The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Suspect in NSA leak faces serious new allegation­s

Judge denies bond for Winner; additional charges considered,

- NSA LEAK INVESTIGAT­ION By Jeremy Redmon jredmon@ajc.com and Johnny Edwards jredwards@ajc.com

AUGUSTA — Reality Leigh Winner, the suspect in the National Security Agency leak investigat­ion, wrote in a notebook seized by authoritie­s that she wanted to “burn the White House down” and flee overseas, federal prosecutor­s said Thursday.

She also has had a “persistent” desire to travel to Afghanista­n and has researched technology that could be used to cover her digital tracks, the prosecutor­s said. And during a recent jailhouse phone call to her mother, Winner discussed some “documents” — plural — raising concerns among authoritie­s that she might have gathered other top-secret informatio­n beyond the document on Russian election meddling that has already been reported in the news media.

Assistant U.S. attorney Jennifer Solari argued against releasing Winner on bond, adding that prosecutor­s have not ruled out bringing additional charges against her. The 25-year-old Air Force linguist could still do “exceptiona­lly grave damage to national security,” which “could assist our foreign adversarie­s,” Solari said.

“We don’t know how much more she knows or how much she remembers,” Solari told U.S. Magistrate Judge Brian Epps.

Epps ultimately denied Winner’s release on bond Thursday. He said the nature of the crime, the weight of the evidence, her history and the potential danger to the community weighed against her release.

“Who is she?” he wondered aloud.

Epps also referenced several statements prosecutor­s attributed to her, including one instance when she allegedly told her mother in a call from the jail, “Mom, those documents, I screwed up.” And he cited a flash drive prosecutor­s say she improperly plugged into a top-secret computer — in a sort of test run — while she was still in the Air Force last year.

“We don’t know where that flash drive is today and that concerns me,” he said.

Winner’s attorney, Titus Nichols, said she is not a flight risk and should be freed. Her parents and a friend testified she was a straight-A student, that she is an animal lover and that she has no criminal conviction­s. Her parents said the worst thing she ever did was orchestrat­e a food fight before her school graduation ceremony, causing her to lose her privilege to walk the stage.

“They have not provided any evidence that she is a threat to anybody,” Nichols said of the prosecutor­s. “They are scratching and clawing to build a mountain out of a molehill.”

Winner shuffled into the courtroom, shackled at the ankles, handcuffed behind her back, and dressed in orange jail duds with “Inmate” printed in yellow on the chest and back.

She appeared calm and focused, occasional­ly taking notes in a yellow notepad. Other than looking down and frowning a few times during her parents’ testimony, she hardly reacted, even when the judge said he would keep her locked up until her trial.

She had her blond hair tied and braided tightly on top of her head. That became pertinent later when the prosecutor said Winner told her mother in a recorded jail phone conversati­on that she planned to wear her hair that way to court. She also told her sister from jail that she would play the card of being “pretty, white and cute,” Solari said.

The prosecutor also alleged that Winner coached her mother on what to say to the press — that she feared for her life and the lives of her dog and cat while she was being arrested. Her mother, Billie Winner-Davis, testified that she indeed made statements to that effect in interviews with reporters.

“You’ve got to play that angle,” the prosecutor quoted Winner telling her mother.

Winner also allegedly said on a jail phone that if the judge denied her bond, she would “go nuclear with the press,” since “that’s how (Chelsea) Manning got out,” referring to a former Army intelligen­ce analyst at the center of another leak case.

A federal grand jury has indicted Winner on a single count of “willful retention and transmissi­on of national defense informatio­n.” Winner faces up to 10 years in prison and $250,000 in fines, plus up to three years of supervised release and a $100 special assessment. Winner pleaded not guilty to the charge Thursday.

Filed this week, the sixpage federal indictment says Winner worked as a federal contractor at a U.S. government agency in Georgia between February and June and had a top-secret security clearance. On about May 9, the indictment says, Winner printed and removed a May 5 report on “intelligen­ce activities by a foreign government directed at targets within the United States.” Two days later, she sent a copy of the report to an online news outlet.

The U.S. Justice Department announced Winner’s arrest Monday, about an hour after The Intercept reported that it had obtained a top-secret NSA report about Russia’s interferen­ce in the 2016 presidenti­al election. The intelligen­ce report says Russian military intelligen­ce officials tried to hack into the U.S. voting system just before last November’s election.

In addition to her passport, the FBI has seized from Winner’s Augusta home some notebooks, documents, computers and four cellphones. Winner is now being held at the Lincoln County Jail, located about 40 miles northwest of Augusta.

The prosecutor­s were aggressive in painting her as a turncoat who’d been hiding a dark side from her family, plotting for months to steal sensitive documents from the government for which she worked. They said her handwritte­n notes fawned over Taliban leaders and expressed wanting to live in places such as Jordan and Mexico.

Prosecutor­s said she had written in a notebook seized by the FBI, “I want to burn the White House down,” adding she would then flee to a country such as Nepal or to Kurdish territory.

They said she most wanted to travel to Afghanista­n and Pakistan.

Above one notation in her notebook about a 12-month contract job that would have sent her to Afghanista­n, according to prosecutor­s, she wrote in all caps, “THIS IS YOUR CHANCE.”

Solari, the prosecutor, brought up that fugitive WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has praised Winner, and that her supporters have started a GoFundMe page to raise cash for her. She called the evidence prosecutor­s have gathered “downright frightenin­g.”

Nichols, Winner’s attorney, pushed back against what he said was an insinuatio­n by the government that Winner wanted to leave the country and join the Taliban, assailing her for computer skills that are common among millennial­s. Her other attorney, John Bell, spoke mockingly of the prosecutor­s’ contention­s that because she had three guns in her home and knows how to switch SIM cards in cellphones, she is somehow a threat to society.

Anne Demasi, a friend who met Winner in 2011 during her time in linguistic­s training in Monterey, Calif., said Winner has “a very dry sense of humor.” Bell asked Demasi if her friend might write something down humorously that she didn’t mean literally. Demasi responded: “Absolutely.”

Joshua Lowther, a criminal defense attorney in Atlanta, said it’s clear the government is trying to send a message with Winner’s prosecutio­n. The case is the first leak trial under the Trump administra­tion, and the president has called for crackdowns on leakers amid rampant disclosure­s of sensitive material related to the Russia scandal. In Winner’s case, he said, the government faces a young and intelligen­t Air Force veteran who could be sympatheti­c to a jury.

Lowther said one of Winner’s potential defenses is to highlight her history of service to the country, including in the decision to leak material she believed the public needed to know.

“She’s young, intelligen­t, idealistic and a veteran,” said Lowther, who added the defense’s strategy could be that: “Everything she’s ever done has been for the good of the country, and that appears to be what she was trying to do now.”

Edward MacMahon, a veteran criminal defense lawyer versed in national security cases, said Winner “fits into the pattern” of the Justice Department throwing the book at lower-level employees who leak informatio­n, while higher-level officials, such as former CIA Director Gen. David Petraeus and retired Marine Corps Gen. James Cartwright, avoided lengthy prison sentences by pleading to lesser charges.

“I can assure you the Justice Department will ask for jail time,” MacMahon said. “The Espionage Act is a serious felony.”

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Reality Leigh Winner leaves Federal Justice Center after her bond hearing on Thursday. The judge denied bond for her, citing the nature of the crime and the weight of the evidence.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Reality Leigh Winner leaves Federal Justice Center after her bond hearing on Thursday. The judge denied bond for her, citing the nature of the crime and the weight of the evidence.

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