Ex CIA Agent Boris Korczak on The Tom Snyder Show


 
   

Boris Korczak is an ex CIA double access agent who worked for the CIA for 7 years. He infiltrated the KGB in the 1970's until a drunken American official exposed him in 1979 in USSR Embassy in Copenhagen. He fled to the United States in 1980 and had many attempts on his life. In 1981, in Giant Food Store in Virginia he was shot with a miniscule poisoned pellet containing ricin. He was not compensated in any way by the United States Government or the CIA. CIA did not honor their contract with Boris. The US Government chose not to be sued, hiding behind "Totten Doctrine". (The Totten doctrine is based on the 1876 Supreme Court case of Totten versus United States. The case involved the estate of an individual who performed intelligence services for President Lincoln during the Civil War. The court dismissed the plaintiff's postwar suit for breach of contract.)Korczak experienced many of the same obstacles that, outed CIA agent, Valery Plame did.To date, he has recieved no help or compensation for the United States of the CIA.He is putting the finishing touches on his tell-all book about his time in the Agency.

Canal: News & Politics
Añadido: March 24, 2008 at 1:49 am
Autor: Bkorczak

Duración: 10:00
Puntuación: 5.00
Reproducciones: 1583

Etiquetas: Agent  Boris  CIA  Double  KGB  Korczak  Plame  Ricin  Valerie  

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Comentarios

DallasMexigga (August 30, 2008 at 8:23 pm)
I can't hear what he's saying, can somebody summarize or interpreter what he said?
Bkorczak (May 17, 2008 at 12:48 am)
Thank you. We x-agents do not die ever. We just fade away, but it is not my time yet.Stay safe.BK
MARYBLEUZ (May 17, 2008 at 12:45 am)
I hold you in even higher regard after hearing this story. You truely have 9 lives!!! The 10th is with Anonymous! What is OSA thinking trying to mess with you?
spygirl43 (May 11, 2008 at 7:44 pm)
Now here is a classy guy. I miss Tom Snyder and his show.
Bkorczak (April 29, 2008 at 2:07 pm)
Budapest uprising was an expression of yearning for this what we still have -A FREEDOM OF SPEECH. I was there and people were dying for it. Thousand went to prisons. US made lots of promisses to help. No help, just crocodile tears on "Voice of America radio".Stay safe.BK
fo3 (April 29, 2008 at 2:01 pm)
Hi, I replied in one of your pro "anonymous Vs Scientology" videos.I didn't know that you were in hungary during the uprising, my friend is hungarian and his father was fighting in that uprising. I was thinking of the uprising of hungary and poland when I was asking you on your opinion on citizens fighting against a structured powerful group. Sure there's no tanks and bullets so it's somewhat easier :)Thanks for your videos and any advice you offer to anon.
AnonOutreach (April 25, 2008 at 2:57 pm)
That is just so sad. I had a buddy in the housing movement in the USA and they had about 30% Vietnam vets that were homeless. Yet there's empty houses all over the place because people fled their mortgages or were foreclosed on.I just don't get it *sigh*
Bkorczak (April 25, 2008 at 1:55 pm)
Yesterday MSNBC - Olberman - gave us a look at the Vets conditions. 1000 suicides a month in 2007 due to lack of help.BK
Bkorczak (April 25, 2008 at 1:52 pm)
Since 1920 US was feeding USSR with grains, unrefundable loans,war material during IIWW.Was the Cold War real? It certainly boosted the the big industry profits and fat cats got fatter. US could "win" the Cold War by cutting its supplies to the Soviets. I do not think we were ever in danger of a real war.BK
AnonOutreach (April 25, 2008 at 1:51 pm)
BTW, my brother had, a shall we say, HIGHLY dangerous job for the government in the 1960's. He as already a bit nutty which is why they trained him for that particular job.Since he came back even crazier he's had free health care, disability, pensions and rent-geared-to-income housing. I can't imagine a Vietnam vet getting that much help. Protesting one's government isn't just a *right* it's a duty. How it became a dirty word, I just don't know *sigh*