Welcome to the International Spy museum and thank you so much for coming out this evening. Im peter ernest, the executive collector of the museum and im very pleased to introduce craig floyd whom ive known for a number of years who keeps trying to build a competitor museum. Although ive put obstacles in his way progress continues and im sure it will go very well. We look forward to his joining and that museum joining us here in this city of museums. Im very, very pleased to welcome him and all of you to the International Spy museum this evening. So have a great evening. Enjoy. Let me welcome everyone here tonight. This is our 8th in a series of events that we call witness to history. It gives us a very important opportunity to get a first hand glimpse of the major moments in Law Enforcement history from those who actually participated in those events. Tonight we take a look into what the u. S. Department of justice has called, quote, possibly the worst intelligence disaster in u. S. Hi
what we were we were we were we were we were we were the decision to risk one s life for a political believe is now a distant third. who the two carriers can be easily or legal. prostitution what devotees determined by the jurisdiction from which the prostitute works in the world of espionage legality depends upon one s employers. spy for your country and you are quiet, and some hero. supply for another nation and you re a trader a monster, getting caught while working for the wrong side can mean death. how can one explain robert hennsen who had a lovely wife, wonderful children, some of a cop, veterans, chicago police department and the cop himself five years have you explain a guy like that that is what a trip to the my book. he was born in 1984 in chicago inside the city limits. his father was a chicago cop who had gone off to the war and the needy, said he was away when he was born. he came back shortly after the war ended and resumed his career as a cop. both of robert