resort town of Great Yarmouth, was given the stiffest sentence — 10 years and eight months in prison — for being involved in all six operations discovered by police.
He and the others faced up to 14 years behind bars.
Roussev worked for alleged Russian agent Jan Marsalek, an Austrian national who is wanted by Interpol for fraud and embezzlement after the 2020 collapse of German payment processing firm Wirecard, prosecutors said.
His whereabouts are unknown.
Security Minister Dan Jarvis said the case sent a warning that Britain would use its "full range of tools" to "detect, disrupt, and deter malicious acts from hostile states and protect the public".
Roussev, 47, and his lieutenant Biser Dzhambazov, 44, pleaded guilty in London's Central Criminal Court last year to espionage charges and having false identity documents. Dzhambazov was sentenced to 10 years and two months in prison.
Roussev called himself Jackie Chan and Dzhambazov was dubbed Mad Max or Jean-Claude Van Damme. Their underlings were dubbed "Minions" from the animated Despicable Me film franchise.
Police said their fanciful pseudonyms masked a deadly serious gang.
In one operation, members tried to lure a journalist who uncovered Moscow's involvement in the 2018 Novichok poisoning of a former Russian spy in Salisbury, England, into a "honeytrap" romance with another member of the group, Vanya Gaberova.
The spies followed Christo Grozev, a Bulgarian researcher for the online publication Bellingcat, from Vienna to a conference in Valencia, Spain, and the gang's ringleaders discussed robbing and killing him, or kidnapping him and taking him to Russia.
"Learning only in retrospect that foreign agents have been monitoring my movements, communications and home, surveying my loved ones over an extended period, has been terrifying, disorientating and deeply destabilising," Grozev said in a statement read during the four-day sentencing hearing.
"The consequences have not faded with time — they have fundamentally changed how I live my daily life and how I relate to the world around me."
In another operation, members of the group conducted surveillance on a US air base in Germany where they believed Ukrainian troops were training.
After police raided his house and arrested Roussev, he denied doing anything on behalf of any government.
"I would be thrilled to see how on God's earth there is a connection between me and Russia or any other state because I haven't been a spy or government agent," Roussev said in a police interview.
"No James Bond activity on my end, I guarantee you."
Messages to Marsalek, however, showed him talking about his "Indiana Jones warehouse" of spy equipment and said he was becoming like "Q," the mastermind behind Bond's gadgets.
Roussev's house was loaded with spy tech. He had equipment used to jam Wi-Fi and GPS signals, along with eavesdropping devices and car trackers.
Cameras were hidden in sunglasses, pens, neckties and cuddly toys, including one in a Minion doll.
A selfie of Marsalek wearing a Russian uniform was found on Roussev's phone.
Three of the so-called minions were convicted at trial in March of spying for an enemy state.
Katrin Ivanova, 33, was sentenced to nine years and eight months in prison; Gaberova, 30, was sentenced to six years and eight months; and Tihomir Ivanov Ivanchev, 39, was sentenced to eight years in prison.
Ivan Stoyanov, 33, a mixed martial arts fighter who pleaded guilty to spying for Russia, was sentenced to five years and three weeks in prison.
Each convict faces deportation after they are released from prison.
Both women had claimed during the trial that they had been deceived and manipulated by Dzhambazov.
Dzhambazov, who worked for a medical courier company but claimed to be an Interpol police officer, was in a relationship with both women — his laboratory assistant and longtime partner Ivanova and beautician Gaberova.
Gaberova had ditched painter-decorator Ivanchev for the "ugly" Dzhambazov, who took her to a Michelin-starred restaurant and stayed with her in a five-star hotel during a surveillance mission.
When police arrested the suspects in February 2023, they found Dzhambazov naked in bed with Gaberova rather than at home with Ivanova.
Defence lawyer Anthony Metzer said Gaberova was naive and her case was tragic as she "slipped into criminality" under Dzhambazov's romantic spell.
But the judge said she knew what she was doing was for Russia.
"You found what you were doing exciting and glamorous, as demonstrated by the film you took of yourself wearing surveillance glasses in Montenegro," Justice Hilliard said.
AP

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