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Bout's lawyer, Albert Y. Dayan, assailed Smulian's motives and memory during cross-examination. He suggested that his narrative was shaded to curry favor with prosecutors and reduce his sentence and that he had a porous recollection of his dealings with Bout. Dayan pointed to one of Smulian's own coded emails that same month warning that Bout did "nothing in gray items" as evidence that the Russian was not involved in any illicit arms deals. But Smulian testified that when he flew to Moscow in late January 2008, Bout grew intrigued with the prospect of a big black-market weapons delivery to two officials of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia, or FARC, a South American terror group known for using cocaine deals to support insurgent operations. In actuality, the two terrorist leaders were informants working for the DEA. The Moscow meeting was a pivotal moment, Smulian testified. He recounted a visit to Bout's house in a Moscow suburb and a meeting with the Russian in his private office. Bout said nothing about the office complex where he worked, but as Smulian followed him down a corridor, the South African noticed suites that clearly "looked like security or military offices," filled with defense-related items and paintings of Russian battle scenes. A former Soviet military officer, Bout has long been linked by U.S. officials to Russia's intelligence apparatus and arms industry. Smulian's description of Bout's inner sanctum and the Russian's knowledgeable discussion of anti-aircraft missiles, helicopter gunships and other sophisticated weapons gave new credence to those ties. "It's why the Russians have always been so defensive about Bout," Vines said. At the same time, Vines said, the trial's revelations show that Bout's operation "looked a little old-fashioned in some ways. Some of the tradecraft is a bit amateurish." Despite using cell phone memory cards and elaborate code words, for example, Bout's frequent electronic messages were apparently not protected by modern encryption.
Smulian said that with a single quick phone call, Bout secured 100 available Igla anti-aircraft missiles and then discussed other weapons, including helicopter gunships, sniper rifles, grenades and munitions. At one point, Smulian said, Bout scoffed at the capabilities of American military helicopters, boasting that "Russia had superior helicopters they could supply" to the FARC. Many of the communications to and from Bout came from Smulian's laptop, which was seized during his arrest in Bangkok. Bout's laptop was also taken and analyzed, and prosecutors have displayed some limited contents during the trial, including research on the FARC that he allegedly stored on its hard drive. A U.S. official who insisted on anonymity to discuss the Bout investigation said the Russian's seized computer also contained evidence that the Russian's business empire had set up hundreds of shell companies around the world for his air cargo and other business ventures, stretching from remote South Pacific islands to the state of Montana. "Anything and everything he touched, he was at the top of his game," said Thomas Pasquarello, a police chief in Somerville, Mass. who formerly was the DEA's lead agent in Thailand for the Bout investigation. "He was extremely meticulous. He'd be head of a Fortune 500 company if he was in another line of work."
[Associated
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