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Topic: Andrew Daulton Lee


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TRW

In the News (Sun 27 Dec 09)

  
  Andrew Daulton Lee - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Andrew Daulton Lee (1952-) a United States citizen and Los Angeles native, had been portrayed by actor Sean Penn in director John Schlesinger 's 1985 movie The Falcon and the Snowman based on the novel by Robert Lindsey.
In December 1976, Lee (with top secret microfilm on his person) had been arrested by Mexican police in front of the Soviet Embassy on the false suspicion of having killed a Mexico City police officer, but under torture had instead confessed to espionage, quickly implicating Boyce in the scheme.
Lee had been convicted of espionage and sentenced to life in prison at the federal penitentiary in Lompoc, California.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Andrew_Daulton_Lee   (280 words)

  
 FILM REVIEW   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Lee is aptly nicknamed "the snowman" in this movie and subsequently is not participating in this scheme for the idealistic goal of making the world better, rather he is in it strictly for the money.
Although they are spies against their own country, Christopher Boyce and Daulton Lee are not portrayed as evil men hoping to endanger the well-being of their country but rather they are shown as men who seize an opportunity for various reasons when it presents itself.
Christopher Boyce and Daulton Lee really were two men, barely in their twenties, that sold CIA secrets to the Soviet Union during the late 1970’s.
www.personal.psu.edu /users/k/m/kmw254/ist110_kmw/papers/FilmRev.htm   (1446 words)

  
 Christopher John Boyce - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Less than a year later Boyce, along with childhood friend Andrew Daulton Lee, began a career as Soviet agents.
Boyce, then 24, had been exposed after Lee had been falsely arrested by Mexican police in front of the Soviet Embassy on suspicion of having killed a police officer.
Under torture, Lee (who had top secret microfilm in his possession when arrested) had confessed to being a Soviet spy and had implicated Boyce.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Christopher_John_Boyce   (593 words)

  
 Estampas
Daulton Lee, hijo de un respetable doctor, se convirtió en un traficante de estupefacientes.
Daulton, quien a menudo iba a Ciudad de México por negocios de drogas, actuaría como el mensajero y entregaría los documentos a la embajada rusa.
Daulton había desarrollado un caro hábito al consumir heroína, por lo que era un cómplice dispuesto a cualquier cosa.
www.eluniversal.com /estampas/anteriores/260904/crimenes.shtml   (1532 words)

  
 Soviet spies: Fool friends & colleagues; steal secrets during 70s, 80s   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Daulton, as he preferred to be called, had been running cocaine and marijuana since high school and, at 23, had recently moved into the more lucrative business of smuggling Mexican heroin.
From April 1975 to late 1976 Boyce and Lee sold operating manuals and detailed technical data for some of America's most sophisticated satellites to the KGB residency in Mexico City.
In stark contrast, Daulton Lee's contact in Mexico once found it necessary to dispense with the niceties and threaten his coked-up agent with a loaded pistol: "You don't carry a gun, do you?" Lee recalled his handler musing as the Russian flashed his own 9 millimeter Makarov.
aia.lackland.af.mil /homepages/pa/spokesman/Sep02/heritage.cfm   (1141 words)

  
 All about Christopher Boyce and Andrew Daulton Lee, by Denise Noe
He was Andrew Daulton Lee, called Daulton, the adopted son of a Palos Verdes physician.
While Daulton’s grades had always been rather poor, he had found a comfortable niche in woodshop where teachers were inevitably impressed by his lovely and detailed work.
Daulton held legitimate jobs from time to time, but when he graduated from high school, his primary occupation was dope dealer.
www.crimelibrary.com /terrorists_spies/spies/boyce_lee/1.html   (1572 words)

