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Harold Nicholson, Ex-CIA Spy, Gets 8 More Years

NIGEL DUARA   01/18/11 07:03 PM ET   AP

Harold Nicholson

PORTLAND, Ore. — One of the highest-ranking CIA officers ever convicted of espionage will spend eight more years in prison after pleading guilty to betraying his country a second time.

U.S. District Court Judge Anna J. Brown sentenced Harold "Jim" Nicholson on Tuesday in Portland federal court on charges of conspiracy to act as an agent of a foreign government and conspiracy to commit money laundering. Five other charges were dropped as part of the plea deal.

Nicholson admitted to using his son, Nathaniel, to collect a "pension" from Russian agents while serving time in federal prison in Oregon.

Before his sentence was handed down, Jim Nicholson delivered a tearful confession in court in which he partly acknowledged his transgressions and apologized to his Russian contacts, his parents and his children.

At times choked up, Nicholson said the impetus to collect his so-called "pension" was desperation. Penniless after a previous conviction, he said he sought to help his children with their student loans and debt.

Instead, he drew one of them into his conspiracy.

Nicholson's youngest son, Nathaniel Nicholson, was sentenced in December to five years on probation after making a deal with prosecutors to help build the case against his father, whom the younger Nicholson said he once idolized.

"I love him dearly, I could not be more proud of him," Jim Nicholson said about Nathaniel. "He has never let me down, and he has never failed his family.

"My failure has been mine alone."

During Jim Nicholson's statement, Nathaniel teared up and rested his head against a family member's shoulder.

As part of a deal he struck with prosecutors, Jim Nicholson was given 10 minutes of relative privacy with his family, during which he was prohibited from touching them. U.S. Marshals were instructed to be present in court and listen in on the conversation.

Nathaniel Nicholson declined to comment after the sentencing.

Brown, the judge in the case, said Nicholson could have been released in June 2017, at the age of 66. Instead, he'll be in prison – and likely remain in solitary confinement – until at least 2025. She described Nicholson's statement as eloquent, but challenged whether he regretted his actions.

"Notably absent from his remarks was any suggestion of remorse," Brown said.

Jim Nicholson admitted to using his son to collect more than $47,000 from Russian officials in Mexico, Peru and Cyprus for past spy work.

As part of his plea deal, Nicholson had to agree that prosecutors could prove the facts of the case, which began in the summer of 2006 when Jim Nicholson urged Nathaniel to contact the nearest Russian consulate.

Between October 2006 and December 2008, he met with representatives of the Russian Federation six times, including twice at a consulate in San Francisco.

"Nathaniel was excited about the prospect of acting in a clandestine fashion like his father," prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memo.

Jim Nicholson was divorced while still a CIA agent and had sole custody of his three children. After his conviction in Virginia, the children went to live with Jim Nicholson's parents in Eugene, Ore. Nathaniel Nicholson was 12 when his father was convicted.

He received a medical discharge from the U.S. Army in 2004 when he suffered a back injury during a parachuting training exercise. He began to attend Lane Community College, with the eventual goal of getting a degree in architecture.

At the first meeting at the Russian consulate, Nathaniel Nicholson presented three pieces of paper slipped to him in prison by his father. They included a letter of introduction, a photograph of Jim and Nathaniel Nicholson at the prison, and a request for money.

If caught visiting the consulate, Nathaniel told prosecutors he had a cover story: He would say he was asking the Russians about architecture.

At a second meeting at the consulate, Nathaniel received $5,000 in $100 bills, according to his plea agreement.

That set off Nathaniel Nicholson's globetrotting tour, which included stops in Mexico City, where he met with Vasiliy Fedotov, known to the FBI as a former high-ranking officer with the KGB. Fedotov gave Nathaniel Nicholson $10,000 in $100 bills.

Jim Nicholson told Nathaniel to distribute the money among his grandparents and siblings, and not to deposit more than $500 at a time.

"Nathaniel always took strength from the notion that he was helping the family by following his father's bidding," prosecutors wrote in a sentencing memo.

All along, CIA agents were keeping track of Nathaniel Nicholson, bugging his car, tapping his phone lines and monitoring his e-mails. He was arrested in 2008.

In his plea agreement, Jim Nicholson and prosecutors agreed to stick to the terms of his original agreement, struck in Virginia in February 1997.

