Chapman is one of only two of the Illegals Program Russians arrested in June 2010 who did not use an assumed name.
Recruitment Chapman is believed to have been recruited by the SVR in or around 2000.
Communications issues In April 2010, Chapman reportedly began to experience communication failures that were later attributed to U.S. interference.
Arrest Officials claimed Chapman worked with a network of others, until an undercover FBI agent attempted to draw her into a trap at a
Manhattan coffee shop. The FBI agent offered Chapman a fake passport, with instructions to forward it to another spy. He asked, "Are you ready for this step?" to which Chapman replied, "Of course." She accepted the passport. But, after making a series of phone calls to her father Vasily Kushchenko in Moscow, Chapman took his advice and handed the passport in at a local police station. She was arrested shortly after.
International exchange After being formally charged, Chapman and nine other detainees became part of a spy swap deal between the United States and Russia, the biggest of its kind since 1986. The ten Russian agents returned to Russia via a chartered jet that landed at
Vienna International Airport in Austria, where the swap occurred on the morning of 8 July 2010. The Russian jet returned to Moscow's
Domodedovo Airport where, after landing, the ten spies were kept away from local and international press.
Revocation of UK citizenship According to a statement from her American lawyer Robert Baum and media reports, Chapman had wanted to move to the UK. The
Home Office exercised special powers via the British
Home Secretary to revoke Chapman's British citizenship to prevent her return to the UK. This was done under section 40 of the
British Nationality Act 1981, introduced as part of the
Nationality, Immigration and Asylum Act 2002 and
Immigration, Asylum and Nationality Act 2006. This power had at that point only been used against a dozen people since its introduction. The Home Office issued legal papers revoking her citizenship on 13 July 2010. Steps were taken to exclude Chapman, meaning she could not travel to the UK. After Chapman's departure to Russia, Baum reiterated that his client had wished to stay in the UK; he also said that she was "particularly upset" by the revocation of her UK citizenship and exclusion from the country. ==Russia: since 2010==