NSA contractor arrested for alleged theft of top secret classified information
Harold
Thomas Martin, who worked at same consulting firm as Edward Snowden,
may have stolen codes developed to hack foreign governments
5
October, 2016
The
FBI has arrested a National Security Agency contractor on suspicion
of the theft of top secret classified data and documents in an
alleged security breach at the same intelligence agency whose spy
secrets were exposed by Edward Snowden.
Disclosure
of the documents stolen “could be expected to cause exceptionally
grave damage to the national security of the US”, claimed the
justice department in a press release giving details of the criminal
complaint against Harold Thomas Martin III, 51, of Glen Burnie,
Maryland.
He
was charged with theft of government property and unauthorized
removal and retention of classified materials by a government
employee or contractor, and, it emerged on Wednesday, has been in
detention since a court appearance on 29 August.
Details
of the arrest were first reported by the New York Times, which
suggested the breach involved the possible theft of highly classified
computer codes developed to hack into the networks of foreign
governments.
“There
is no evidence that Hal Martin intended to betray his country,”
said Martin’s attorneys Jim Wyda and Deborah Boardman in a
statement, according to the Washington Post. “What we do know is
that Hal Martin loves his family and his country. He served honorably
in the United States Navy as a lieutenant and he has devoted his
entire career to protecting his country. We look forward to defending
Hal Martin in court.” They said the charges against Martin were
“mere allegations” and they had not yet seen prosecutors’
evidence.
The
justice department confirmed that Martin worked for the same company
as Snowden when he exposed details of NSA mass surveillance methods
three years ago.
Martin
has been in custody since a court appearance in August. According to
the New York Times, Martin is suspected of taking the “source code”
developed by the agency to break into computer systems of adversaries
like Russia, China, Iran and North Korea.
Snowden,
who remains in exile in Russia, facing charges under the Espionage
Act, reacted to the details of the arrest, tweeting to his 2.4
million followers: “This is huge. Did the FBI secretly arrest the
person behind the reports NSA sat on huge flaws in US products?”
The
White House said Barack Obama took the national security implications
seriously. Press secretary Josh Earnest told a briefing: “I think
any time that information like this is released in the context of a
criminal complaint, the federal government is reminded of how
important is it to be vigilant about protecting the national security
of the country and information that is relevant to our national
security.
“So
this is certainly a situation that the Department of Justice takes
seriously, as evidenced by their complaint, but this is a situation
that President Obama takes quite seriously, and it is a good reminder
for all of us with security clearances about how important is it for
us to protect sensitive national security information.”
The
justice department confirmed: “A criminal complaint has been filed
charging Harold Thomas Martin III, 51, of Glen Burnie, Maryland, with
theft of government property and unauthorized removal and retention
of classified materials by a government employee or contractor.”
The
assistant attorney general for national security, John Carlin, US
attorney Rod Rosenstein for the District of Maryland and special
agent in charge Gordon Johnson of the FBI’s Baltimore field office
made the announcement.
According
to the affidavit, Martin was a contractor with the federal government
and had a top secret national security clearance.
He
was arrested late on 27 August as search warrants were executed at
his home, two storage sheds and his vehicle on a leafy suburban
street outside of Baltimore.
“I
heard a boom and went to the ground,” Dave Cunningham, who lives a
couple of doors down from Martin and described himself as a “lifer”
in the neighborhood, said of the raid on Martin’s home. He said he
thought it was a gunshot. But when he looked out the window, he saw
numerous law enforcement vehicles, including two large vans that
parked in front of the house.
Glen
Bond, who has lived in a house across the street from Bond for 50
years, said there were two big vans in front of the house blocking it
from view and “25 or 30 cars”.
“They
were in camouflaged uniforms, two dozen of them. They were serious.
Helmets, rifles,” Murray Bennett, who lives next door to Martin,
said.
“Big
guns,” Bond said. “When they came they took out a whole bunch of
stuff but it was all in black trash bags. You couldn’t see
anything.”
A
woman who came to the door of Martin’s home said: “This is a
matter that’s under investigation. I have no comment ... I’d
appreciate it if you’d leave from the front of my house so my dogs
will calm down and I can get some peace.”
Neighbors
describe Martin and the woman he lives with – no one could say
whether they were married – as “nice”, “decent”, and
“peaceful”.
During
execution of the warrants, investigators found hard-copy documents
and digital information stored on various devices and removable
digital media.
“A
large percentage of the materials recovered from Martin’s residence
and vehicle bore markings indicating that they were property of the
US government and contained highly classified information, including
Top Secret and Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI). In
addition, investigators located property of the US government with an
aggregate value in excess of $1,000, which Martin allegedly stole,”
a justice department press statement said.
Martin
is said to have had six classified documents obtained from sensitive
intelligence and produced by a government agency in 2014.
“These
documents were produced through sensitive government sources, methods
and capabilities, which are critical to a wide variety of national
security issues. The disclosure of the documents would reveal those
sensitive sources, methods and capabilities,” the justice
department said.
The
documents have been reviewed by a government agency and designated as
top secret, “meaning that unauthorized disclosure reasonably could
be expected to cause exceptionally grave damage to the national
security of the US”, the justice department statement said.
If
convicted, Martin faces a maximum sentence of one year in prison for
the unauthorized removal and retention of classified materials and 10
years in prison for theft of government property. An initial
appearance was held for Martin in US district court in Baltimore on
29 August and he is still detained.
The
arrest is a major embarrassment for the NSA and its contractor Booz
Allen coming just three years after Snowden, who worked for both.
The
NSA said in the wake of the Snowden revelations in 2013 it had
tightened up internal security, introducing more stringent monitoring
of staff and a double-checking system in which sensitive information
needed two people to access it rather than just one. Highly
classified information would no longer be concentrated in one place,
making it harder for potential hackers.
The
new breach provides fresh arguments for privacy activists who argue
that the NSA cannot be trusted to protect all the personal data it
gathers, from bank accounts to health records.
Supporters
of Snowden quickly made a distinction between him and the motives of
the arrested man. They reiterated that Snowden is a whistleblower who
leaked top secret material out of principle, believing the NSA was
acting unconstitutionally by engaging in mass surveillance.
It
was not yet clear what motivated the latest alleged leaker.
Snowden,
who had worked for the CIA and the NSA, handed over material to
journalists at the Guardian in 2013 when he was employed by Booz
Allen as contractor to the NSA. As a computer specialist based in
Hawaii, he was engaged in a number of operations, including targeting
China.
Flying
from Hawaii, where he was based, to Hong Kong, he gave tens of
thousands of top secret documents to journalists to illustrate the
scale of surveillance by the NSA and Britain’s GCHQ. The documents
also revealed the extent to which major US tech companies were
cooperating with the NSA in providing details from customer accounts.
Glenn
Greenwald, one of the journalists who was given material by Snowden,
rounded on the NSA for its lack of security. “Nobody is more inept
at securing its own data than NSA. But trust them to keep all yours
safe and secure.”
Jesselyn
Radack, a US lawyer who represents whistleblowers, was among those
quick to caution journalists about making comparisons with Snowden.
In a tweet, she wrote: “Media;pls stop comparing theft of NSA
source code to @Snowden blowing whistle on secret domestic
surveillance.”
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