Of course, I am sure it was no fun for Franz, but Kerry's investigations could be made into a movie, if this sort of intrigue keeps up:
http://blogs.cqpolitics.com/spytalk/2009/06/what-nuclear-secret-was-kerry.htmlSwiss police threatened to arrest an aide to Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., for espionage last month if he entered the country in pursuit of a CIA connection to Pakistan's secret nuclear bomb smuggling.
Douglas Franz, a former newsman who recently became a top investigator with the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, which Kerry chairs, is an expert on Pakistani nuclear scientist A.Q. Khan, suspected of aiding Iran, North Korea and Libya in their secret nuclear bomb programs.
...
Last month Franz told Swiss authorities he wanted to question Urs Tinner, a Swiss citizen suspected of supplying Khan's network with "the technical knowledge and equipment that was used to make gas centrifuges for uranium enrichment," The Associated Press reported May 25.
In his book, Franz, a distinguished former New York Times reporter and managing editor of the Los Angeles Times, reported that Tinner had been recruited as a CIA informant, perhaps as early as 2000.
This was originally reported here, but I missed it:
http://www.boston.com/news/world/europe/articles/2009/05/25/swiss_warn_us_senate_investigator_in_nuclear_probe/Switzerland has warned a U.S. Senate investigator not to interview a Swiss lawyer involved in a nuclear smuggling case, a spokesman for the Swiss Justice Department said Monday.
The spokesman, Folco Galli, said the department sent an e-mail May 11 rejecting a request by Douglas Frantz, the chief investigator of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.
Frantz had asked to interview Roman Boegli, the lawyer for Urs Tinner, a Swiss citizen suspected of supplying the clandestine network of Pakistani scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan with the technical knowledge and equipment that was used to make gas centrifuges for uranium enrichment.
Tinner's brother, Marco, and his father, Friedrich, are also under investigation by Swiss authorities for participation in Khan's nuclear smuggling ring.
"Mr. Frantz requested our permission to question the lawyer," Galli said. "We told him that such permission couldn't be granted" because Swiss investigations in the case are still under way.
Urs Tinner, who was released in December after almost five years in investigative detention, has yet to be charged. A Swiss parliamentary panel is investigating the government-ordered shredding of thousands of files of evidence in the case on the grounds they contained information that could endanger national security.
Newsweek views this as "The Swiss Say Get Out And Stay Out"
http://www.newsweek.com/id/199159