US couple admit spying for Cuba
A retired US state department official and his wife have admitted spying for Cuba for nearly three decades.
The former official, Walter Kendall Myers, 72, had access to top-secret government information.
Under a plea deal, Mr Myers will spend the rest of his life in jail while wife Gwendolyn, 71, will serve a term of no more than seven-and-a-half years.
She pleaded guilty to a lesser charge of conspiracy to gather and transmit national defence information to Cuba.
The couple also agreed to forfeit $1.7m (£1m) in assets - including a Washington DC apartment and a 37-ft yacht - an amount equal to the total salary he earned from the state department.
Shopping trolley swaps
They have been in custody since being arrested in June, following an undercover FBI sting operation.
“ For the past 30 years, this couple betrayed America's trust by covertly providing classified national defence information to the Cuban goverment ” David Kris Assistant attorney general
Myers was known as Agent 202, while his wife was Agent 123, according to court documents.
Prosecutors say the couple were recruited three decades ago while living in South Dakota by a Cuban intelligence agent, who had met Myers during his previous role at the state department.
In 1981, the husband and wife returned to Washington where Myers got a job back at the state department and worked his way up.
US authorities say that from 1983 until this year the couple had a shortwave radio to receive messages from the Cuban government.
They also delivered government secrets by swapping shopping trolleys with their Cuban handlers at stores, and spent an evening with then-Cuban leader Fidel Castro in 1995, say officials.
The US justice department said the case should serve notice that America remained vigilant in protecting its secrets.
"For the past 30 years, this couple betrayed America's trust by covertly providing classified national defence information to the Cuban government," David Kris, assistant attorney general for national security, said in a statement.
But the couple's lawyer, Bradford Berenson, said they had acted "not out of selfish motive or hope of personal gain, but out of conscience and personal commitment", reports AP news agency.
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