Russia Spy Shower

Russia Spy Shower




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Russian Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Kozak (right) blurted out Thursday that surveillance video is being taken of tourists in Sochi hotel showers. He also told gay visitors: 'Don’t touch the kids.' (Martin Rose/Getty Images)
SOCHI, Russia — Where's the Iron Curtain when you need one?
On the same day the Russian deputy prime minister told gays coming to the Winter Olympics not to touch children, he divulged that cameras are keeping an eye on Olympic tourists while they're in the shower.
The blunder happened when Dmitry Kozak was asked about conditions in hotels and the lack of water, the subjects of ongoing media criticism.
Kozak suddenly became defensive and blurted: "We have surveillance video from the hotels that shows people turn on the shower, direct the nozzle at the wall and then leave the room for the whole day."
The admission was the latest misstep in Russia's hosting of the 2014 Winter Games at the palm-tree-lined resort on the Black Sea.
The Sochi Games appear to have locked up the gold medal for blunders — even before Friday's opening ceremonies.
With all the water-related problems in Sochi, it's surprising anyone is willing to take a shower — and for those that brave it, Big Mother is watching. (Thomas Northcut/Getty Images)
The shower spying — reminiscent of an infamous scene from the raunchy comedy "Porky's" — had not been reported publicly before the flustered Kozak volunteered the stunning information.
Russian officials quickly shut down a potential deluge of followup questions on the peeping policy by hurrying Kozak away from the podium.
There has been evidence in Sochi of Internet surveillance aimed at news media, but never before of visual surveillance inside hotel rooms.
And it wasn't Kozak's only jaw-dropping remark during the the news conference.
Moments before, he gave the impression he believes gays may have pedophilic leanings, going a step further even than Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Blunders have been plaguing the Olympics in Sochi, Russia as the games get underway. (GARY HERSHORN/REUTERS)
"We are all grownups and any adult has the right to understand their sexual act," Kozak said. "Please don't touch the kids, that's the only thing."
Putin had said earlier that gays should "leave the children alone."
The athletes' Olympic village has been beset by problems, including uncovered manhole covers on walkways, half-finished hotels and ramshackle rooms that are missing items like lightbulbs, chairs, tables and even doorknobs.
Critics have said that some rooms don't have water, and when the faucets do work, yellow-tinted water flows out.
This Sochi shower could be monitored by the Russian government.
Then there's the problem with the bathrooms. Guests are confronted with this advice: "Please do not flush toilet paper down the toilet! Put it in the bin provided." They're also warned not to go fishing in the commodes.
Other tweets have shown the infamous double-toilet bathrooms installed in some locations.
Beside the chronic infrastructure problems, the $51 billion Games are opening under the cloud of terrorism with Chechen rebels threatening violence as they attempt to establish an Islamic republic 250 miles from Sochi.
The Department of Homeland Security Thursday temporarily banned all carry-on liquids, gels, aerosols and powders on flights from the U.S. to Russia, a day after warning carriers about explosives smuggled in toothpaste tubes or cosmetic containers.
Still, Secretary of State Kerry tried to reassure people planning on attending the Olympics that security is on high alert.
Russia's President Vladimir Putin (right) stands with International Olympic Committee President Thomas Bach. So far, the Winter Olympics in Russia are getting a cool reception. (RIA NOVOSTI/REUTERS)
"We have to be, all of us, vigilant and attentive as a result of that," Kerry told NBC News. "But as I said, if an American wants to go, including my daughter, I'd say go."
Even the event venues are now coming under fire.
Competitors' complaints about the treacherous women's Olympic downhill ski course caused a halt to practice on the slopes while workers shaved down the jumps.
And opposition to the Sochi Games has spread worldwide as lesbian and gay activists have mobilized to protest the anti-homosexual policies put in place by Russian leaders.
In Manhattan Thursday night, about 50 protesters gathered outside the Russian consulate and chanted, "Gay rights are human rights."
And they thought these Sochi double-toilet stalls were odd. (Steve Rosenberg/BBC/AP)
They poured red liquid labeled "vampire blood" on the Olympic flag.
The display symbolized the Olympics run on "the blood of the people of Russia," protester Ann Northrup said.
Russian officials fired back against the avalanche of criticism directed at the country's preparation for the Sochi Games.
"The closer to the opening of the Olympics, the more hysteria in the foreign media about Russia," Russian Railways head Vladimir Yakunin wrote in his Live Journal blog.
With Joseph Straw and News Wire Services
Filip Bondy is a former Daily News sports columnist and current sports contributor.
Copyright © 2021, New York Daily News

