http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1850701/posts
Russia declassifies military archives dating back to 1941-1945
Ping of interest
Policy on management of Camp 020 (KV 2/2593; KV 4/369)
KV 2/2593 consists of a chronological list of people passing through Camp 020 and Camp 020R, compiled in 1943 and then kept up-to-date to the end of the war. It gives the name of the detainee, arrival date, date transferred out and where to, release date or, where appropriate, a note that the subject was executed, an indication of whether held at Camp 020 or 020R, and whether the subject committed suicide. The list is also annotated with subsequent information as to when the subject was decarded, the Security Service PF (Personal File) file reference and notes concerning the destruction of those files when appropriate.
Several of the inmates of Camp 020 attempted appeals against their detention, and the policy file on handling these is now released at KV 4/369 (1941-1945). The files cover the involvement of the Official Solicitor in hearing these appeals, and much of the correspondence concerns the question of where to send people withdrawn from Camp 020 but not at liberty (the London Reception Centre and Dartmoor Prison being the main possibilities). The file includes copies of some petitions, and much of the correspondence relates to a particular case, that of Juan Lecube (whose Security Service PF (personal file) has already been released).
Camp 020 Agents are starting to be listed:
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/releases/2004/may21/double_cross.htm
Double Cross Agents
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/releases/2005/highlights_march/march1/agents.htm
Suspected Agents
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Yes, it is interesting.
Thank you for the ping, Calpernia.
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/1858230/posts
(snip) surveillance against the National Lawyers Guild, an organization founded in 1937 and long associated with the labor movement and liberal causes.
As Colin Moynihan reports in The Times, the F.B.I. turned over copies of some 400,000 pages from its files on the group under a 1977 lawsuit. In 1997, the copies were donated by the guilds lawyers to the Tamiment Library and Robert F. Wagner Labor Archives at New York University with the understanding that they could be made available to the public this year.