from Wired.com, August 8, 2012, By Robert Beckhusen
Alexei Navalny showed up to work in Moscow on Monday to discover he was being bugged. He called the police, like many perhaps would, but not before tweeting photos and video of himself and his colleagues taking the Kremlin’s monitoring devices apart.
It’s not hard to figure out why Navalny was bugged. He’s one of Russia’s most influential anti-corruption bloggers and is at the center of a protest movement aimed at toppling the regime of President Vladimir Putin. Since late July, the 36-year-old lawyer has faced possible arrest, trial and up to 10 years in prisonfor charges Putin’s prosecutors claim stem from an embezzlement scheme, but which Navalny and his supporters claim is an attempt to silence him.
The discovery began when Navalny’s colleagues at the watchdog group Anti-Corruption Fund had just returned from vacation, and “just for a giggle,” inspected his office with a “bug detector,” Navalny blogged. And as a prominent opposition figure, the odds that Navalny was being spied on were pretty good. Using the detector, his team found a device attached to wire hidden inside the wall molding. “Experts, what is this?” he asked his Twitter followers, attaching a photo. The strange device was apparently a microphone.
Video posted to his blog, seen above, shows more wires being pulled from the wall and another device that appears to be a hidden camera. While discovering the devices, Navalny kept tweeting. “In short, official: the Anti-Corruption Fund found listening device,” he tweeted. Navalny’s team called the police, who found not only the microphone but a hidden camera attached to a power source and transmitter. Police reportedly said on video and in Russian that the device was being remotely operated.
“Here it is – the bug of Czech agent But regardless of the case’s merits, the timing for it couldn’t be more revealing. For one, Russia is embroiled in the largest opposition movement since the collapse of the Soviet Union, sparked after Putin’s suspicious re-election in December. Social media portals Facebook, Twitter and Russian-language site Vkontakte have been key organizing tools. Blogs hosted at LiveJournal, which is popular in Russia, have helped disseminate anti-Kremlin messages. [Read More: Original article from Wired.com]