Skip to content
Case File
d-16008House OversightOther

Speculative account of Snowden's movements and alleged espionage for Russia

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #020372
Pages
1
Persons
1

Summary

The passage offers vague speculation about Snowden's location and motives without concrete evidence, dates, or new information. It does not provide actionable leads, specific transactions, or novel re Claims Snowden traveled from an unknown safe house to Moscow via Aeroflot. Suggests Snowden may have become a source for Russian intelligence. Frames Snowden's actions as contradictory to his public

This document is from the House Oversight Committee Releases.

View Source Collection

Persons Referenced (1)

Tags

whistleblowerespionagerussiaforeign-influenceedward-snowdenhouse-oversightpotential-espionageintelligence
Share
PostReddit

Related Documents (6)

House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Snowden’s alleged contact with an unknown ‘carer’ and a foreign mission during his missing eleven days before Hong Kong arrival

The passage suggests a possible intermediary (“carer”) who arranged Snowden’s logistics and may have ties to a foreign mission, offering a concrete lead (name of intermediary unknown, dates May 20‑May Snowden allegedly provided classified documents to an unauthorized party, violating his oath. Snowden communicated with journalist Barton Gellman about coordinating with a foreign mission. Keith Brad

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Speculative claim of an unnamed NSA collaborator aiding Snowden

The passage offers a vague hypothesis about an unknown mole assisting Snowden, without concrete names, dates, transactions, or evidence. It repeats known historical analogies and provides no actionabl Suggests an unidentified NSA insider may have guided Snowden to Booz Allen and Hong Kong. Draws parallels to historic Russian moles (Hanssen, Ames) to argue a mole could evade detection. Cites an int

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Speculation of NSA insider assistance and unknown movements of Edward Snowden before his arrival in Moscow

The passage suggests that Snowden may have had an unnamed NSA co‑worker who helped him copy top‑secret Level 3 files and hints at a possible undisclosed stop in mainland China during his first eleven Snowden likely required assistance from an NSA employee with privileged passwords to copy Level 3 fi The identity of the possible insider is unknown and may still be employed at the NSA. Snowden’s wh

2p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Speculative account linking Snowden's Hong Kong stop to unknown contacts and questioning NSA security breach

The passage raises questions about Snowden's travel choices and suggests possible undisclosed contacts in Hong Kong, but provides no concrete names, dates, or financial transactions. It hints at a sec Snowden flew from Hawaii to Hong Kong via Narita, a route that took over 13 hours. Hong Kong has an active US extradition treaty, making it an unlikely safe haven. The author suggests Snowden may hav

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Opinion piece questioning Snowden's motives and suggesting foreign assistance

The passage offers a vague, speculative narrative about Edward Snowden's motives and hints at undisclosed foreign assistance, but provides no concrete names, dates, transactions, or actionable leads. Claims Snowden's disclosures may have served a foreign power Suggests unknown actors helped Snowden Frames Snowden as a potential threat to US security

1p
House OversightOtherNov 11, 2025

Possible post‑Snowden leak of NSA document on German Chancellor Merkel to Der Spiegel

The passage suggests that a sensitive NSA file naming Chancellor Angela Merkel as a target (not an asset) appeared in German media weeks after Snowden’s Hong Kong hand‑over, implying an unknown party Der Spiegel published a story naming Merkel as an NSA target, citing a document not found in the 58, Journalist Laura Poitras texted Snowden for background after the story broke, indicating she lacke

1p

This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,400+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.