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Crime

NSA Employee Leaked Classified Cyber Intel, Charged With Espionage (nextgov.com) 69

A former National Security Agency employee was arrested on Wednesday for spying on the U.S. government on behalf of a foreign government. Nextgov reports: Jareh Sebastian Dalke, 30, was arrested in Denver, Colorado after allegedly committing three separate violations of the Espionage Act. Law enforcement allege that the violations were committed between August and September of 2022, after he worked as a information systems security designer at the agency earlier that summer. Dalke allegedly used an encrypted email account to leak sensitive and classified documents he obtained while working at the NSA to an individual who claimed to have worked for a foreign government.

The individual who received the documents was later revealed to be an undercover FBI agent. Dalke was arrested in September upon arriving at the location where he and the undercover agent agreed to exchange documentation for $85,000 in compensation. "Dalke told that individual that he had taken highly sensitive information relating to foreign targeting of U.S. systems, and information on U.S. cyber operations, among other topics," the press release from the Department of Justice reads. "To prove he had access to sensitive information, Dalke transmitted excerpts of three classified documents to the undercover FBI agent. Each excerpt contained classification markings."
"Should Dalke be found guilty, his sentence could include the dealth penalty or any term of years up to life imprisonment," notes the report.
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NSA Employee Leaked Classified Cyber Intel, Charged With Espionage

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  • There are no ... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by PPH ( 736903 ) on Thursday September 29, 2022 @06:46PM (#62925431)

    ... foreign spies or underage girls on the 'net. They are all FBI agents. Remember this and your life will be a lot easier.

    • It was a thought crime. He didn't actually leak anything to a foreign government. He just thought he did.
    • by necro81 ( 917438 )

      There are no foreign spies or underage girls on the 'net. They are all FBI agents.

      Or they're dogs [google.com].

    • If only the FBI could catch people who already committed a crime rather than lazing around, and when it’s quota time creating new “dumb criminals of opportunity” for show.
      • by PPH ( 736903 )

        catch people who already committed a crime

        They have different priorities*. Specifically, to stop intelligence from leaking out. Once the crime has been committed, the serious damage has been done. And punishment does little to stop future infractions. The little people who actually do the leaking are expendable as far as foreign intelligence is concerned..

        You applied for and received a security clearance. That implies a higher standard of care with the information you have been entrusted with than that of the general public. The process of securin

  • by quonset ( 4839537 ) on Thursday September 29, 2022 @06:48PM (#62925435)

    A husband and wife who were medical professionals within the Army are charged with conspiring to provide [cnn.com] the Russian government with personal medical records from the US government and military.

    It appears the wife was motivated by patriotism toward Russia while the husband contemplated volunteering for the Russian army after it invaded Ukraine, but said he lacked combat experience. Not that the current crop [9cache.com] of 300K conscripts have any combat experience [9cache.com] which would stop them from being sent to the frontline.

    Also, for those keeping track, Russian telegram channels are in a tizzy over the impending collapse of the Lyman pocket [twitter.com] and the loss of thousands of experienced Russian troops.

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward
      It's interesting that the CNN article you linked to didn't mention that the "wife" is the first ever "trans" Army officer. Since just a couple of stories down points out the first woman to be elected as secretary-general of the International Telecommunication Union, it's only fair that we also note the first trans Army officer, who also is also the first trans traitor.

      https://www.dailymail.co.uk/ne... [dailymail.co.uk]
      • Re: (Score:1, Troll)

        by quonset ( 4839537 )

        It's interesting that the CNN article you linked to didn't mention that the "wife" is the first ever "trans" Army officer. Since just a couple of stories down points out the first woman to be elected as secretary-general of the International Telecommunication Union, it's only fair that we also note the first trans Army officer, who also is also the first trans traitor.

        https://www.dailymail.co.uk/ne... [dailymail.co.uk]

        Not a problem. We'll make sure when Christians are selling secrets to foreign governments it will be pointed out.

        See how dumb that sounds?

      • by necro81 ( 917438 )

        It's interesting that the CNN article you linked to didn't mention that the "wife" is the first ever "trans" Army officer.

        That makes her subterfuge all the more strange. Does she know what they do to trans people in Russia?

    • Seems a silly risk to take when the stuff is just lying around by the caseload in Mar a Lago. Mind you Polina the nice paid-in-cash undocumented cleaning lady who used to work there had photos of those on her phone two years ago so the horse has probably bolted on that one.
    • I have read some good stuff here. Certainly price bookmarking for revisiting. talktalk webmail [allwebmail.tech]
  • Snowden? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 29, 2022 @06:52PM (#62925445)

    How come the FBI didn't catch Snowden trying to exchange information for cash?
    Is it because he handed over data to a trusted journalist in the best interest of the public instead of money?

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      How come the FBI didn't catch Snowden trying to exchange information for cash?

      Simple: Because Snowden has an actual clue how things work and never tried to do that. Anybody willing to pay for secret documents on the Internet is going to be part of a trap.

      The guy from the story is a moron. Probably also worthless as a "information systems security designer". I wonder whether they specifically hired him so they could tempt him and then produce a nice "success". Would not be the first time US "law" enforcement has done that.

    • When he first went to the press he was suspected of another info leak. It looked like the data he outed was gathered after he was suspected but still technically worked there. The press angle bought him a few weeks until they could not keep him out of court any longer....then skee-saddle....! Blah blah fair trial whatever....

