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United States v. Spy Factory, Inc.
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United States v. Spy Factory, Inc. : ウィキペディア英語版
United States v. Spy Factory, Inc.

''United States v. Spy Factory, Inc.'' was a criminal case dealing with the largest chain of surveillance equipment shops in the United States, the San Antonio, Texas-based Spy Factory. The store and its officers Ronald Kimball, Marlin Richardson and Tracy Edward Ford were indicted on a total of 70 counts related to smuggling of and illegal trade in equipment used for wiretapping and surveillance. Despite motions to dismiss the case because of the alleged vagueness of and other issues, the company and all three officers pleaded guilty and were convicted.
==The Spy Factory==
The Spy Factory, Inc. was the largest chain of surveillance equipment stores (colloquially, spy shops) in the United States, with outlets in Arizona, California, Colorado, Georgia, Illinois, Missouri, Nevada, Texas, Utah and Washington.
The company was owned by Ronald Kimball, a former federal agent who worked for the United States Department of Justice in Ecuador and Costa Rica, and also a purveyor of bullet-proof vehicles through his other business, Executive Armoring.
According to Kimball, "()orporate executives and political figures in Mexico and Latin America" were the Spy Factory's first customers; "()hen orders started coming in from the Middle East", and by 1991, the company did about 90% of its business overseas.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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