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U.S. spies paid $100K to mysterious Russian who promised damaging info on Trump: report

ABOVE: Heads of U.S. intelligence agencies continue to sound alarm about Russia. – Feb 14, 2018

WASHINGTON, Feb 9 (Reuters) – A Russian who offered stolen National Security Agency cyberweapons and compromising information on President Donald Trump bilked U.S. spies out of $100,000 last year, The New York Times reported on Friday, citing U.S. and European security officials. The money was delivered to a Berlin hotel room in September and was intended as the first installment of a $1 million reward, according to U.S. officials, the Russian and communications reviewed by the Times, the newspaper reported.

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The theft of the secret hacking tools was very damaging to the NSA, which was trying to determine exactly what was missing, the Times said.

READ MORE: Trump blocks release of Democrat-drafted Russia memo, cites national security concerns

Several U.S. intelligence officials told the paper they said they did not want the Trump information from the Russian, who was suspected of having ties to Russian intelligence and Eastern European cybercriminals.

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He claimed it would link the president and his associates to Russia, the Times said, citing the officials. But instead of providing the hacking tools, the Russian produced unverified and possibly fabricated material involving Trump and others, including bank records, emails and purported Russian intelligence data, the paper cited the officials as saying.

The U.S. intelligence officials halted the deal out of concern it could entangle them in a Russian operation to create discord inside the U.S. government, and potential fallout in Washington from the perception that they were trying to buy compromising material on Trump, the Times reported.

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WATCH: New evidence of Trump thwarting Russia probe

The Central Intelligence Agency declined to comment on the negotiations with the Russian seller, the Times said.

The NSA, which produced the bulk of the hacking tools that the Americans sought to recover, said only that “all N.S.A. employees have a lifetime obligation to protect classified information,” the Times reported.

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The CIA did not respond to a request by Reuters for comment, while NSA officials were not available out of regular business hours for comment.

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