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The Courts United States

Discord Leaker Jack Teixeira Pleads Guilty, Seeks Light 11-Year Sentence (arstechnica.com) 50

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Ars Technica: Jack Teixeira, the National Guard airman who leaked confidential military documents on Discord, agreed Monday to plead guilty, promising to cooperate with officials attempting to trace the full extent of government secrets leaked. Under the plea deal, Teixeira will serve a much-reduced sentence, The Boston Globe reported, recommended between 11 years and 16 years and eight months. Previously, Teixeira had pleaded not guilty to six counts of "willful retention and transmission of national defense information," potentially facing up to 10 years per count. During a pretrial hearing, prosecutors suggested he could face up to 25 years, The Globe reported.

By taking the deal, Teixeira will also avoid being charged with violations of the Espionage Act, The New York Times reported, including allegations of unlawful gathering and unauthorized removal of top-secret military documents. According to prosecutors, it was clear that Teixeira, 22, was leaking sensitive documents -- including national security secrets tied to US foreign adversaries and allies, including Russia, China, Ukraine, and South Korea -- just to impress his friends on Discord -- some of them teenage boys. Investigators found no evidence of espionage. US District Judge Indira Talwani will decide whether or not to sign off on the deal at a hearing scheduled for September 27.

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Discord Leaker Jack Teixeira Pleads Guilty, Seeks Light 11-Year Sentence

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  • Dyslexia (Score:5, Funny)

    by PPH ( 736903 ) on Monday March 04, 2024 @06:14PM (#64289856)

    I read that as an 11 Light Year sentence.

  • Just store the secrets in a golf resort bathroom, closet email server, or cover the folders with sticky ice-cream in a Corvette trunk, and you get off.

    • âï He's right you know.
    • Or even better, put them into a coffin claiming it's your ex-wife and instead of a cemetery, bury it on your property. Can be dug out when needed.

    • Or stuff it in your sock on your way to the shredder.

  • by sysrammer ( 446839 ) on Monday March 04, 2024 @11:49PM (#64290400) Homepage

    For some reason the guy that ignored a solemn oath to America thought that internet "friends" would keep a secret?

    That community—which The Times found was "fixated on weapons, mass shootings, and shadowy conspiracy theories"—was expected not to share the documents. Ultimately, Bellingcat found that Teixeira's friends spread the documents widely, first to other Discord servers, then to Telegram, 4Chan, and Twitter (now called X).

    It's getting to be that the only Americans who can keep an oath nowadays are ones who want to tear it down.

  • Whatever the punishment here, that a person of this status had access to information at this level is unacceptable. That's not one kid bro just feeling his oats and violating an oath. It's a serious sign of systemic negligence.

Dennis Ritchie is twice as bright as Steve Jobs, and only half wrong. -- Jim Gettys

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