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She was 'wild in bed'

lauhumku

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She was 'wild in bed'

THE flame-haired Russian spy was not only good at networking. She was also great in bed. A law student claims that he had a fling with Anna Chapman and gave her a "14 out of 10" for her prowess in bed.

Mr Charlie Hutchinson, 31, told The Sun that he was stunned when he saw the picture of Anna Chapman, 28, in the newspapers after her arrest by the FBI for spying. She was among the 10 arrested in the United States early this week.

Mr Hutchinson, who is still a student, said he met her on a night out at Southampton. He claims that she jumped into his cab and they went back to the university's residences. He claimed that she didn't wear panties and was just incredible in bed.

"She was red hot. While we had sex she was talking in Russian. It lasted for two hours and was so sexy. She was incredible," the Sun quoted him as saying. "Both of us were drunk. When we got into my room she began doing a striptease while I sat on the bed. "She has a stunning figure - and had no underwear on. She really knew what she was doing."



 

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People walk past the Barnes and Noble bookstore on the corner of Warren and Greenwich street in New York June 29, 2010. Local media reported the downtown Barnes and Noble store was where suspected Russian spy Anna Chapman communicated with Russian officials.
Eleven suspects, some of whom lived quiet lives in American suburbia for years, were accused of gathering information ranging from data on high-penetration nuclear warhead research programs to background on CIA job applicants.


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A patron browses through a book at the Barnes and Noble bookstore on the corner of Warren and Greenwich street in New York June 29, 2010.
Local media reported the downtown Barnes and Noble store was where suspected Russian spy Anna Chapman communicated with Russian officials.


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People walk past the Starbucks outlet on 47th and 8th Avenue in New York June 29, 2010. Local media reported the midtown Starbucks was where suspected Russian spy Anna Chapman communicated with Russian officials.


 

lauhumku

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A view of the Starbucks outlet on 47th and 8th Avenue in New York June 29, 2010. Local media reported the midtown Starbucks was where suspected Russian spy Anna Chapman communicated with Russian officials.


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Portrayed as a flame-haired, green-eyed femme fatale, a 28-year-old Russian businesswoman has emerged as a tabloid darling in an alleged Cold War-style spy ring uncovered by US authorities.


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Her British ex-husband told how his glamorous former wife became "obnoxious" and dominated by her KGB father, in an interview published yesterday.



 

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Alex Chapman told the Daily Telegraph he was suspicious that Anna Chapman, the flame-haired 28-year-old now in detention in the United States, had become "conditioned" even before their marriage collapsed in 2005.


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He said he was surprised to hear she had gone to the United States because his ex-wife had always made disparaging remarks about Americans and said she did not want to go there.


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Sultry Facebook photos of Anna Chapman were plastered Tuesday on the front page of the New York Daily News following her arrest along with 10 other alleged members of a sophisticated network of US-based Russian sleeper agents



 

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"Spy ring's femme fatale," screamed the New York Post, before elaborating: "Red hot beauty snared in Russian 'espionage' shock."


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The Telegraph said British intelligence was now investigating whether she had worked as a spy when she lived in Britain or was recruited when she lived there.


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"Anna told me her father had been high up in the ranks of the KGB. She said he had been an agent in 'old Russia'," he told the Telegraph.


 

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Alex Chapman said that at first his wife had been carefree and led a "bohemian" lifestyle but she changed dramatically
during the four years of their marriage.


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"When she was still living in London she fell in with a group of people who had a lot of influence. She would go to film premieres and became arrogant and obnoxious, always going on about powerful people she was meeting," he said.


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FBI agents monitored Chapman on 10 Wednesdays between January and June 2010 as she carried out elaborate communication rituals with her Russian handler in scenes straight out of a John Le Carre spy novel.



