Metafilter The Community Weblog
Tuesday, February 11, 2003 7:14 PM PST
Home Archives MetaTalk Login
AboutNew UserSearch Donate

February 6, 2003

Despite the FBI's best efforts, the spy only passed public domain information to North Korea In Graham Greene's hilarious "Our Man in Havana", a salesman-unlikely-turned-spy passes vacuum-cleaner blueprints as plans of a nuclear plant to his superiors at MI6. Turns an American of Korean origin has been doing pretty much the same with North Korea and thus cannot be charged with espionage. One can only hope that the current bullish attitude of North Korea is all based on the info passed by this guy (who, BTW, sold it for cash).
posted by magullo at 10:13 AM PST [trackback] (8 comments total)

I'll be very interested to hear what happens to this guy. From the article, it looks like he could make a good case for having just spoofed the N. Koreans into paying him for useless info. It's the American Way (see: Fox News, O'Reilly, Rivera, most of the rest of commercial TV, et al.). Seems like his only real mistake was not declaring the cash to the IRS...
posted by ubi at 10:36 AM PST on February 6


so. all north korea ACTUALLY has in it's possession weapons of mass suckage?

posted by quonsar at 11:17 AM PST on February 6


unlike the bullish attitiude of other "non mentionables"
posted by Satapher at 12:10 PM PST on February 6


If he sold useless information to them, i.e. drained away their cash, then I say good for him. But, yeah, the taxes situation is a bit odd. How do you declare something like that? "Yeah, um... I was pretending to be a spy, so a foreign government gave me money for uselss info. Where do I put that on the form?" That would be a funny situation to see.
posted by geekhorde at 1:01 PM PST on February 6


I am so in the wrong line of work.
posted by IshmaelGraves at 1:49 PM PST on February 6


How do you declare something like that? "Yeah, um... I was pretending to be a spy, so a foreign government gave me money for uselss info. Where do I put that on the form?"

Sounds like a Consultant to me.
posted by nyxxxx at 2:12 PM PST on February 6


one word: Decoy
posted by th3ph17 at 4:12 PM PST on February 6


Sounds familiar. Remember Edmund Pope, an American who was arrested, tried and convicted by the Russians in 2000? The FSB claimed he was buying secrets dealing with Russian torpedo technology – “secrets” which, it turns out, had been public knowledge for years! Some of this old torpedo technology had even been published in Popular Science magazine.
posted by Mack Twain at 5:43 PM PST on February 6


« Older Is the U.S. suffocating reform...   |   "Feminism" isn't the problem... Newer »



Home   About   Archives    MetaTalk   Login   New User   Search   Donate  

© 1999-2002 The MetaFilter Network
All posts are © their original authors.

Samui Villas and Homes are a real estate company based in Koh Samui, Thailand Samui Villas and Luxury Beach Samui Villas on Koh Samui - Thailand
© Copyright 2005-2010 Metafilter | Community Weblog. All rights reserved.
A template of the Vooweb.com Website templates network
Metafilter | Community Weblog Sites

© Copyright 2005-2010 Metafilter | Community Weblog. All rights reserved.
A template of the Vooweb.com Website templates network