DOGE staff known as 'Big Ball' have reported the grandfather of a KGB spy


See, it is sure that the decisions are not perfect that the federal government has been the agency's gutted agency, objected to the goal, funding, and staff of Elon Musk and a group of 20-es year old Edgelords that sourced from a Tech Bro Crypto-Fascists network and Strengthen the messaging of white nationalists In their free time, but at least none of them are directly related to anyone deeply involved in the intelligence of a foreign opponent. Now, let me take a huge sip of water and check the journalist Jacob Silverman's latest report

So, you know the Doge's staff who went through the “big ball,” if not known as 19-year-old Edward Coristine-a supposed former Member of the Online CyberCriminal Organization The com and a cybersecurity worker reportedly obtained fired from his work for leakage of company secrets? Well, it turns out that there is another layer on its weak -suspicious background. According to independent journalist Jacob SilvermanCoristine is the grandson of Valery Martynov, a former KGB spy.

Per Silverman's Research, Martynov was an officer in the technical espionage division of the Russian Intelligence Agency in 1980, when he was sent to the United States to serve as an undercover agent at the Soviet embassy in Washington, DC about two years in his stay, Si Martynov was the FBI's fastener and began feeding the US government secrets.

Martynov was later identified as compromised by KGB Counterintelligence Officer Victor Cherkasin, who successfully developed resources within US intelligence agencies. To get Martynov back to Russia without suspected he was found out, Cherkasin was asked to skip another Soviet spy (this is a long story that Silverman explained in detail). Once the plane touched, Martynov was arrested and eventually executed.

His widow eventually moved to the United States permanently, where he and his children would arrange, get married, and have children – including Edward.

Edward started with Doge working with the General Services Administration, where he reportedly called employees to explain the code they wrote and justify their jobs, According to Wired. Earlier this month, he named a “senior adviser” In the Bureau of Diplomatic Technology of the State Department, where a significant amount of sensitive data is stored in relation to American diplomatic operations. Washington Post reported that his duty could provide him with the ability to obtain “unauthorized access to classified material and to compromise information with other countries and foreign activities.”

So anyway, a grandmother of the former KGB agent who is Seems to have no need to undergo a background check has not yet occurred access to the state department's sensitive data. That's something happening now. Is it big? I have no idea. This is just one of those details you hear and like you, “Yeah that seems like a likely to happen to these people.”

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