 

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New York newspapers are on display featuring personal photos of suspected Russian spies Anna Chapman (L) and Richard and Cynthia Murphy at a news stand in New York, June 30, 2010. Russia and the United States sought to cool a heated scandal sparked by the arrest of 11 suspected Kremlin spies, amid fears the Cold War-style furore could harm improving ties.


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New York newspapers are on display featuring personal photos of suspected Russian spies Anna Chapman (L) and Richard and Cynthia Murphy at a news stand in New York, June 30, 2010. Russia and the United States sought to cool a heated scandal sparked by the arrest of 11 suspected Kremlin spies, amid fears the Cold War-style furore could harm improving ties.



 
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Russian spy Anna Chapman is stripped of UK citizenship


13 July 2010 Last updated at 17:36 GMT <script type="text/javascript"> <!-- $render("page-bookmark-links","page-bookmark-links-head",{ position:"top", site:'News', headline:'BBC News - Russian spy Anna Chapman is stripped of UK citizenship', storyId:'10620352', sectionId:'99116', url:'http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/10620352', edition:'International' }); --> </script>

Russian spy Anna Chapman is stripped of UK citizenship


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Russian spy Anna Chapman was married to a British man


Anna Chapman, one of the Russian spies deported from the United States, has been deprived of her British citizenship, the BBC understands. She has lost her British citizenship and exclusion is expected to follow, meaning she cannot travel to the UK. Ms Chapman was among 10 Russians arrested in the US who admitted to being agents for a foreign country.

Last week her lawyer said she would like to come to the UK as she has a UK passport through a previous marriage. Russia agreed to exchange four US spies for the 10 Russian agents and the swap was carried out in Vienna on 9 July. Ms Chapman, who is also known as Anya Kushchenko, is the daughter of a Russian diplomat.

Until the Home Office's decision, she had dual Russian-UK nationality. BBC home affairs correspondent Andy Tighe said Ms Chapman became the best-known of the Russian spy ring after details and photographs from her Facebook entry were picked up by newspapers around the world. Vienna spy swap He said her lawyers were handed a letter formally revoking her citizenship and she was told her passport was no longer valid.

It is understood steps are also being taken to permanently exclude Ms Chapman from travelling to the UK in the future, our correspondent said.
Earlier this month, Briton Alex Chapman, 30, from Bournemouth, Dorset, talked to a newspaper about his four-year marriage to the 28-year-old Russian. He said they had met at a party in London in 2002 and married five months later.

He said she changed dramatically during the marriage, and by the end was having "secretive" meetings with "Russian friends". Ms Chapman did not seek to conceal her Russian identity when she arrived in New York from Moscow in February 2010, saying she wanted to build up a recruitment agency targeting young professionals in both cities. But following the Vienna spy swap, a Home Office spokesperson had said they were reviewing Ms Chapman's passport situation.
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"The home secretary has the right to deprive dual nationals of their British citizenship where she considers that to do so would be conducive to the public good. This case is under urgent consideration," the spokesperson said. Shadow home secretary Alan Johnson had said it "cannot be in our interests" to let Ms Chapman settle in the UK.

The BBC's Dominic Casciani said only half a dozen people have been stripped of British citizenship since the law was introduced in 2002. The law was partly introduced to make it easier to deport radical cleric Abu Hamza al Masri. The home secretary can strip someone of citizenship if their presence is "seriously prejudicial" to British interests: for example, if they are a threat to national security.

The 10 Russian agents had pleaded guilty in New York to "conspiracy to act as an unregistered agent of a foreign country". More serious money-laundering charges against them were dropped. Prosecutors said the accused had posed as ordinary citizens, some living together as couples for years, and were ordered by Russia's External Intelligence Service (SVR) to infiltrate policy-making circles and collect information.

On Sunday it was reported that two of the four Russians expelled from Moscow as part of the spy swap were believed to be staying undercover in a British hotel. The brother of one, Igor Sutyagin, said he had called his wife from a small town on the edge of London, but had not been told exactly where he was.


 
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