SPYSCH_141026_217
Existing comment:
Tree Stump Bug:
In the early 1970s, US intelligence placed a bug in a wooded area near Moscow to eavesdrop on radar and communications signals of a nearby Soviet missile system. The intercepted signals were stored and then transmitted to a satellite passing overhead, for retransmission to a ground site in the US.
The device was concealed in an artificial tree stump, camouflaged in a cluster of trees and tall glass. The top of the tree stump appeared to be opaque, but was actually transparent. It allowed enough sunlight through to charge the device's solar batteries. The KGB eventually discovered the bug.

Quick Plant Bugs:
When an agent doesn't have the time or access necessary to plant a complex bug system, he can use a "quick plant."
Audience surveillance technicians conceal wireless bugs and transmitters in small items that can be quickly installed or simply "left" at the target location such as the opponent's office, home, or car.
Examples of quick plants include cigarette lighters, electrical adapters, and telephone mouthpieces.
Proposed user comment: