Can't really call it spying
Big hullaballoo in Britain about an old lefty Member of Parliament who hired a series of young Russian honeytraps as "assistants". MP Hancock is a senior member of various defense committees, and the "assistants" have taken full advantage of his access to information.
Brit media describe Katia Zatuliveter, the latest honeytrap, as a spy or sleeper.
Nope. She's neither a spy nor a sleeper.
Spies are
clandestine. Their real identity is unknown to the subjects of their spying, and they take careful steps to conceal their activities, because exposure could be deadly.
This honeytrap didn't need to be clandestine. English-speaking countries are so totally confused and senile, so collaborated and collapsed, that we no longer understand the difference between inside and outside. We no longer understand
nations and
borders.
Consider the old idea of adverse possession or finders keepers. When a piece of property has been abandoned for a long time, the law considers it to be common or public. Anyone who claims it and maintains it will be allowed to possess it.
The governments of US and UK have been abandoned by their original owners for 21 years, which means that honeytrap Zatuliveter isn't really trespassing in any significant way. She's just strolling around in an unclaimed wilderness, picking up interesting things and sending them home.