[3] The club had been founded by Captain Archibald Maule Ramsay, MP, who later stressed his patriotism in the House of Commons and said that there was a distinction between anti-Semitism and pro-Nazism.
[6][7][8] In his autobiography, The Nameless War, Ramsay argued: "The main object of the Right Club was to oppose and expose the activities of Organised Jewry, in the light of the evidence which came into my possession in 1938.
[10] Wolkoff, using Assistant Military Attaché Col. Francesco Marigliano, an intermediary from the Italian embassy, sent information to Berlin, including suggestions for Joyce's propaganda broadcasts.
In February 1940, Wolkoff met Tyler Kent, a cipher clerk from the US embassy with similar views, who became a regular visitor to the Right Club.
Kent later revealed to Wolkoff and Ramsay some of the documents that he had stolen from the embassy and was holding in his flat, notably on sensitive communications between Winston Churchill and Franklin Roosevelt.
Her espionage work took a downturn when she then approached De Muncke and asked her if she could pass a coded letter to William Joyce through her Italian embassy contacts.