  
 All about Christopher Boyce and Andrew Daulton Lee, by Denise Noe
Lee explained that he was a photographer and those were negatives for a commercial for an advertising agency.
Apparently the Mexicans were convinced that Lee murdered a cop because the simulated postcard was a photograph of an intersection where a police officer had been slain.
Lee told them the story he had most recently told the Mexicans: that he was working for the CIA and giving the Russians false data.
www.crimelibrary.com /terrorists_spies/spies/boyce_lee/4.htm   (1366 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
The scheme, which netted the pair $70,000, was discovered only after Lee's arrest by Mexican police as he attempted to deliver classified material at the Soviet Embassy.
Under questioning by Mexican security police and FBI representatives, Lee implicated Boyce, who was arrested on 16 January in California.
Lee was sentenced to life in prison, Boyce to 40 years.
www.agentsnotes.com /spycases.html   (5005 words)

  
 People of the Cold War
The FBI got their trace in 1977 and arrested them both (Lee first, Boyce later).
Lee was doomed for the rest of his life and Boyce was jailed 40 years.
Lee was responsible for the transactions held up on the Soviet embassy in Mexico City in 1975.
www.geocities.com /CapitolHill/Lobby/4907/P-main.htm   (8274 words)

  
 TRW - Enpsychlopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Boyce's childhood friend Andrew Daulton Lee (a heroin and cocaine dealer) was the courier for the classfied data.
The story of the Boyce-Lee case was told in the best-selling Robert Lindsey book The Falcon and the Snowman the basis for the 1985 film of the same title by director John Schlesinger.
Lee was sentenced to life in prison (his longer sentence was due to the fact he had a long prior criminal record composed primarily of drug-trafficking convictions) and was paroled in 1998.
www.grohol.com /psypsych/wiki/TRW   (665 words)

  
 TRW Plays Key Role in Aerospace
In 1977, federal agents arrested TRW employees Christopher John Boyce and Andrew Daulton Lee after they sold the Soviets thousands of secret documents, including material exposing a proposed espionage satellite system.
The case was recounted in the best-selling book "The Falcon and the Snowman." Boyce was known as the Falcon because of his love for the raptors.
Lee was the Snowman because he was a drug addict.
www.globalsecurity.org /org/news/2002/020223-trw01.htm   (924 words)

  
 From a Hawke to a Falcon : Melbourne Indymedia
Boyce and his associate Andrew Daulton Lee were put on trial in 1977 for selling U.S. secrets to the Russians.
Lee had flown to the Soviet Embassy in Mexico and sold details of the CIA's covert activities in Australia to the Soviets.
Boyce and Lee were both found guilty; Lee was given a life sentence, while Boyce was sent for "psychiatric observation" - an indication that he might be treated leniently in return for his silence.
melbourne.indymedia.org /print.php?id=58267   (2906 words)

  
 Untitled Document   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
The Lee jury took longer, but the result was the same: guilty on all counts.
In addition to civilian spies like the Rosenbergs, Boyce, and Lee, FBI agents like Hanssen, and CIA officers like Ames, the Department of Defense, the Defense Intelligence Agency, and the uniformed services, among other important organizations in our national security apparatus, have all had their own espionage scandals.
A former Pentagon lawyer and her husband - trained in the use of miniature cameras and deciphering Morse code - spied for East Germany, and were sentenced to 21 and 17 years in prison, respectively.
www.henrymarkholzer.com /printable/print_articles_why_not_treason.htm   (10630 words)

  
 WebArticles - TRW   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Lee was arrested in front of the Soviet Embassy on suspicion of having killed a police officer and the police discovered microfilmed classified TRW documents on his person.
Boyce went to prison at age 25 and Lee at 26, each spending half of their lives in prison.
, FBI, 1977, Andrew Daulton Lee, heroin, cocaine, Robert Lindsey, The Falcon and the Snowman, 1985, John Schlesinger.
www.webarticles.org /TRW   (698 words)

  
 Cold War spy 'Falcon' released from federal custody - 03/15/03
Boyce was 22 when his father, a former FBI agent, helped him land a summer job as a clerk at TRW Inc. in Redondo Beach, where he had access to classified communications with CIA headquarters in Langley, Va.
He smuggled some of the documents home and sold them to the Russian Embassy in Mexico City, taking in about $77,000 before he and childhood friend Andrew Daulton Lee, his courier, were caught.
Lee, who was tried separately, was also convicted of espionage and paroled in 1998.
www.detnews.com /2003/nation/0303/15/nation-108999.htm   (606 words)

