Russian Agents in US Aimed to Make Kids Spies
Crew members pressured kids to join the cause, and at least one had agreed to do it, the sources said.
The ring, which included notorious wanna-be femme fatale Anna Chapman, was busted two years ago, and had infiltrated a well-connected consulting firm operating in New York and Washington, according to sources.
Mobilizing kids to do Russia's bidding was a clever strategy since people raised in America would likely raise fewer suspicions and would more easily pass security checks when they began operating as spies as adults, experts note.
One child successfully recruited was a sophomore at George Washington University in the capital when his parents were nabbed. They had lived under assumed names in the US with their son for more than a decade.
The boy agreed to his parents' request to join the family business, and to travel to Russia for espionage training, sources told the Journal. He's currently in Russia. A lawyer who represented his father against espionage charges called the accusations "crap."