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Christopher Metsos, 11th Russian Spy Suspect, Skips Bail

MENELAOS HADJICOSTIS and CHRISTOPHER TORCHIA   07/ 1/10 07:53 PM ET   AP

Christopher Metsos

NICOSIA, Cyprus — Russian money and influence have long made a splash on this Mediterranean resort island where a suspected spy paymaster vanished after being allowed to walk free on bail.

The ties go right to the top: Russian energy giant Lukoil has a big presence, and the Greek Cypriot president, a communist who studied in Moscow, is expecting an illustrious visitor in October – Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.

Embarrassed authorities searched airports, ports and yacht marinas Thursday for the suspect, identified as Christopher Robert Metsos. Freed on $33,000 (euro27,000) bail, he failed to show for a required meeting with police on Wednesday.

There's no evidence for now that the deep Russian presence in Cyprus played a role in his release, but the Cypriot government is under pressure to explain the bewildering fumble involving a man wanted in the United States for allegedly operating a Russian spy ring there.

Ten suspects are in custody in the U.S., where federal prosecutors said Thursday one man had confessed to federal agents that he worked for Russia's intelligence service. Six suspects appeared in courts in New York and Boston, while a hearing in Alexandria, Va., was postponed. Most of the suspects are charged with crimes that carry penalties of up to 25 years.

The case, a throwback to the Cold War era, recalls Cyprus' own heyday as a place of intrigue, a listening post for spies of all stripes who maneuvered in the Middle East and a convenient transit point for the shady figures of espionage.

Greek Cypriot police examined surveillance video from crossing points on the war-divided island, fearing the suspect may have slipped into the Turkish Cypriot north, a diplomatic no-man's land recognized only by Turkey.

But the fugitive might feel more at home in the Greek-speaking south, where tens of thousands of Russians own mansions and offshore accounts, read Russian-language newspapers and send their children to Russian schools. Recently, the tourist town of Limassol hosted a Russian festival that was opened by Greek Cypriot President Dimitris Christofias.

Cyprus is a top gateway of foreign investment into Russia, and is a popular destination for Russian capital because of low taxes. Cypriot firms have been used as holding companies to avoid taxation in Russia. In recent years, Cyprus took steps to open up bank records so Russian authorities could track tax dodgers.

The political links are tight, too. Christofias, the only communist head of state in the European Union, earned a doctorate in history in Russia and speaks the language. He has welcomed Russian support for peace talks with the Turkish-speaking north, and his foreign minister met his Russian counterpart last week.

On Thursday, as police scoured the island for Metsos, Christofias was hosting an event at the presidential palace to mark the arrival of one of Russia's largest banks, Gazprombank.

In Nicosia, Justice Minister Loucas Louca admitted that a judge's decision to release Metsos "may have been mistaken" and said authorities were examining leads on his possible whereabouts.

"We have some information and we hope that we will arrest him soon," Louca told reporters.

The balding, bespectacled Metsos, 54, is wanted in the United States on charges that he supplied money to the spy ring that reputedly operated under deep cover in America's suburbs.

In Washington, the Justice Department expressed disappointment Thursday that Metsos was freed on bail. "As we had feared, having been given unnecessarily the chance to flee, he did so," said Dean Boyd, a spokesman for the department's national security division.

Cypriot police spokesman Michalis Katsounotos said there were "no indications yet" that Metsos had left the south of the island – and insisted that police bore no responsibility for his disappearance.

"The nagging question of why he was released on bail is best posed to the court, not the police," Katsounotos told The Associated Press.

Russians shuttle through the international airport in Larnaca, where Metsos was arrested Tuesday while waiting to board a flight for Budapest, Hungary. He was traveling on a Canadian passport and said he was a tourist.

About 150,000 Russian tourists visited Cyprus in 2009 and even more are expected this year. Cyprus authorities are trying to make it easier to issue travel visas to Russian citizens and cultural ties extend to the religious: Russians recently inaugurated a large Orthodox church.

Turkey is bound by Interpol warrants, but Cyprus' Turkish-speaking north is not and has no extradition treaties with other countries. Its only air link is to Turkey, though ferries run to Lebanon and Syria.

About 25 flights take off daily from northern Cyprus to more than a half-dozen Turkish cities.

A Turkish Interior Ministry official said he had no information about any search warrant for Metsos in Turkey, but if one was issued, police at airports and ports would be on the lookout for him. He spoke on his department's customary condition of anonymity.

Metin Beyoglu, a spokesman for the breakaway Turkish Cypriot government, said there was no information that Metsos had crossed into the north.

Katsounotos says Metsos arrived on the island June 17 and Cypriot authorities received the Interpol arrest warrant June 25. He was arrested four days later.

Cyprus was split into an internationally recognized Greek Cypriot south and Turkish Cypriot north in 1974 when Turkey invaded in response to a coup by supporters of union with Greece.

Cyprus has for decades been a hotbed of espionage intrigue, as spies converged on the east Mediterranean island positioned at the crossroads of three continents – Europe, Africa and Asia.

The stepfather of famous psychic Uri Geller ran a hotel in the mid-1950s that was a front for Israel's Mossad spy agency, and Geller ran errands for agents.

More recently, former CIA agent Harold Nicholson, in prison for espionage, recruited his 24-year-old son Nathaniel to meet Russian agents in cities around the world from 2006 to 2008 to collect money owed by his former handlers. One of those cities was the Cypriot capital, Nicosia.