Maria Butina, leader of a pro-gun organization in Russia, speaks to a crowd during a rally in support of legalizing the possession of handguns in Moscow, Russia on April 21, 2013. AP
From Russia with love — and then some.
Admitted Russian agent Maria Butina is claiming she wasn’t a spy at all — just a gun-loving student with a “weakness” for smart and powerful men.
Butina, who served 15 months behind bars for breaching conservative circles to influence US Republican politics, was interviewed from a Virginia jail for a six-part Wondery series, “Spy Affair,” set to be released Tuesday.
In the first two episodes, previewed by The Post, Butina, 32, casts herself as a firearm loving peacemaker — trying to learn from the National Rifle Association and conservatives to promote gun rights in the Motherland, and build a “relationship between two countries [she] loved.”
“Look, I romanticized the NRA. They have the biggest lobbying group, and I wanted to learn how they do it,” Butina tells narrator Celia Aniskovich.
Maria Butina posing with firearms – FBI counter-intelligence agents arrested her on charges she acted as a Kremlin agent.
Oleg Volk/Polaris
That Butina just so happened to have affairs with powerful, twice-her-age men who facilitated her ruse was simply the luck of the draw, she insisted.
“I have one weakness as a woman — I really like smart men. That’s my biggest weakness, and that I guess gets me in trouble all the time,” she says of her romance with former Overstock CEO Patrick Byrne.
Butina came on the scene as a student at American University, when the US and Russia were locked in a fierce sanctions battle ahead of the 2016 election.
And so her relationship — and allegiance — to Alexander Torshin, a prominent Russian politician and banker, raised red flags within the FBI, which suggested her motives went far beyond glasnost.
“She’s not trained as a spy, but she’s being used by elements of the Russian government in a way that is advancing Russian interests and that is what squarely put her on the radar,” former FBI agent Peter Strozk says in the series.
Butina, however, chalks her relationship with Torshin up to her desire to cozy up to the rich and powerful — the same reasons she gives for her keen interest in then-candidate Donald Trump.
Maria Butina
Alexandria Detention Center/AP
“For me he is not a government official, he has become my gun-loving friend,” she says of Torshin.
Butina’s main pipeline to the GOP was through her then-boyfriend Paul Erickson, a Republican operative and an unlikely match for the svelte and charming Russian — with whom he was rarely seen being affectionate towards, pals said.
“[It was] like they were on the same page about something — and we didn’t know what it was,” says Elena Nicolaou, the daughter of one of Erickson’s pals who met Butina on a trip to Disney World in 2015.
The trip was a dream come true, Butina gushes.
“I came back to my childhood — this is how I dreamed: ‘Someday, I’m going to go to the stars, way beyond our galaxy,’” she recalls about her wave of emotions riding Disney’s Space Mountain rollercoaster.
Her relationship with Byrne blossomed soon after the Florida trip, with rendezvous at the Bowery Hotel and a cabin outside of Park City, Utah.
“My attitude to her was, ‘look I know these Republican guys are duds. When you really want to come and get, you know, a world-class shagging and have a great weekend, give me a call,’” he recalls telling Butina.
Byrne insists he kept up the relationship for Uncle Sam — to get to the bottom of Butina’s real motives in the US.
Eventually, he claims he was instructed to spy on her.
“’We do not ask citizens to sleep with people to get information, but you are being asked to rekindle your romantic relationship with Maria and get to the bottom of what she is doing here,’” he says he was told by the US government, a claim that has been denied by FBI agents.
Butina was arrested in July 2018 and spent 15 months behind bars before she was deported home in October 2019. Now, she works for Russia’s state-owned television network as host of an online show that mocks opposition to the Kremlin.
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