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Media reports quickly branded her a femme fatale, and tabloids splashed her photos on their front pages. An acquaintance, David Hartman, owner of a New York real estate company, described Chapman as "pleasant, very professional, friendly." "There's nothing too crazy about her that I knew of," he said. A criminal complaint alleges that, unbeknownst to her business contacts such as Hartman, Chapman was using a specially configured laptop computer to transmit messages to another computer of an unnamed Russian official
-- a handler who was under surveillance by the FBI. The laptop exchanges occurred 10 times, always on Wednesdays, until June, when an undercover FBI agent got involved, prosecutors said. The agent, posing as a Russian consulate employee and wearing a wire, arranged a meeting with Chapman at a Manhattan coffee shop, they said. During the meeting, they initially spoke in Russian but then agreed to switch to English to draw less attention to themselves, the complaint says in recounting their recorded conversation. "I need more information about you before I can talk." "OK. My name is Roman. ... I work in the consulate." The undercover said he knew she was headed to Moscow in two weeks "to talk officially about your work," but before that, "I have a task for you to do tomorrow." The task: To deliver a fraudulent passport to another woman working as a spy. "Are you ready for this step?" he asked. "S---, of course," she responded. The undercover gave her a location and told her to hold a magazine a certain way
-- that way, she would be recognized by a Russian agent, who would in turn confirm her identity by saying to her, "Excuse me, but haven't we met in California last summer?" But Chapman was leery, prosecutors said. "You're positive no one is watching?" they say she told the undercover agent after being given the instructions. Afterward, authorities say, she was concerned enough to buy a cell phone and make a "flurry of calls" to Russia. In one of the intercepted calls, a man advised her she may have been uncovered, should turn in the passport to police and get out of the country. She was arrested at a New York Police Department precinct after following that advice, authorities said. In a video clip on a Russian website focused on investment in hi-tech start-ups, she talks about her ambitions to create a venture fund that would invest in projects in Russia and discusses the business opportunities offered by New York. "Nothing has excited me more in life than the number and level of people I have met here. This place is full of ideas," she said in Russian.
"I'm trying to create a project that would connect two capitals
-- New York and Moscow -- the two most important cities for me in the quest for ideas," she says. Asked how someone new to business can meet the right people in New York, she says, "America is a free country, and it's the easiest place in the world to meet the most successful people. ... Here you can go out for dinner with your neighbor and meet a top venture capitalist." Authorities say the undercover's parting words to her had been, "Your colleagues in Moscow, they know you're doing a good job. So keep it up."
[Associated
Press;
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