___

Torchia reported from Istanbul, Turkey. Associated Press writers Suzan Fraser in Ankara, Selcan Hacaoglu in Istanbul and Pete Yost in Washington contributed to this report.

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NICOSIA, Cyprus — Russian money and influence have long made a splash on this Mediterranean resort island where a suspected spy paymaster vanished after being allowed to walk free on bail. The ...
NICOSIA, Cyprus — Russian money and influence have long made a splash on this Mediterranean resort island where a suspected spy paymaster vanished after being allowed to walk free on bail. The ...
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01:31 PM on 07/01/2010
The FAIR tax is a CON word and once again the Middle & Lower Class carry the overall tax burden.

A) The FAIR tax would ELIMINATE:
* the estate tax, (helps the ultra rich)
* personal income tax (helps everyone - maybe)
* Payroll taxes (helps Corporatio­ns)
* Social Security tax
* Medicaid tax
* Corporate Income taxes --- (Gotta protect them Corporatio­ns who do NOT hire American workers)

B) HERE'S THE BURDON
* Chris Edwards, (Cato Institute)­says,
Corporate taxes, payroll, income and estate taxes currently generate approximat­ely $2.4 trillion, and a revenue-ne­utral Fair Tax would still require that CONSUMER pony up $2.4 trillion.

C) FAIR tax is ONLY applied to "NEW" goods (not used)
* NO TAX on (used - non-NEW) home costing $1.5 Million
* No TAX used Yachts
* No TAX on used cars

Those eliminatio­ns help the poor too, but they help the rich more since all one has to do is LOOK at all that lost Revenue that we need to pay for wars and such.

D) Middle Lower Class PAY the MOST
* David Burton, of Americans for FairTaxati­on, reluctantl­y admitted that after YOU including all taxes that the FairTax replace (income, payroll, corporate and estate), those earning OVER $200,000 (ultra wealthy) would see their share of overall tax burden DECREASE -but- that “those earning between $40,000.00 and $100,000” would see their percentage of tax burden RISE.

SOURCE:
http://www­.factcheck­.org/taxes­/unspinnin­g_the_fair­tax.html
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SageSpencer
Angel brought Him the leaden heart & the dead bird
12:14 PM on 07/01/2010
Let’s see if I got this straight..­.Interpol issues a warrant for a "Russian spy-ring paymaster" and then we are supposed to believe that a judge just happened to think it was okay to give bail to an internatio­nal spy? Okay then.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Aripottah
Dining on micro-bios may be hazardous to health
11:39 AM on 07/01/2010
Well, duhhhhh ..........
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
acmeaviator
H@ll is other people.
11:29 AM on 07/01/2010
Why is no one asking the obvious question here? UVB-76 has been showing massive activity since early June. Now we find these "amateur spies"? What is really going on?
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ZenSufi
Summa iru.
11:28 AM on 07/01/2010
I bet he was just russian to get out of Cyprus.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
georgiegirl
11:18 AM on 07/01/2010
Why would a judge let him out on bail in the first place....h­ow stupid. I'd leave, too.
11:05 AM on 07/01/2010
and this is a surprise--­why didn't the US have him under surveillan­ce while he was out on bail
11:00 AM on 07/01/2010
I bet the Cypriot judge who set bail was the best money could buy. Where was our government­? First it spends months monitoring these spies, arrests them and then does nothing when the Cypriots arrest the 11th spy and paymaster of the group. Mossad and MI5 wept.The disappeara­nce of the 11th spy was the predictabl­e outcome of his release on bail. The U.S. did nothing to prevent his release or interdict his escape. Is there a government in Washington in operable condition? What does the U.S. ambassador to Cyprus actually do to earn a living?
10:50 AM on 07/01/2010
Yeah who lets an alleged spy out on bail? Have these people ever watched a movie??
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MrNCN
All we are saying is give pizza chants...
11:06 AM on 07/01/2010
Spy? PAYMASTER for the spies! Who would have thought that he could come up with the $$ eh? Big surprise..­.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AJ in ATL
33 years of being a Liberal and proud of it!!!
10:21 AM on 07/01/2010
Where is Jason Bourne when you need him?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dan Stewart
10:14 AM on 07/01/2010
As soon as I heard he was out on bail I knew he would jump. Obviously, so did the people who released him on bail. What person in his right mind would abide by the rules of release when they're facing life in prison in the U.S.? And, aside from diplomacy, what does Cyprus care about holding this guy?

There's a lot of Russians in Cyprus, and they have far more local influence than the U.S.

Forget this guy, he's gone forever. Probably on a boat in the Black sea on his way to Odessa right now.

Who cares anyway? I'm not outraged.
10:09 AM on 07/01/2010
Sounds like an alien abduction to me. Don't worry, they will do some tests and then send him back.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
larrykat
Let's make a toast to future ghosts.
10:01 AM on 07/01/2010
Are we sure this isn't a German spy? Lose the glasses, put in a monocle... Gott in Himmel, it's Colonel Klink! Has anyone checked out Sgt. Schultz??
10:06 AM on 07/01/2010
Das heißt Oberst Klink und Unteroffiz­ier Schultz, nicht Colonel Klink oder Sergeant Schulz. ;)
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ZenSufi
Summa iru.
11:27 AM on 07/01/2010
Ausgezeich­net.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
msbeal
Let no neo-con lie go unchallenged
09:57 AM on 07/01/2010
My god it's Richard Dreyfuss the actor from Jaws!!