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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe spy who couldn’t spell: how the biggest heist in the history of US espionage was foiled
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/oct/26/spy-couldnt-spell-how-biggest-heists-us-espionage-history-foiled<snip>
The classrooms and hallways of Farmingdale High in Long Island were deserted on the morning of Saturday 19 August 2001, when a van pulled into the schools parking lot. Turning off the engine, the driver a tall man in his late 30s stepped out into the warm summer sun. He cast a sweeping gaze upon the institution he had graduated from two decades earlier.
Whatever nostalgia he might have felt for his old school was tinged with bitterness. It was here that he had suffered some of lifes early humiliations: taunted by classmates for his apparent dimwittedness; held in low esteem by his teachers. If they remembered him at all, they would remember him as the boy who had difficulty reading. The boy who was so bad with spellings. His bearish frame may have protected him from physical bullying, but combined with his severe dyslexia and his social awkwardness, it had also cemented his image as a dolt.
That image had stuck with him, despite a successful career in US intelligence, where he had been given access to some of the countrys most valued secrets. Being underestimated by family, classmates and colleagues had been the theme of his life, a curse he had borne silently since childhood. But for the mission he had now embarked upon, it was a blessing. None of his co-workers or managers in the intelligence community could have imagined that he of all people was capable of masterminding a complex espionage plot.
He had already pulled off what was then the biggest heist of classified information in the history of American espionage. In just a few days, he hoped to execute the final step of a meticulous plan to exchange those secrets for millions of dollars. If he succeeded, he would have enough money to pay off the mortgages of his brothers and sisters, settle his personal debts and secure the financial future of his children.
With fortune, he imagined, respect would follow. Those who had known him would no longer doubt his intelligence. Once and for all, he would shake off the image that had dogged him since childhood.
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A long but great read
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The spy who couldn’t spell: how the biggest heist in the history of US espionage was foiled (Original Post)
malaise
Oct 2016
OP
monmouth4
(9,695 posts)1. I didn't intend to read it all but couldn't stop. Absolutely fascinating malaise, thanks so much
for posting..
malaise
(268,979 posts)2. Same thing happened to me
Got hooked and had to read to the end