hanssen in A Sentence

    1

    Whenever Hanssen left home, undercover FBI agents secretly followed him.

    0
    2

    The evidence against Hanssen was overwhelming, and he knew it.

    0
    3

    The FBI says it has tightened security since the Hanssen arrest.

    0
    4

    In February 2001, Robert Hanssen was caught selling information to the Russians.

    0
    5

    In February 2001, Robert Hanssen was caught selling information to the Russian government.

    0
    6

    When confronted, Hanssen said he was trying to hook up a color printer.

    0
    7

    Both approaches were incredibly foolhardy, but Hanssen got away with it both times.

    0
    8

    Hanssen spent much of his time out of the office visiting friends and colleagues;

    0
    9

    Hanssen admitted that he would been spying off and on for more than 20 years.

    0
    10

    Hanssen also sold computer software to the Russians that allowed them to track CIA and FBI activities.

    0
    11

    Hanssen knew it and felt secure enough to conduct thousands of unauthorized and incriminating searches over the years.

    0
    12

    The safety-, schedule- and cost-related benefits are substantial, and we expect that many others will follow suit,” said Hanssen.

    0
    13

    The safety-, schedule- and cost-related benefits are substantial, and we expect that many others will follow suit,” says Hanssen.

    0
    14

    Hanssen was paid $600,000 for his efforts(and promised that another $800,000 was waiting for him in a Russian bank).

    0
    15

    The FBI launched an investigation- which Hanssen closely followed by hacking into FBI computers- but the investigation was unsuccessful.

    0
    16

    Over the years Hanssen left so many clues to his spying that he practically glowed in the dark.

    0
    17

    Using the ACS systems, Hanssen downloaded hundreds, if not thousands, of classified documents and gave them to the Russians.

    0
    18

    No one involved in the Kelley/Hanssen mole hunt was disciplined or fired from the FBI, although several agents were promoted.

    0
    19

    FBI agent Robert Hanssen was given a life sentence without the possibility of parole for selling American secrets to Moscow.

    0
    20

    The FBI, and even the KGB, had assumed that Hanssen never met with any Russian agents, but they were wrong.

    0
    21

    In the years that Hanssen spied for the Russians, he handed over thousands of America's most important military and intelligence secrets.

    0
    22

    As the Justice Department later described it, Hanssen was“wholly unsupervised” by either the State Department or the FBI for the next six years.

    0
    23

    It was later learned that Hanssen, who had reached a high position within the FBI, had been selling intelligence since as early as 1979.

    0
    24

    At a time when he made less than $100,000 a year, Hanssen kept a gym bag filled with $100,000 in cash in his bedroom closet.

    0
    25

    Ståle Hanssen, project manager for Johan Sverdrup jackets, installation and commissioning, describes the technology enabling single-lift installation of big platforms as a game changer for the industry.

    0
    26

    What are the odds that a retiring KGB officer would have taken Robert Hanssen's file with him when he retired, and that the FBI would have been successful in tracking him down?

    0
    27

    After Hanssen's arrest, the inspector general of the Justice Department launched an investigation into how the mole hunt had gone so wrong and how Hanssen had been able to spy for so long without attracting suspicion.

    0
    28

    His brother-in-law, Mark Wauck, also an FBI agent, saw the unexplained cash and reported it to his superiors, also noting that Hanssen had once talked of retiring to Poland, which was then still part of the Soviet bloc.

    0
    29

    The FBI mole hunters had never suspected Robert Hanssen of spying before, but all residual doubt that he was their man disappeared when the KGB officer who sold them Hanssen's file began to interpret the file's contents.

    0
    30

    When the KGB paid him cash, Hanssen sometimes counted the money at work, then deposited it in a savings account in his own name, in a bank less than a block from FBI headquarters in Washington, D. C.

    0