Skip to main content
Skip to content
Case File
kaggle-ho-020263House Oversight

Possible pre‑June 2013 Russian diplomatic contacts with Edward Snowden in Hong Kong

Possible pre‑June 2013 Russian diplomatic contacts with Edward Snowden in Hong Kong The passage outlines specific dates, locations, and alleged meetings between Snowden and Russian officials before his public disclosure, suggesting a covert assistance channel that could be investigated for illegal facilitation of a fugitive. It names high‑level actors (Putin, Russian diplomatic representatives) and provides concrete timestamps (May 20‑June 23, 2013) and a flight number (Aeroflot SU213). While the claims are unverified, they offer actionable leads for document requests, flight logs, and diplomatic communications. Key insights: Snowden allegedly met Russian diplomatic representatives in Hong Kong before June 9, 2013.; Putin is quoted as saying Snowden was identified only as an “agent of special services.”; Snowden reportedly visited the Russian consulate multiple times, receiving a birthday celebration on June 21, 2013.

Date
Unknown
Source
House Oversight
Reference
kaggle-ho-020263
Pages
1
Persons
1
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

Possible pre‑June 2013 Russian diplomatic contacts with Edward Snowden in Hong Kong The passage outlines specific dates, locations, and alleged meetings between Snowden and Russian officials before his public disclosure, suggesting a covert assistance channel that could be investigated for illegal facilitation of a fugitive. It names high‑level actors (Putin, Russian diplomatic representatives) and provides concrete timestamps (May 20‑June 23, 2013) and a flight number (Aeroflot SU213). While the claims are unverified, they offer actionable leads for document requests, flight logs, and diplomatic communications. Key insights: Snowden allegedly met Russian diplomatic representatives in Hong Kong before June 9, 2013.; Putin is quoted as saying Snowden was identified only as an “agent of special services.”; Snowden reportedly visited the Russian consulate multiple times, receiving a birthday celebration on June 21, 2013.

Tags

kagglehouse-oversighthigh-importanceedward-snowdenrussiadiplomatic-contactshong-kongaerospace-flight

Ask AI About This Document

0Share
PostReddit
Review This Document

Extracted Text (OCR)

EFTA Disclosure
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
111 With three notable exceptions, the flights to them had stopovers in a country that was an ally of the US, and which could seize Snowden. The three exceptions were China, North Korea (via China) and Russia. The only one of these three countries, or any other country, that Snowden is known to have dealt with directly during his 33 day stay in Hong Kong, was Russia. As previously discussed, he had dealings with Russian “diplomatic representatives “, as Putin called them. Putin did not provide the date of these contacts but he provided an intriguing clue. Snowden was identified to him, according to Putin, not by name but merely as an “agent of special services.” Putin’s description suggests the meeting had taken place before Snowden became a household name on June 9, 2013. For his part, Snowden was evasive when discussing his contacts with Russia while still in Hong Kong. When Lana Lam asked Snowden on June 12, 2013 whether he had already requested asylum from the Russia government, he deferred, saying: “My only comment is that I am glad there are governments that refuse to be intimidated by great power.” As it turned out, Snowden was correct. The Russian government was not intimidated by the threats of reprisals by the United States, as the Obama Administration would learn after his arrival in Russia on June 23, 2013. But the only way that Snowden could not have known that fact on June 12" was by being in contact with Russian officials prior to his interview with Lam. Of course, he may have had multiple contacts on different dates with these officials. The Russian pro-government newspaper Kommersant reported that Snowden had visited the Russian consulate on more than one occasion and had been given a birthday celebration there on June 21, 2013. What we do know about Snowden’s interactions with the Russians in Hong Kong comes partly from Putin’s own description of them. Putin said, it will be recalled, that his decision to facilitate Snowden’s escape to Russia had been kicked all the way up the Russian chain of command for him to personally decide Snowden’s fate. Presumably, this decision-making process began earlier than June 21, 2013, when he reportedly came to the consulate. The question is: how much earlier? Since Snowden had arrived in Hong Kong on May 20", 2013, his contacts with Russian officials could have occurred as long as a month earlier. That would fit in with Snowden telling Gellman on May 24" that he needed his help in dealing with the diplomatic mission of an unnamed country. In any case, Putin tells us he learned an American “agent of the special services” had contacted Russian diplomats because he wanted assistance. And Snowden did need assistance to escape from Hong Kong. As he had no visas, he would require the sort of assistance that could only be provided by a government willing to defy the United States. The assistance came from Russia. Nine days before Snowden boarded Aeroflot flight SU213 to Moscow on June 23", the US had filed a criminal complaint against him. It had also alerted Hong Kong authorities and Interpol when it unsealed the complaint on June 21, 2013. And on June 21st it had invalidated his U.S. passport (although he still had it in his possession at the Hong Kong Airport.) Since by this time

