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Texas Man Who Acted As Russian Agent Gets 10 Years' Prison (go.com) 87

An anonymous reader quotes a report from ABC News: A Texas man who acted as a secret agent for the Russian government and illegally exported cutting-edge military technology to Russia has been sentenced to 10 years in prison. Alexander Fishenko learned his punishment Thursday in federal court in New York. He pleaded guilty in September to crimes including acting as a Russian agent. The 50-year-old Fishenko is a U.S. and Russian citizen. He owned Houston-based Arc Electronics Inc. Prosecutors say he led a scheme that evaded strict export controls for micro-electronics commonly used in missile guidance systems, detonation triggers and radar systems. Prosecutors say his company shipped about $50 million worth of technologies to Russia between 2002 and 2012. In other Russian-related news, a Russian government-owned news site Sputnik has reported that the Kremlin is building a nuclear space bomber that should be flight-ready by 2020.
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Texas Man Who Acted As Russian Agent Gets 10 Years' Prison

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  • in soviet russia we bomb you!

    • A Russian agent named Alexander Fishenko ! Who'd guess .
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Actually, the surname is Ukrainian, so not obvious. Swing and a miss.

        • Re: (Score:1, Flamebait)

          There's the Russian troll. Always trying to deflect blame from Russia.

          "It's Ukraine's fault Russia invaded them. Had they not wanted the freedom of the West rather than the oppression of Russia this wouldn't have happened."

          "It's Ukraine's fault the terrorists are receiving arms and munitions from Russia. Had they let them burn polling places, destroy ballots and attack those who wanted to vote in free and open elections this wouldn't have happened."

          "It's Ukraine's fault Russia invaded and occupies Crimea.

  • TANJ (Score:1, Flamebait)

    by ChrisMaple ( 607946 )
    And yet Hillary remains free.
    • Re:TANJ (Score:4, Insightful)

      by EvilSS ( 557649 ) on Thursday July 21, 2016 @09:04PM (#52558377)

      And yet Hillary remains free.

      See, because most people do it backwards. It's power first, then treason. Do it the wrong way 'round and you risk going to jail.

  • by Diac ( 1515711 ) on Thursday July 21, 2016 @08:43PM (#52558299)

    Everyone uses them. The issue with trying to prosecute any spies is that your own get treated the same way and you can not say anything about it.

    Sounds more like a plea deal than anything else otherwise the two countries would just switch caught spies like they normally do also outside of the public view.

  • Sooner or later, this will be used to kill Americans and allies. The man's action is a but-for cause of their death. He is getting off very light from that POV.

    On the other hand, America's legal arms dealers are a massive industry, and they never get held responsible for how the weapons are used. So the ten years isn't for the deaths that are being caused, it's for the fact that the particular weapon is one that someone doesn't want sent overseas.

    • Re:Sentencing (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Friday July 22, 2016 @02:46AM (#52559197)

      Are you serious, or just the average clueless American? There is nothing Russia can buy from any other country that they can't make themselves. In particular when it comes to weapons. You are aware they are a military super-power right? Do you really think some little-heard of electronics company got hold of a secret super weapon and sold it to the Russians, so they can use it to kill Americans? Wake up you idiot. There is obviously something else behind it, but BS accusations about spies and superweapons makes it easier to swallow for dumb Americans like yourself, and it fits the agenda.

      • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

        There is nothing Russia can buy from any other country that they can't make themselves.

        No, it can't. There are many high-tech components Russia cannot make because it does not have the technical knowledge nor manufacturing to do. If it did it would be building its own ships rather than paying France to do so or its own engines instead of from Ukraine.

        You are aware they are a military super-power right?

        No, they're not. Russia is only capable of attacking its weaker, smaller neighbors becau
      • by mbone ( 558574 )

        Are you serious, or just the average clueless American?

        This is slashdot; what do you expect?

  • MPAA (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday July 21, 2016 @09:41PM (#52558525)

    Thank god he did not send some music tracks with that, he would have gotten 100 life sentences and a trillion dollar fine.

