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DATE=12/9/1999 TYPE=CORRESPONDENT REPORT TITLE=RUSSIAN SPY CASE (L) NUMBER=2-257003 BYLINE=GIL BUTLER DATELINE=STATE DEPARTMENT CONTENT= VOICED AT: INTRO: American counter intelligence officials have given more details of what they describe as a Russian intelligence operation aimed at the State Department. On Wednesday, Stanislav Borisovich Gusev, a Russian embassy attache, was detained in the case then released to the Russian embassy and told to leave the United States within 10 days. V-O-A's Gil Butler has that story from the State Department. TEXT: The State Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation say Mr. Gusev was detained Wednesday morning near his car parked outside the State Department. Assistant FBI director Neil Gallagher said the Russian embassy employee had been under surveillance for weeks. What Mr. Gallagher described as a very sophisticated listening and transmitting device was discovered inside the State Department. Officials declined to say where it was located but said it was not in the executive suite of offices where Secretary of State Madeleine Albright and other senior officials work. Stanislav Gusev had been in the United States since March of this year. He was briefly detained, then, as an embassy employee with diplomatic immunity, told to leave the United States within 10 days. Mr. Gallagher called the case a stark reminder, that despite easing of tensions, the United States is a target of Russian intelligence agents. /// GALLAGHER ACT /// I think this incident by itself sends a strong message that there is a very aggressive Russian intelligence presence operating inside the United States. That is an issue that the U-S government continues to be concerned about. /// END ACT /// The FBI and State Department security officials are continuing their investigation. They want to know how and when the sophisticated device was placed inside the State Department building. The investigators are also assessing whether the intelligence operation got sensitive U-S information through the device. After the listening device was located, State Department security officers looked for more, but didn't find any. Assistant Secretary of State David Carpenter: /// CARPENTER ACT /// We have a program here that deals with this type of issue. Once this device became known to us, we began a very, very aggressive sweep of our principal offices in this building to ensure that there was not another device. /// END ACT /// U-S officials say there was no connection between this case and Russia's expulsion last week of an American diplomat they accused of spying. They said Mr. Gusev had been under surveillance for a long time. (signed) NEB/MGB/JO 09-Dec-1999 13:12 PM EDT (09-Dec-1999 1812 UTC) NNNN Source: Voice of America .