| ® || 148 | HOW AMERICA LOST ITS SECRETS bounties from money raised on the Internet. In 2015, for instance, WikiLeaks offered $100,000 bounties to any whistle-blowers who provided the site with secret documents exposing details of the Trans-Pacific Trade Agreement. Nor is acting alone necessarily a line that divides whistle-blowers from spies. In many cases, whistle-blowers have accomplices who help them carry out their mission. For example, in 1969, the cel- ebrated whistle-blower Daniel Ellsberg, a military analyst at the Rand Corporation, had an accomplice, Anthony Russo, who had also worked at Rand. (Both were indicted by the government.) Acting in concert, they copied secret documents that became known famously as the Pentagon Papers. Whistle-blowers can also, like conventional spies, enter into elabo- rate conspiracies to carry out an operation. On the night of March 8, 1971, eight whistle-blowers working together with burglary tools broke into the FBI office in Media, Pennsylvania, and stole almost all the FBI files there. The conspirators escaped and kept their identities secret for over forty-two years. © Self-definitions also do not necessarily produce a distinction re) between whistle-blowers and conventional spies. Consider Philip Agee, who left the CIA in 1969 for what he described as “reasons of conscience.” Specifically, he said he objected to the CIA’s covert support of Latin American dictators. After contacting the Soviet embassy in Mexico City, he defected to Cuba, where he leaked infor- mation that exposed CIA operations. Although Agee insisted he was a whistle-blower, and he adamantly denied offering any secrets to the Soviet Union, the KGB viewed him as a conventional spy. Accord- ing to Oleg Kalugin, the top Soviet counterintelligence officer in the KGB in Moscow, who defected to the United States, Agee offered CIA secrets first to the KGB residency in Mexico City in 1973 and then to the Cuban intelligence service. Agee provided the KGB wi