WASHINGTON _ A federal government contractor has been accused of removing highly classified information and storing the material in his house and car, federal prosecutors announced Wednesday.
The Justice Department announced a criminal complaint against Harold Thomas Martin III of Glen Burnie, Maryland.
The Justice Department’s top national security official, John Carlin, said in Boston that the arrest pointed to the threat posed by insiders. Among the classified documents found with Martin, the government says, were six that contain sensitive intelligence — meaning they were produced through sensitive government sources or methods that are critical to national security issues — and date back to 2014.
All the documents were clearly marked as classified information, according to the criminal complaint. Investigators also found stolen property valued at more than US$1,000 at Martin’s residence or vehicle. He voluntarily agreed to an interview.
“Martin at first denied, and later when confronted with specific documents, admitted he took documents and digital files from his work assignment to his residence and vehicle that he knew were classified,” according to the complaint, despite not having the authorization to do so.
Martin has been in custody since a court appearance in August. It was not immediately clear if he had an attorney, and a message left at a home telephone number listed for Martin was not immediately returned on Wednesday.
In 2013, Edward Snowden, also a contractor for the NSA at the time, took a large quantity of documents that were later given to reporters, which laid bare a number of NSA surveillance operations.
According to The New York Times, Martin is suspected of taking the highly classified “source code” developed by the agency to break into computer systems of adversaries like Russia, China, Iran and North Korea.
Like Snowden, Martin worked for Booz Allen Hamilton, which builds and operates many of the NSA’s most sensitive cyber-operations, the Times reported.
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