In that deal, for which Nicholson is already serving 24 years in prison, he admitted to providing the post-Soviet intelligence service of the Russian Federation with national defense information, including photographic negatives, between June 1994 and his arrest on Nov. 16, 1996.

Nicholson met with them in several southeast Asian countries, as well as Switzerland, receiving cash payments each time.

When he was arrested at a Washington, D.C., airport, Nicholson was headed to Zurich with cash and information on the identities on the CIA Moscow chief and his staff, the identities and code names of CIA informants and the identities of CIA case officers. He also admitted plans to reveal the extent of U.S. knowledge about the intelligence capabilities and military preparedness of the Russian Federation.

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Amryxx
politeness rules, but with sharpened edges
04:24 PM on 01/19/2011
No one is going to complain if the US uses the death penalty on those committing treason.

Just sayin'
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
CountryBeforeParty
We are against misconduct, not against wealth
03:32 PM on 01/19/2011
Matthew Broderick is an ex-CIA spy?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
salamanca1
We'll never run out of stupidity
07:16 PM on 01/19/2011
THAT'S who he looks like! Thank you. I couldn' t put my finger on it for a minute.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
roninroshi
Oni ni Kanabo (鬼に金棒 )
02:37 PM on 01/19/2011
An interesting story on another CIA op... http://english.aljazeera.net/indepth/features/2011/01/2011112104142751917.html
11:46 AM on 01/19/2011
So, here we all are trying to make a living, and going about our measly jobs and this guy is trying to sell us all out. Nice. Really nice. And some people wonder why we don't trust one another?
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
J0E1
Don't blame me, I'm not a republicrat.
11:35 AM on 01/19/2011
Sounds like he was a little bit rusty with his spy techniques as his son was suspected and caught so quickly.  You should have trained him better.
This user has chosen to opt out of the Badges program
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VOTER
Freedom from fear - the philosophy of human rights
01:13 PM on 01/19/2011
Right.
Dad didn't expect surveillance on his son?
Duh!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Zen0469
An empty micro-bio is a happy micro-bio.
10:44 AM on 01/19/2011
Thou shalt not collect a pension if thou hath both a mercenary and a Roooshian soul. Undoubtedly the eight additional years will provide time for prayer, introspection, and the odds concerning the prospect of redemption,
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Fred Ricardo
The white hat, Truth, Justices and theAmerican way
09:02 AM on 01/19/2011
Israel gives F-35 technology to China and we give them $30 BILLION dollars in aid. Why the double standard?
08:41 AM on 01/19/2011
Here we have a story about an American CIA agent betraying his county to the Russians for money. 18 comments so far including one comparing the traitor’s crimes to the activities of AIPAC, one supporting this and another attempting to make a joke about Joe Lieberman. Revealing.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
fauker1923
'Give 'em the Good News'
08:19 AM on 01/19/2011
seriously guys... if you let me out THIS time I won't betray you to the russians
11:40 AM on 01/19/2011
lol :D
08:07 AM on 01/19/2011
Matthew Broderick is a spy????
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
arkymorgan
Nobody knows the trouble I've been...
07:30 AM on 01/19/2011
Well, his first mistake was in asking too little from the Russians. If he'd gotten some real money out of them, he would never have been 'caught' in the first place.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JayMonaco
09:57 AM on 01/19/2011
Really?
ThinkCreeps
Seriously, it's time.
06:35 AM on 01/19/2011
I'm seeing why he was convicted and sentenced for spying in the 1990s.

I'm not seeing what additional harm has been done by his son collecting money in payment for the information sent as part of those earlier crimes, since it appears that no new damaging information was sent.

While I suspect his sentence would have been worse had he been a soviet/russian agent selling information to the US in the 1980, there's no obvious justice in extending his sentence for getting paid.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dham4201
01:32 PM on 01/19/2011
I mean...he's already been convicted for selling us out and endangering the lives of other operatives...and years later he's still trying to collect his reward for doing so. Really? If this guy was in Russia he would of been tortured and shot a looong time ago
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Wisdo
semantics shamantics
06:24 AM on 01/19/2011
surely the picture is Michael Sheen?
12:35 AM on 01/19/2011
Where did the 47 000.- go? To welfare bank account?
I know, I have the weirdest question.
Seriously, where are the money now?
12:10 AM on 01/19/2011
Traitor. A single bullet goes a long way.