  • So, they want to kill Snowden -- or at the very least lock him away for life, and he is an American hero.

    Ross Ulbricht is serving life in prison building a website to buy and sell shit that should be legal (well, most of it) anyway.

    Hillary Clinton commits treason, and goes free.

    But this dude, sells military secrets to the Russians, and 10 years.... yep ... seems legit to me.

    • Ross Ulbricht is serving life in prison building a website to buy and sell shit that should be legal (well, most of it) anyway.

      Didn't he try to have someone murdered?

      • by r_naked ( 150044 )

        Ross Ulbricht is serving life in prison building a website to buy and sell shit that should be legal (well, most of it) anyway.

        Didn't he try to have someone murdered?

        If that was the case why wasn't he convicted of 1st degree murder? Honest question....

        I believe in innocent until proven guilty in a court of law. The charges that he was *CONVICTED* of do _NOT_ warrant a life sentence. If he had been convicted of 5 attempts at murder for hire, THAT would warrant a life sentence. You can't (well obviously you can, or he wouldn't have gotten life) sentence someone based on what you THINK they did. The sentencing should be based on the crimes they were charged and convicted o

        • I remember reading about it. Seems that I was mistaken: he was charged but not yet tried.

          Yeah a life sentence seems way overboard for his actual convictions.

    • by dbIII ( 701233 )

      Hillary Clinton commits treason, and goes free

      Treason doth not prosper ... look that quote up and you will understand.
      Treason isn't even giving classified anti-tank weapons to Hezbolla less than a year after they blew up over a hundred US Marines. Treason these days is beating a Russian at chess. Treason is for nobodies. People working for the state can just wrap themselves in a flag and call working for an enemy "patriotism".

  • He's lucky that he wasn't also copying mp3s otherwise the sentence would have been much worse.

  • Seriously folks, if a subcontractor in Hawaii like Snowden had access do you really think the Chinese didn't? It's a massive attack surface and one of those hundreds of thousands is going to have gambling debts or trade secrets for sex.

    After all even Petraus right at the top of the tree was found guilty for selling secrets for sex.
  • Texas Man Who Acted As Russian Agent Gets 10 Years' Prison

    When are they going to do something about the guy [imdb.com] who's been acting as an evil wizard for the last 10 years?

  • Texas man? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    I was expecting a name like Buck, or Cash. Alexander Fishenko, another immigrant whose loyalties lie elsewhere. We got lots of them now. After his prison sentence he should forfeit his property, be stripped of citizenship, and deported.

  • Secret Agent? (Score:5, Informative)

    by mbone ( 558574 ) on Friday July 22, 2016 @07:49AM (#52559937)

    An electronics exporter who violates ITAR and sells electronics abroad is not a secret agent, even if he misrepresented the purchases when he acquired those electronics.

    And, how did he get this stuff? By "falsely claiming to be a traffic light manufacturer." Now, think about that for a second. The traffic lights in your neighborhood have "microprocessors which are frequently used in military systems, missile-guidance systems and detonation triggers" ? Well, they may (microprocessors can be put to many uses), but that doesn't mean that the traffic lights in your neighborhood contain secret military hardware. In fact, they certainly do not.

    In other words, this guy was convicted of selling export-controlled hardware, which you can buy on the open market, not militarily secret hardware, which you cannot. There is a big difference (not least in that there near no exhaustive list of what is subject to ITAR control, and at times no easy way to determine if something is or is not export restricted), but you wouldn't know it from reading this article.

  • This man committed TREASON against the United States of America. Why is he not being summarily executed, with extreme prejudice, for this crime? Ten years isn't SHIT for treason. The only possible reason I can think of, is they want to keep him around to use for prisoner exchange, or to sift his brain for more information. Otherwise he should be pushing up daisies.
  • Chelsea Manning got 35 years for spying and aiding the enemy when she released to the American public the truth about the war they were in.

"The vast majority of successful major crimes against property are perpetrated by individuals abusing positions of trust." -- Lawrence Dalzell

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