*FBI Nabs Suspected Leaker of Top-Secret Information to Media Outlet:
25-Year-Old Federal Contractor*

by PATRICK GOODENOUGH
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/authors/detail/patrick-goodenough>
June 6, 2017

A federal contractor charged with leaking a top-secret NSA document to a
media outlet was tracked down after the media outlet sent photos of the
document to a government agency source - and in doing so providing
investigators with vital clues that eventually led to the suspect.

The suspect, 25-year-old Reality Leigh Winner, had used her computer at
work to email the media outlet, according to an affidavit released by the
Department of Justice on Monday.

News of Winner's arrest came shortly after The Intercept, an online news
site that encourages whistleblowing and the leaking of official documents,
published a top-secret NSA document relating to Russian hacking attempts
before last November's election.

The Intercept said the document had been "provided anonymously" and had
been "independently authenticated." It also reported that it had contacted
the NSA and Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and that
officials declined to comment but asked that a report on the document not
be published. A number of redactions were then requested and agreed upon.

The DoJ did not identify the government agency involved in Winner's alleged
offending, but said she was "a contractor with Pluribus International
Corporation assigned to a U.S. government agency facility in Georgia." She
had worked there since February, and held top-secret clearance.

The Alexandria, Va.-based Pluribus International advertises intelligence
analyst and similar positions at more than a dozen locations around the
nation, including Fort Gordon in Augusta, Georgia. The NSA has a large
cryptologic center in Fort Gordon, which is also home to the U.S. Army
Signal Corps.

Winner was arrested by the FBI at her Augusta home on Saturday and appeared
in federal court in the city on Monday, charged with removing classified
material from a government facility and mailing it to a news outlet. The
charge, "gathering, transmitting or losing defense information
<https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/18/793>," carries penalties of up
to ten years' imprisonment.

According to an affidavit by an FBI special agent that forms part of the
criminal complaint, the media outlet - not identified in the documents -
sent photos of the top-secret document that had come into its possession
with a source at an unnamed government agency, asking the person to
determine their veracity.

That copy evidently provided valuable clues to the origin of the document.

"The  U.S. Government Agency examined the document shared by the News
Outlet and determined the pages of the intelligence reporting appeared to
be folded and/or creased, suggesting they had been printed and hand-carried
out of a secured space."

An internal audit then established that six individuals had accessed and
printed the document concerned. Examination of the six individuals' desk
computers established that only one of them - Winner - had been in email
contact with the media outlet concerned. She used a Gmail account to email
the outlet at the end of March 30.

During a search of Winner's home on Saturday, the suspect admitted to
investigators that she had printed the document, removed it from work, and
mailed it to the news outlet from Augusta, Ga.

According to the affidavit, Winner also acknowledged that she was aware of
the contents of the document and knew that it "could be used to the injury
of the United States and to the advantage of a foreign nation."

Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein said the suspect had been quickly
identified and arrested through "exceptional law enforcement efforts."

"Releasing classified material without authorization threatens our nation's
security and undermines public faith in government," he said. "People who
are trusted with classified information and pledge to protect it must be
held accountable when they violate that obligation."

Anti-Trump posts

According to an application for a search warrant, filed with the Augusta
court, Winner was an active duty member of the U.S. Air Force since 2013,
and held a top-secret clearance over that period.

A review of social media accounts that appear to belong to Winner points to
a young woman with strongly negative opinions of President Trump and his
policies.

In response to a Feb. 12 tweet from the president relating to the admission
of refugees from terror-prone countries, the account owner tweeted, "the
most dangerous entry to this country was the orange fascist we let into the
white house."

In a Jan. 31 post linking to a newspaper story on the president's
immigration executive order, she tweeted a hashtag that compares Trump to a
vulgar term for female genitalia. Other hashtags to appear include
#NotMyWall and #notmypresident.

The document at the center of The Intercept's reporting
<https://theintercept.com/2017/06/05/top-secret-nsa-report-details-russian-hacking-effort-days-before-2016-election/>
deals
with NSA intelligence about a Russian Military Intelligence cyberattack on
a U.S. voting software supplier and attempts - through the use of
spear-phishing emails - to get access to computers by fooling employees
into handing over login credentials.

The NSA document said it was not known whether the attempts to compromise
the targets were successful.

The Intercept encourages whistleblowers and offers advice to those who want
to leak information securely.

"Don't contact us from work. Most corporate and government networks log
traffic. Even if you're using Tor [an Internet browser that conceals a
user's IP address from the visited websites], being the only Tor user at
work could make you stand out."

"Don't email us, call us, or contact us on social media," The Intercept
advises. "From the standpoint of someone investigating a leak, who you
communicate with, and when, is all it takes to make you a prime suspect."



Read more: Family Security Matters
<http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/detail/fbi-nabs-suspected-leaker-of-top-secret-information-to-media-outlet-25-year-old-federal-contractor?f=must_reads#ixzz4jE886hAo>
http://www.familysecuritymatters.org/publications/detail/fbi
-nabs-suspected-leaker-of-top-secret-information-to-media-
outlet-25-year-old-federal-contractor?f=must_reads#ixzz4jE886hAo
Under Creative Commons License: Attribution
<http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0>


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