United States v. Pitts

973 F. Supp. 576, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11105, 1997 WL 431060
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedJuly 30, 1997
Docket1:96cr0483
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 973 F. Supp. 576 (United States v. Pitts) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Pitts, 973 F. Supp. 576, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11105, 1997 WL 431060 (E.D. Va. 1997).

Opinion

SENTENCING MEMORANDUM

ELLIS, District Judge.

Introduction

Defendant Earl Edwin Pitts (“Pitts”) came before the Court for sentencing after entering a plea of guilty on February 28, 1997, to Counts 1 and 3 of a 12-Count indictment. 1 *577 Specifically, Pitts pled guilty to conspiring to commit espionage, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 794(a) and (c) (Count 1), and attempting to commit espionage, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 794(a) (Count 3). Pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3553, the Court stated its findings and reasons from the bench for the sentence imposed. This Sentencing Memorandum elaborates on those findings and reasons.

The record reflects that Pitts,- a United States citizen, joined the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) as a Special Agent on September 18, 1983. Upon graduation from the FBI Academy, Pitts was assigned to the FBI Field Office in Alexandria, Virginia, where he worked on white collar crime and narcotics investigations. In March 1985, the FBI relocated Pitts to Fredericksburg, where he worked as the- Resident Agent for the Northern Neck region of Virginia. After less than two years as a Resident Agent, the FBI transferred Pitts to the New York Field Office to work as a member of a foreign counterintelligience (“FCI”) squad. As an FCI squad member, Pitts’ duties included investigating officers of the Committee - for State Security, Komitet Gosudarstvennoy Bezopasnosty (“KGB”), the intelligence service for the then-existing Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (“U.S.S.R.”), assigned to the U.S.S.R. Mission to the United Nations. In this position, Pitts had access to a wide range of sensitive, classified, and top secret material concerning, among other things, counterintelligience operations, surveillance of U.S.S.R. Mission officials, and the true identities of human assets and defectors, namely, American and Soviet agents.

While working in New York, Pitts betrayed his country by becoming an agent of the KGB. Specifically, in July 1987, Pitts sent a letter to a Soviet official employed by the U.S.S.R. Mission to the United Nations requesting a meeting with a representative of the KGB at the New York Public Library. The letter suggested that Pitts could provide the- KBG with valuable U.S. security information. To establish his bonafides as a source of such information, Pitts’ letter enclosed certain secret surveillance information pertaining to the Soviet official’s recent activities. The Soviet official, who was not, as Pitts thought, a KGB officer, forwarded Pitts’ message to the U.S.S.R. Mission’s Chief Security Officer, who instructed the official to meet Pitts at the New York 2 Public Library and to introduce Pitts to Aleksandr Karpov, the KGB officer at the U.S.S.R. Mission responsible for penetrating the United States’ intelligence and security services. The Soviet official complied, and Pitts’ counter-espionage activity commenced.

Between July 1987 and October 1992, Pitts actively engaged in espionage on behalf of the KGB and, subsequently, the Sluzhba Vneshney Rasvedi Rossii (“SVRR”), the KGB’s successor organization. 2 During this period of time, Pitts held a number of sensitive positions within the FBI 3 and had access to top secret documents. After Pitts moved from New York City to the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area in August 1989, he made at least 9 brief trips to New York to pass unclassified and classified material to his KGB and SVRR “handlers.” 4 In exchange *578 for this U.S. national security information, the KGB and SVRR paid him substantial sums of money. The record confirms that Pitts received at least $129,000 for the U.S. national security information he provided to the KGB and SVRR and was promised an additional $100,000. In an effort to conceal these funds and their source, Pitts laundered his ill-gotten proceeds by making hundreds of small cash and money order deposits into various personal bank accounts. In this regard, for example, Pitts made 20 or more such deposits in a single month.

In October 1992, Pitts was transferred to the Legal Counsel Division at FBI Headquarters. At this time, Pitts ceased to engage in active espionage on behalf of Russia: he went “dormant,” as they say colloquially in the field. Approximately three years passed with Pitts in this idle mode. Then, in January 1995, Pitts began to work in the Behavioral Science Unit at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia. At no time did Pitts disclose to the FBI his 1987-1992 espionage activities on behalf of the KGB and SVRR.

Sometime in 1995, unbeknownst to Pitts, the Soviet official whom he had initially contacted by letter in 1987 had begun to cooperate with the FBI. In the course of this cooperation, this official disclosed to FBI personnel Pitts’ prior espionage activities on behalf of the KGB and SVRR. Armed with this information, the FBI launched project “False Flag,” a eounterintelligience operation designed to persuade Pitts that the SVRR had reactivated him. Through “False Flag,” the FBI hoped to gather information concerning Pitts’ espionage activities during the 1987-1992 period.

The “False Flag” sting commenced when the FBI mailed a letter to Pitts, postmarked New York, New York. This letter purported to reactivate him as a spy for the SVRR. Pitts did not respond. The FBI then instructed the former Soviet official to apr proach Pitts. So, on August 26, 1995, the Russian informant contacted Pitts at his residence in Northern Virginia, requesting that he immediately meet a “guest from Moscow.” Pitts agreed to meet the Russian informant and the guest at the Chancellorsville Battlefield Visitor Center later that same afternoon. At this “clandestine” meeting, the Russian informant and the guest asked for Pitts’ assistance and Pitts readily promised to “do what I can.” 5 And so he did.

From then until his arrest in December 1996, Pitts, believing that the Russians had indeed reactivated him, engaged in a wide array of attempted espionage activities. In contrast to his prior espionage, the persons Pitts dealt with during the “False Flag” operation were actually undercover FBI agents pretending to be SVRR officers. During the 16 month period of Pitts’ attempted espionage, he made 23 “drops” of unclassified and classified FBI documents and held 9 telephone conversations and 2 face-to-face meetings with his SVRR/FBI handlers. In particular, Pitts, believing that he was dealing with Russian agents, provided his handlers confidential personal information concerning approximately 250 fellow FBI special agents and numerous internal FBI directories. And, in an especially audacious plot, Pitts planned to smuggle an SVRR technician into the FBI Academy to facilitate SVRR eavesdropping on a secure FBI telephone communication system. To this end, Pitts provided his SVRR/FBI handlers with: (1) his FBI *579

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Related

United States v. Pitts
Fourth Circuit, 1999
United States v. Earl Edwin Pitts
176 F.3d 239 (Fourth Circuit, 1999)

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973 F. Supp. 576, 1997 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11105, 1997 WL 431060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-pitts-vaed-1997.