    • There's lots of room to fuck up without trying to sell secrets to a foreign government, and Snowden fucked up.

      • How'd he fuck up? It's not clear he would have been found out if he hadn't revealed himself.
        • by drnb ( 2434720 )

          How'd he fuck up? It's not clear he would have been found out if he hadn't revealed himself.

          He revealed classified info that the enemy (al-Qaeda types) would later read. That's a f'up know as aiding the enemy. Its quite the enhancement to legal charges.

    • As I understand when Snowden was in the NSA, the security system was shit.

      I imagine they have made some changes since, hence the reason they caught this guy so soon.

    • How come the FBI didn't catch Snowden trying to exchange information for cash? Is it because he handed over data to a trusted journalist in the best interest of the public instead of money?

      No, Snowden did not have the best public interest in mind. If he had, he would have gone a whistleblower path that did NOT involve releasing classified information that the enemy would in fact read. He in fact provided aid to the enemy. That harms the public. What he should have done was approach a friendly member of the US House or Senate and inform them and then have his journalist friend "leak" to the public that a member of the intelligence community has approached Congress as a whistleblower, revealing

      • Snowden had the example of what happened to Thomas Drake. Drake had previously tried to go down that whistleblower path and was charged with the espionage act and faced life ruination for his trouble, narrowly escaping prison.

        Snowded risked a lot, and sacrificed, to prove that James "least untruthful" Clapper was lying. Whatever 'harm' to the public or 'aid to the enemey' there was is purely imagined by likewise dishonest actors.

        The same disingenuous scumbags that called people conspiracy theorists for beli

        • by drnb ( 2434720 )

          Snowden had the example of what happened to Thomas Drake. Drake had previously tried to go down that whistleblower path and was charged with the espionage act ...

          Because Drake, like Snowden, released information to a journalist. That is not whistleblowing. The only things journalists should hear is that an member of the intelligence community approached Congress as a whistleblower over illegal spying on American citizens. That is the story you want to get to the public. Not intelligence community documents. The latter takes you off the whistleblow path.

          ... now call Snowden a traitor for providing the actual proof

          No, for making internal documents public. Including the ability of the enemy to read the documents. That is aid to

          • Yes and without evidence, people like you can simply lie and deny that any wrongdoing took place. That is why Drake released unclassified information to the journalists, because the people are the ultimate authority when their constitutional rights are being brazenly violated and congress is too complicit, complacent, or corrupt to do anything about it.

            "the enemy" for the jackboots and authoritarians in this story is the informed public.

            • Yes and without evidence ...

              No, there is evidence that al-Qaeda types read the information released. So no, not heroes, they chose paths that provided aid to the enemy.

              That is why Drake released unclassified information to the journalists, ...

              Snowden did not, he released classified, failed at redaction at times, and his documents were read by the enemy.. One example:
              "the exposure of intelligence activity against al-Qaeda"
              https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

              And being unclassified does not mean the enemy was not aided. Its is big business to collect, analyze and report on unclassified information, corporati

  • Easy Solution (Score:1, Flamebait)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Why didn't he declassify the documents simply by thinking about it with his 6D chess brain, not that he every had classified documents in the first place, or tried to overflow an election purely because he didn't win!

    • Because he didn't have the authority to declassify the documents that a sitting president has?

  • Who contacted who?

    • by bws111 ( 1216812 )

      Providing the opportunity to commit a crime is not entrapment. It doesn't matter who contacted who.

      • It might not be entrapment in the US. But offering someone money to commit a crime, then arresting them for committing that crime would be illegal and the evidence would definitely be inadmissible in the rest of the world.

  • Interestingly they didn't wait for almost two years to get him and say he risks death !

    And justice for all... who can afford it !!!

    The USA, just like my own country, is a joke.

    • No intent to distribute, and no actual distribution. At least no evidence of such.

      Taking documents is waaaay different from taking documents and trying to sell them.

      I wouldn't be surprised to find that the NSA will look through every phrase in every document to see if foreign governments learned anything from Cheetolini, but that's gonna take time. It's almost like two superficially similar situations can actually be radically different.

  • At the plebe level they call it espionage. At the congressional level and up, they call it leaking. Funny how the term used determines the outcome...

  • It's no surprise, given the number of people who have some sort of access to sensitive information, that you'll periodically have one trying to pass it on for one reason or another; but the money seems surprisingly bad in this case.

    From a cursory search of job listings, "information systems security designer" is a job description that should push you at least a touch over $100k/year; and it's one you won't even be considered for unless you've got the combination of clearance and at least the appearance
    • Something else is going on here. I had a clearance eons ago, The first thing they do is ram down your brain you can be imprisoned and even the death penalty for leaking. They reminded you every 6 months. Especially the part about espionage (at the time) was the only death penalty federal crime. So the guy had some reason to leak besides the money. Some sympathy to Russia, or maybe hate for the US. I am stunned at the lackadaisical attitude people are having about this and the orange man. Trump should be in
      • He is fundraising $1 million per day off of this. It's almost like it's a deliberate ploy to vacuum cash from the MAGA rubes more effectively.

  • If you want to live in any country and sell them out for money or any other reason, you should receive the most severe punishment, including execution.
  • This is the new Edward Snowflake!

Some people manage by the book, even though they don't know who wrote the book or even what book.

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