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Anna Chapman, who was deported from the U.S. to Russia on charges of espionage, takes part in Fashion Week in Moscow in April.
Anna Chapman, who was deported from the U.S. to Russia on charges of espionage, takes part in Fashion Week in Moscow in April.
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LOS ANGELES — Anna Chapman, now a television star and sometime lingerie model in her native Russia, was the face of the biggest spy swap since the Cold War when she and nine others were arrested in June 2010. On Monday, the FBI released a trove of videos and documents about Chapman and others.

In one, a woman in her late 20s with reddish hair and sporting big sunglasses walks into a New York City coffee shop, takes a seat and pulls out a laptop computer. She leans forward to talk to her companion and briefly flashes the smile that turned her into an international sensation.

The agency said it released the videos and documents in response to a Freedom of Information request.

“The arrests of 10 Russian spies last year provided a chilling reminder that espionage on U.S. soil did not disappear when the Cold War ended,” the agency said in an accompanying statement. “The highly publicized case also offered a rare glimpse into the sensitive world of counterintelligence and the FBI’s efforts to safeguard the nation from those who would steal our vital secrets.”

The agency said its investigation into Chapman and others working for the Russian Foreign Intelligence Service went on for more than a decade. The investigation was dubbed “Operation Ghost Stories.”

The tapes show Chapman shopping in Macy’s. Additional photos and video show other conspirators burying money in a weed patch, handing off documents or meeting at Columbus Circle. The group was a collection of what is known as illegals because they took civilian jobs rather than working from the Russian Embassy. They appeared to live quiet, middle-class lives while burrowing into U.S. society to cultivate contacts.

The suspects were arrested June 27, 2010. Within days, they pleaded guilty in federal court to conspiring to serve as unlawful agents of the Russian Federation within the U.S. and were deported. The agents were swapped for four Russians imprisoned for spying for the West.

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