  
 Intelliflix: Rent Falcon And The Snowman, The on DVD
Chris Boyce (Hutton) works a low-level job at a defense plant where he uncovers documents that prove that the C.I.A. is secretly coercing foreign governments.
He confides in his conniving, fast-talking friend, Andrew Daulton Lee (Penn), a reckless drug dealer and user, who convinces him to sell this information to the Soviets for big bucks.
Lee boldly cuts a deal with the KGB, but soon the stakes spin out of control as the Soviets up the ante.
www.intelliflix.com /movie_view.dvd?id=4809   (211 words)

  
 1975 - 1980   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
This was likely accompanied by the need for money with which he and Lee could purchase drugs, a taste developed during their teenage years.
The espionage activity, which netted the pair $70,000, was discovered only after Lee's arrest by Mexican police as he attempted to deliver yet another set of classified material at the Soviet Embassy in Mexico City.
MADSEN, LEE EUGENE, a Navy Yeoman assigned to the Strategic Warning Staff at the Pentagon, was arrested 14 August 1979 for selling classified material to an FBI undercover agent for $700.
www.dss.mil /training/espionage/1975-80.htm   (2262 words)

  
 Amazon.com: Books: The Falcon and the Snowman: A True Story of Friendship and Espionage   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Journalist Lindsey adroitly chronicles the true story of Andrew Daulton Lee and Christopher John Boyce, two high school buddies from good families who were tried and convicted of espionage.
On the face of it, there was nothing to indicate that Andrew Dalton Lee and Christopher James Boyce were anything but two devout Catholic boys growing up in happy, warm families in one of the most affluent suburbs in America, living one version of the American Dream and facing nothing but the best of futures.
His high school friend Dalton Lee had wandered from his childhood days as an altar boy to become a successful drug dealer in trouble with the law and looking for the big score.
www.amazon.com /exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1585745022?v=glance   (1971 words)

  
 Defense Industry   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
LEE, PETER H. a nuclear physicist who worked at key research facilities for more than 30 years, turned himself in to authorities and pleaded guilty on 8 December 1997 to two felony counts, one for passing national defense information and the other for providing false statements to the government.
Lee admitted that in 1985, while working as a research physicist at Los Alamos National Laboratory, he traveled to the People’s Republic of China.
However, as Lee later confessed to the FBI, he lied on both forms because he intended to and did, in fact, deliver lectures to Chinese scientists that discussed his work on microwave backscattering from the sea surface.
www.dss.mil /training/espionage/Industry.htm   (4381 words)

  
 SignOnSanDiego.com > News > State/The West -- Cold War spy 'Falcon' is released from federal custody
Boyce's courier was Andrew Daulton Lee, his childhood friend.
Boyce and Lee sold thousands of classified intelligence documents to the Soviets for more than a year, earning about $77,000, until they were caught in 1976.
But he gained true notoriety with the 1985 release of the movie "The Falcon and the Snowman," starring Timothy Hutton as Boyce, who loved falconry, and Sean Penn as Lee, nicknamed Snowman for his drug problems.
www.signonsandiego.com /news/state/20030315-0002-ca-falconsrelease.html   (447 words)

  
 Deep Black - Space Espionage and National Security
But that was before the espionage trial of Andrew Daulton Lee and Christopher John Boyce, which took place in Los Angeles in 1977.
The spacecraft whose secrets Lee and Boyce sold to the Russians was described to Boyce at an early TRW briefing as "a multipurpose covert electronic surveillance system," according to Robert Lindsey, whose book The Falcon and the Snowman chronicles the spies' exploits.
The NRO reacted to Lee's and Boyce's having compromised Rhyolite, as well as to the subsequent public trial, in traditional fashion: its name was changed.
www.euronet.nl /~rembert/echelon/db08.htm   (9226 words)

