(CNN) -- Federal judges in Virginia and Massachusetts have ordered five suspected Russian secret agents be moved to New York.
A federal judge in Alexandria, Virginia, on Wednesday ordered that Russian spy ring suspects Mikhail Semenko, Michael Zottoli, and Patricia Mills be moved to New York "promptly," according to court documents.
Suspects Donald Heathfield and Tracey Ann Foley, currently being held in Boston, also will be moved to New York, a federal judge there ruled.
Zottoli and Mills have admitted that they are Russian citizens and have been living as a couple under false identities in Virginia, investigators say. Prosecutors said that they made the admissions soon after being arrested and authorities have found evidence to support that information.
Semenko is accused of aiding the plot by allegedly conducting private wireless computer links to communicate with a Russian government official, court documents said.
In all, 11 suspects were arrested in the alleged spy plot in late June.
Meanwhile, a human rights activist has raised the possibility that a Russian researcher convicted of spying for U.S. intelligence services could be exchanged for one of the spy suspects in the United States.
Ernst Chyorny, a member of the Public Committee in Defense of Scientists in Russia, told CNN on Wednesday that the mother of Igor Sutyagin, the convicted Russian spy, told him about the development.
Earlier on Wednesday, Russian news agencies also reported that Sutyagin may be swapped along with other individuals in exchange for the people suspected of spying for Russia and detained in the United States.