TY - BOOK AU - Vise,David A. TI - The bureau and the mole: the unmasking of Robert Philip Hanssen, the most dangerous double agent in FBI history SN - 0871138344 AV - UB 271.R92 .H199 2002 PY - 2002/// CY - New York PB - Atlantic Monthly Press KW - Hanssen, Robert. KW - United States KW - Federal Bureau of Investigation KW - Biography KW - Spies KW - Russia (Federation) KW - Intelligence officers N1 - Includes bibliographical references; Alone -- Mad Dog -- A G-Man -- A Charitable Contribution -- The Pizza Connection -- Betrayal -- Control -- The Fbi's Blunder -- The Boss -- The Stripper -- The Unwitting Porn Star -- Friends -- Independence Day -- Respecting the Russians -- Double Trouble -- The Case Agent -- Clashing With Clinton -- A long and Lonely Time -- Watching and Waiting -- What took You so Long? -- Freeh Fall -- The Betrayals of a Spy -- The E-mails of a Spy -- The Sexual Fantasies of a Spy N2 - "The Bureau and the Mole takes you into the shadowy world of Robert Philip Hanssen, a twenty-five-year veteran of the FBI who was a devout Catholic and a devoted family man, who attended the same church and sent his children to the same school as his boss, Bureau Director Louis J. Freeh. But as he emerged from a troubled childhood in Chicago to rise to the highest ranks of America's counterintelligence experts, Hanssen was also leading another life - as a diabolically clever spy for the Russian government." "Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist and author David A. Vise untangles Hanssen's web of deceit to tell the story of how he avoided detection for decades while becoming the most dangerous double agent in FBI history - and how Freeh and the Bureau eventually rooted him out. Vise probes Hanssen's personal history to uncover how a seemingly All-American boy concealed a sordid sexual life from his family and ultimately became the perfect traitor by employing the very sources and methods his own nation had entrusted him with. Drawing from a wide variety of sources in the FBI, the Justice Department, the White House, and the intelligence community, Vise also interweaves the narrative of how Freeh led the government's desperate search for the betrayer among its own ranks, from the false leads, to the near misses, to its ultimate, shocking conclusion."--Jacket UR - http://catdir.loc.gov/catdir/toc/fy041/2001053872.html ER -