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  1. Robert Lee Johnson (1922 – May 18, 1972) was an American sergeant who spied for the Soviet Union . Johnson volunteered to spy for the KGB while he was stationed at Berlin, Germany. He also recruited a former Army friend, James Mintkenbaugh. Johnson worked for the KGB between 1953 and 1964, and passed on information while stationed at various ...

  2. Johnson’s application for the position was routinely approved, something which, perhaps unbeknownst to Johnson himself, proved to be the most pivotal event in his life. When news of the transfer reached the KGB, the Soviet intelligence apparatus focused its baleful eye onto Robert Lee Johnson like the lens of a spy satellite.

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  3. Jul 21, 1985 · ROBERT LEE JOHNSON. American Spies. July 20, 1985 at 8:00 p.m. EDT ... call to investigators in 1964 from the wife of Army Sgt. Robert Lee Johnson ended one of the nation's strangest spy rings. In ...

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  5. Feb 27, 2013 · Johnson’s application for the position was routinely approved, something which, perhaps unbeknownst to Johnson himself, proved to be the most pivotal event in his life. When news of the transfer reached the KGB, the Soviet intelligence apparatus focused its baleful eye onto Robert Lee Johnson like the lens of a spy satellite.

  6. A federal grand Jury in Richmond, Va.. will consider the charges against Sgt. Robert Lee Johnson, 43, a Pentagon courier, and James Allen Mintkenbaugh, 46, a former Army sergeant. If convicted, the two men face a maximum penalty of death.

  7. Robert Lee Johnson (1922 - May 18, 1972) was an American sergeant who spied for the Soviet Union. Johnson volunteered to spy for the KGB while he was stationed at Berlin, Germany. He also recruited a former Army friend, James Mintkenbaugh. Johnson worked for the KGB between 1953 and 1964, and passed on information while stationed at various sites in Europe and the U.S. Most famously, when ...

  8. uncovered William Vassall as a spy, McCoy wrote, certain secret British documents (shown by Golitsyn to be in KGB hands) ‘‘could have been assumed to come from the Lonsdale-Cohen-Houghton net’’—though they could not conceivably have been. He said that Sgt. Robert Lee Johnson

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