The Boston Globe

Air Force punishes 15 for leak of secrets

Poor judgment cited in Teixeira oversight

- By Tara Copp

WASHINGTON — The Air Force has discipline­d 15 personnel in connection with the massive classified documents leak by an airman earlier this year, concluding that multiple officials intentiona­lly failed to take required action on his suspicious behavior, the Air Force inspector general reported Monday.

Massachuse­tts Air National Guard member Jack

Teixeira is accused of leaking highly classified military secrets from the 102nd

Intelligen­ce

Wing at Otis Air

National Guard

Base in Massachuse­tts, where he worked.

The punitive actions range from relieving personnel from their positions, including command positions, to non-judicial punishment under Article 15 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice.

Teixeira, 21, has been behind bars since his April arrest on charges stemming from the most consequent­ial intelligen­ce leak in years. He is charged under the Espionage Act with unauthoriz­ed retention and transmissi­on of classified national defense informatio­n. He has pleaded not guilty, and no trial date has been set.

Prosecutor­s said in a court filing last week that the two sides have not yet engaged in “substantiv­e” plea discussion­s.

Teixeira enlisted in the Air National Guard in 2019. He shared military secrets he illegally collected from his intelligen­ce unit with other Discord users, authoritie­s said — first by typing out classified documents he accessed and then sharing photograph­s of files that bore “SECRET” and “TOP SECRET” markings.

In its investigat­ion of the leaks, the Air Force inspector general found both security gaps occurred in part because personnel had access to classified docu

ments without supervisio­n, and because in instances where Airman First Class Teixeira was caught violating security policies none of the personnel who either witnessed the violations or had responsibi­lity for Teixeira took the actions necessary in response.

Teixeira worked as a cyber transport systems specialist, essentiall­y an informatio­n technology specialist responsibl­e for military communicat­ions networks. As such, Teixeira often had unsupervis­ed access as part of a three-person team at night to a Top Secret-Secret Compartmen­talized facility to perform maintenanc­e inspection­s. Teixeira remains in the Air National Guard in an unpaid status, said Air Force spokeswoma­n Ann Stefanek.

“At times, members were required to perform preventive maintenanc­e inspection­s and other tasks, which required individual­s to be on their own for hours, unsupervis­ed in other parts of the facility,” the IG found. “Further, no permission controls were in place to monitor print jobs, and there were no business rules for print products. Any night shift member had ample opportunit­y to access (classified) sites and print a high volume of products without supervisio­n or detection.”

Inside Teixeira's 102nd Intelligen­ce Support Squadron, members had what the IG described as a “more complete” picture of the breadth of Teixeira's active unauthoriz­ed intelligen­ce-seeking but “intentiona­lly failed to report the full details of these security concerns” because they thought security officials might overreact, the IG found.

For example, in fall 2022 Teixeira was seen writing down informatio­n from a classified document onto a Post-it note. While he was confronted about the note, there was no follow-up to ensure the note had been shredded and the incident was not reported to security officers.

It was not until a January 2023 incident that the appropriat­e security officials were notified, but even then security officials were not briefed on the full scope of the violations.

If any of the personnel had taken the appropriat­e actions, they may have reduced “the length and depth of the unauthoriz­ed and unlawful disclosure­s by several months,” the IG found.

Those unit officials “who understood their duty to report specific informatio­n regarding A1C Teixeira’s intelligen­ce-seeking and insider threat indicators to security officials, intentiona­lly failed to do so.”

But the IG also said the unit's own policy, which encouraged its tech support service members to attend intelligen­ce briefings “to better understand the mission and the importance of keeping the classified networks operating,” was improper and problemati­c because it exposed the service members to higher levels of classified material than they needed to know.

The documents released on social media revealed sensitive US intelligen­ce on the Russia-Ukraine war, the Middle East, and an array of other topics.

As a result of the security breach, Colonel Sean Riley, 102nd Intelligen­ce Wing commander, was relieved of command, and the 102nd Intelligen­ce, Surveillan­ce and Reconnaiss­ance Group commander, Colonel Enrique Dovalo, received administra­tive action for concerns with unit culture and compliance with policies and standards.

The Air Force also said previously suspended commanders from the 102nd Intelligen­ce Support Squadron and the detachment overseeing administra­tive support for airmen at the unit mobilized for duty were permanentl­y removed.

The Air Force took the intelligen­ce mission from the 102nd after Teixeira’s leaks were discovered, and the group’s mission remains reassigned to other units.

 ?? ?? Jack Teixeira, 21, is accused of leaking classified military files online.
Jack Teixeira, 21, is accused of leaking classified military files online.

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