 Card number 11, card number 11, James Jesus Engelton, or James Jesus Engelton, C-I-A-K-G-B, C-I-A-K-G-B. In addition to Oswald, several U.S. military men defected to the USSR between June 1958 and January 1960. At least four of them, including Oswald, soon returned to the U.S. This and Oswald's marine spy training suggest they were part of a false defector program run by the U.S. intelligence. Gary Powers, whose 1960 spy flight was shot down over Russia, later said Oswald supplied the Soviets with vital U-2 radar data. In any case, Oswald received a government stipend and a nice apartment in Minsk and married Marina Prozova-Sakava, whose uncle was a colonel in Soviet domestic intelligence. In June 1962, Oswald returned home with his bride. They were met by Spass T. Ricken, a traveler's aid society agent, who was also secretary general of the CIA, connected American friends of the anti-Bulshevik nations. The State Department, advised by the FBI, said Oswald had not expatriated himself and could resume U.S. citizenship. Because a State Department quote was an issue, he was able to renew his passport on 24 hours notice. In January 1964, KGB agent Yuri Nozenko defected to the U.S., claiming that KGB neither debrief Oswald about his military background nor recruited him. James Jesus Angeles, the CIA counter-italogist chief, who handled agency matters pertaining to the Kennedy assassination, subjected Nozenko to 1,277 days of hostile interrogation and solitary confinement, but Nozenko stuck by his story. Angleton later said, quote, A mansion has many rooms. There were many things during that period. I'm not privy to whose struck John, end quote. If Angleton didn't believe Oswald was the lone assassin who struck John, neither could he prove that Oswald was a Kremlin-sponsored killer.