On an August workday in 2011, a cherubic 18-year-old Icelandic man
named Sigurdur “Siggi” Thordarson walked through the stately doors of
the U.S. embassy in Reykjavík, his jacket pocket concealing his calling
card: a crumpled photocopy of an Australian passport. The passport photo
showed a man with a unruly shock of platinum blonde hair and the name
Julian Paul Assange.Thordarson was long time volunteer for WikiLeaks with direct access
to Assange and a key position as an organizer in the group. With his
cold war-style embassy walk-in, he became something else: the first
known FBI informant inside WikiLeaks. For the next three months,
Thordarson served two masters, working for the secret-spilling website
and simultaneously spilling its secrets to the U.S. government in
exchange, he says, for a total of about $5,000. The FBI flew him
internationally four times for debriefings, including one trip to
Washington D.C., and on the last meeting obtained from Thordarson eight
hard drives packed with chat logs, video and other data from WikiLeaks.
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/06/wikileaks-mole/all/
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2013/06/wikileaks-mole/all/
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