Related Documents (6)

House OversightJan 5, 2018

Document titled “INSIDE THE TRUMP WHITE HOUSE” with minimal content

Document titled “INSIDE THE TRUMP WHITE HOUSE” with minimal content The file contains only a title and file identifier with no substantive information, names, dates, transactions, or allegations. It provides no actionable leads or novel insights into any controversial actions or actors. Key insights: File appears to be a placeholder or index page; No mention of individuals, agencies, or financial details

1p
House OversightFinancial RecordNov 11, 2025

Snowden’s alleged misrepresentations of CIA/DIA roles, salary, and authority to intercept President Obama

The passage supplies specific, but already widely reported, claims that Snowden exaggerated his intelligence‑agency titles, inflated his Booz Allen salary, and asserted authority to tap the President’ Snowden claimed senior adviser roles at CIA and DIA that agency records dispute. He alleged a $200,000 annual salary from Booz Allen, whereas the firm reports $133,000. He asserted personal authority

1p
House OversightUnknown

Empty House Oversight Document Lacks Substantive Content

Empty House Oversight Document Lacks Substantive Content The provided file contains only a title and no substantive text, offering no names, transactions, dates, or allegations to pursue. Consequently, it provides no investigative leads, controversy, novelty, or power linkages. Key insights: Document contains only a header and filename.; No mention of individuals, agencies, or actions.

1p
House OversightUnknown

YouGov Global Admiration Survey Highlights Bill Gates, Obama, and Pope Francis

YouGov Global Admiration Survey Highlights Bill Gates, Obama, and Pope Francis The passage is a summary of a public opinion poll about admired figures worldwide. It contains no concrete allegations, financial flows, or misconduct involving powerful actors, and offers no actionable investigative leads beyond general popularity rankings. Key insights: Bill Gates ranked as the most admired person globally according to YouGov.; President Obama and Pope Francis also placed highly in the survey.; Various business leaders, entertainers, and politicians appear in top‑10 lists by country.

1p
House OversightUnknown

Snowden's alleged coordination with Russian intelligence and Hong Kong mission details

Snowden's alleged coordination with Russian intelligence and Hong Kong mission details The passage repeats known public narratives about Snowden’s interactions with journalists and Russian intelligence, offering no new concrete evidence, dates, or financial transactions. It mentions high‑profile entities (NSA, CIA, President Obama) but provides no actionable leads, making it low‑value for investigation. Key insights: Claims Snowden met Russian intelligence in Hong Kong before traveling to Moscow.; Alleged email ultimatum to journalist Glenn Greenwald (Gellman) on May 24 for a May 27 publication.; Reference to a panel appointed by President Obama reviewing Snowden’s case.

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Speculative account of Snowden's movements and alleged foreign intelligence involvement in Hong Kong

The passage offers a narrative with no concrete evidence, dates, or documented transactions. It repeats known public allegations about Snowden and does not provide actionable leads, new documents, or Claims CIA Deputy Director Morell reviewed Snowden case on an Obama‑appointed panel. Alleges Russian President Putin personally contacted diplomats in Hong Kong regarding Snowden. Suggests Chinese in

1p

Forum Discussions

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,500+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.

Support This ProjectSupported by 1,550+ people worldwide
Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.