
UK man accused of offering ex-defence minister Grant Shapps' information to Russian intelligence
Howard Phillips is accused of offering Shapps' home address and phone number to two people he believed were Russian agents, but were in fact British undercover officers.
The 65-year-old denies one count of engaging in conduct intended to materially assist a foreign intelligence service, a crime that carries a potential sentence of up to 14 years in jail.
His trial began at Winchester Crown Court on Wednesday, when prosecutor Jocelyn Ledward said Phillips offered to help Russian intelligence "not necessarily for ideological reasons or because he sympathised with the Russian state".
Ledward said Phillips had sought to carry out "easy – and, perhaps, interesting or exciting – work for easy money".
Phillips in October 2023 applied for a job with the United Kingdom's Border Force and was approached in March 2024 by purported Russian agents, using the names Sasha and Dima, Ledward said.
She added that Phillips maintained his job application despite his apparent contact with Russian agents in the belief the job "might give him access to information that he could later provide".
Ledward said Phillips was asked to save a file onto a clean USB stick, stating what he could offer and why, and hide it inside a parked bicycle on a London street in April 2024.
The document stated that Phillips could "facilitate the collection of an operative from any port of entry, provide them with safe harbor, travel, assistance and return them to a designated place of embarkation undetected".
Phillips met Sasha and Dima in a London hotel later that month, and then met Dima in May 2024, saying he knew Shapps' home address, telephone number and where his private plane was kept as he had visited Shapps' house, Ledward said.
Phillips, whose trial is due to take up to three weeks, is also accused of offering logistical support, booking a hotel and buying a mobile phone for a foreign intelligence service.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Business Standard
32 minutes ago
- Business Standard
LIVE news updates: Strong earthquake tremors felt in Delhi
Strong tremors felt in Delhi US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and his Russian counterpart will meet Thursday in Malaysia for what could be a testy conversation as tensions between the countries rise over Moscow's increasing attacks on Ukraine and questions about whether Russia's leader is serious about a peace and Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov are to see each other in Kuala Lumpur, where both men are attending the annual Association of Southeast Asian Nations Regional Forum, which brings together all 10 Asean members and their most important diplomatic partners, including Russia, China, Japan, South Korea, the Europeans and the US. A Liberian-flagged cargo ship attacked by Yemen's Houthi rebels sank on Wednesday in the Red Sea, and a European naval force in the Mideast said only six of the 25 people who were on board have been attack on the Eternity C, which also killed at least three of the crew, represents the most serious assault carried out by the Houthis in the crucial maritime trade route where $1 trillion in cargo once passed through November 2023 to December 2024, the Houthis targeted more than 100 ships with missiles and drones in a campaign the rebels describe as supporting Palestinians in the Gaza Strip during the Israel-Hamas war.


Time of India
32 minutes ago
- Time of India
Ukraine has repressed Russian-speaking people: Envoy
Russian ambassador Denis Alipov R ussian ambassador Denis Alipov responded to one story ('If you take a gun to culture, you kill human spirit', July 4) in TOI 's eight-part series on price of war and fight for peace. Excerpts: The piece "If you take a gun to culture, you kill the human spirit" reflects a misunderstanding of causes and consequences of the ongoing conflict. Portrayal of the war as a 'self-inflicted wound for Russian society' is misreading events. Efforts to 'cancel Russia' have been central to policy in Kiev's regime that came to power following the 2014 coup. It has sought to marginalise Russian language, repress Russian-speaking population, dismantle monuments commemorating shared history, and persecute Ukrainian Orthodox Church. An example is the 2019 law that established Ukrainian as the sole state language, effectively outlawing official multilingualism in a country where Russian is the native tongue for at least one-third of the population. This was followed by the national minorities (communities) law that curtailed rights/ freedoms of ethnic Russians - this even drew UN's criticism. 'Derussification' includes demolition of monuments to figures like Alexander Pushkin and Catherine the Great, and repression of Ukrainian Orthodox Church including a de facto ban on its activities, and attempts to seize the sacred Kiev-Pechersk Lavra, a spiritual cornerstone in both countries. It's imperative to confront Kiev and its international sponsors, who've played a role in provoking the deadliest conflict in Europe since WWII. Their campaign has shattered peace & stability and damaged culture, historical memory, and people-to-people relations. Indeed, "taking a gun to culture" does kill the human spirit. But it's Ukraine, not Russia, that led this assault -- Russia sought to stop it by force only after its words fell on deaf ears.

Hindustan Times
38 minutes ago
- Hindustan Times
Donald Trump slaps tariffs on 7 minor trading countries, calls it ‘common sense'
US President Donald Trump on Wednesday sent tariff letters to seven smaller trading partner countries, saying that the formula for calculating the rates was based on common sense. US President Donald Trump imposed tariffs on seven small nations that don't contribute much to the country's trade deficit.(Reuters) The Philippines, Brunei, Moldova, Algeria, Libya, Iraq, and Sri Lanka have been hit with tariffs. When asked about the basis for his tariffs on the listed countries, Trump said it was common sense and deficits, among other factors. 'The formula was a formula based on common sense, based on deficits, based on how we have been treated over the years, and based on raw numbers…. They are based on very substantial facts and also past history,' Trump told the media. It must be noted that none of the listed countries is a major industrial rival to the United States. Still, Trump claimed that before he took office, the White House never had 'anybody who understood the numbers'. 'You look at the past history, we never had anybody in the White House who understood the numbers. We have taken hundreds of billions of dollars in tariffs, and we haven't even started yet,' he added. Later in the day, Brazil, the second-biggest supplier of steel to the US after Canada, was also added to the list Reasons for Donald Trump's tariffs on Brazil Donald Trump's threat to impose 50% tariffs on Brazilian goods sent the country's currency plunging. The US leader sharply escalated a dispute with Latin America's largest nation and leftist leader, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva. In a letter posted to his social media account, Trump cited Jair Bolsonaro, the right-wing former president and Lula rival who is facing a trial on charges that he attempted a coup following his 2022 election defeat. Trump made a direct link to politics, saying he was making the change 'due in part to Brazil's insidious attacks on Free Elections, and the fundamental Free Speech Rights of Americans.' The charges against Bolsonaro, a leader who mimicked Trump's political style during his presidency, stem from an investigation into post-election riots in Brazil's capital that have been compared to the January 6, 2021, insurrection attempt in Washington. Bolsonaro has repeatedly appealed for Trump's help as his legal woes mount. Brazil had been set to face the minimum 10% levy under the so-called 'reciprocal' tariffs Trump originally unveiled in April. The letter, the latest of more than 20 posted by Trump in recent days, was the first substantial upward revision from previously announced rates.