  
 Unlimited DVD Rental - Rent Falcon And The Snowman on DVD today
Chris Boyce works a low-level job at a defence plant where he uncovers documents that prove that the C.I.A. is secretly coercing foreign governments.
He confides in his conniving, fast-talking friend, Andrew Daulton Lee, a reckless drug dealer and user, who convinces him to sell this information to the Soviets for big bucks.
Lee descents further into drug abuse, and the C.I.A. prepare to take the informants down.
www.1dvd.co.uk /movie/6656.html   (213 words)

  
 William Robert Brady Descendants
Laura Lee BUTLER (22 May 1959 -) & Paul Dexter RAY (30 Mar 1953 -)
John Lee BRADY (30 Dec 1940 -) & Marie Josephine LIGHTHOLDER (19 Sep 1940 -)
Andrew Elijah Gains BRADY (Sep 7, 1862 - Jan 8, 1920) & Eliza THAMES
home.sw.rr.com /billtx/descwilliamrobertbrady.html   (5811 words)

  
 The Falcon and the Snowman: A True Story of Friendship and Espionage (Robert Lindsey)   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
None, if we look at the current state of affairs, its human and we still haven't seemed to find a way to factor for that in our security and our passions for those who 'seem on the surface to be like us.' Read it.
He was highly intellegent with a potentially bright future, and secured a position at defense contractor TRW with a Top Secret security clearance because of his retired FBI agent father's connections.
Lee, on the other hand, was a dropout and a drug dealer whose life was spiraling downward toward the inevitable bad conclusion.
www.interference.com /webstore/us/product/1585745022.htm   (839 words)

  
 Amazon.co.uk: Reviews DVD: The Falcon And The Snowman [1984]   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-08)
Chris Royce works a low-level job at a defence plant where he uncovers documents that prove teh CIA is secretly coercing foreign governments.
He confides in his convincing, fast talking friend, Andrew Daulton Lee, a rechless drug dealer and user, who convinces him to sell ths information to the Soviets for big bucks.
Lee descends further into drug abuse, and the CIA prepare to take the informants down.
www.amazon.co.uk /exec/obidos/tg/stores/detail/-/dvd/B000050GQL/reviews   (191 words)

  
 List of convicted or accused traitors - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Governor Thomas Dorr 1844, convicted of treason against the state of Rhode Island ; see Dorr Rebellion
Robert E. Lee ; Commander of the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia
Christopher Boyce, Andrew Daulton Lee arrested for selling secrets to Soviets
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/List_of_convicted_or_accused_traitors   (966 words)

  
 CNN.com - 'Falcon' released from federal custody - Mar. 14, 2003
Boyce was 22 when his father, a former FBI agent, helped him land a summer job as a clerk at TRW Inc. in Redondo Beach, where he had access to classified communications with CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia.
He smuggled some of the documents home and sold them to the Russian Embassy in Mexico City, taking in about $77,000 before he and childhood friend Andrew Daulton Lee, his courier, were caught in 1976.
He was free for 19 months, supporting himself by robbing banks in the Pacific Northwest, before he was arrested in Port Angeles, Washington.
www.cnn.com /2003/LAW/03/14/falcon.released.ap   (480 words)

  
 U.S. spy freed after 25 years in prison / Christopher Boyce sold secrets to Soviets
Boyce and his childhood friend Andrew Daulton Lee -- they had been altar boys together -- soon started selling classified intelligence documents to the Russian Embassy in Mexico City.
Boyce was convicted of espionage in 1977; Lee also was convicted of espionage and was paroled in 1998.
But it was the 1985 film "The Falcon and the Snowman" that cemented his fame.
sfgate.com /cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/chronicle/a/2003/03/15/MN205136.DTL   (365 words)

  
 [No title]
Christopher Andrew has indeed been given privileged access to material, and is not the first reputable historian to have been in that position.
Co-author Christopher Andrew tells us that the sources were gathered by a defector, Vasili Mitrokhin, not a representative of the FIS, which means that they are more trustworthy.
Mitrokhin, Andrew tells us, was a secret dissident who strongly disapproved of the KGB even though he worked for its foreign intelligence branch for 35 years.
shwi.alternatehistory.com /Hammer%20and%20Sickle%20Win.txt   (12548 words)

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