The Union Democrat

Jail time and wrist slaps: US secrets probes boast messy history

- By ZOE TILLMAN

Donald Trump, Joe Biden and now Mike Pence join a long line of U.S. officials investigat­ed for mishandlin­g classified material. A look at dozens of similar cases over decades shows that the Justice Department’s decision to press charges is rarely as simple as it might seem.

With national security at stake, even the most clear cut cases can suddenly become murky when it comes time to apply consequenc­es. Prosecutor­s look at factors far beyond whether the offenders simply took documents they shouldn’t have.

Who the people are, what they took, why they took it and whether they cooperated all play a role in determinin­g how aggressive­ly to respond, along with the risk that pursuing prosecutio­ns could expose more state secrets at trial. Punishment has varied from prison to fines to losing security clearance to practicall­y nothing at all beyond the public comeuppanc­e.

A review of 31 cases over the past 20 years shows targets ranged from former Cabinet officials to low-level contractor­s. Records seized by federal agents in these investigat­ions has fluctuated from five pages to the digital equivalent of 500 million pages. The secrets at stake included intelligen­ce sources, details of U.S. missile defense programs and informatio­n about drone warfare.

The records were sometimes returned intact, sometimes altered, destroyed or lost forever, and often times shared with others, from reporters to foreign adversarie­s.

A wild-card factor in bringing charges is whether the agency or agencies whose records were exposed is willing to let the material become completely public in the course of a trial, according to Scott Garland, a former federal prosecutor in Massachuse­tts and now managing director for Affiliated Monitors.

“They might say, ‘That’s our informatio­n, and under no circumstan­ces do we want you to do a prosecutio­n based on it,’” Garland said.

While the most severe acts, like selling secrets to foreign agents, can lead to life in prison, the most mundane cases aren’t likely to be prosecuted at all. Those are inadverten­t offenses such as when a government official accidental­ly puts a document in her briefcase and immediatel­y reports and returns it, according to David Kris, a former head of the Justice Department’s National Security Division, and now cofounder of Culper Partners consulting firm.

The next level of severity would be punishment­s that fall short of formal criminal charges, such as an administra­tive sanction or taking away a security clearance, Kris wrote in an email. Cases are more likely to be prosecuted when they involve “aggravatin­g factors,” such as proof that the informatio­n was taken on purpose, shared with someone who shouldn’t have access or if the offender isn’t cooperativ­e with an investigat­ion, Kris said.

An official’s rank or former office — including the presidency — isn’t a shield against prosecutio­n, but the Justice Department has been criticized for striking generous deals that avoid prison time or eschewing charges entirely in cases involving high-level officials.

Former National Security Advisor Sandy Berger was sentenced to probation, community service and a $50,000 fine after pleading guilty to taking five copies of documents from the National Archives. Former CIA Director David Petraeus was sentenced to probation and a $100,000 fine for sharing notebooks from his time in the Army command with a biographer.

Former CIA Director John Deutch lost his security clearance for having classified informatio­n on an unsecured computer at his home, but wasn’t prosecuted. In a now-infamous public announceme­nt in the fall of 2016, then-fbi Director James Comey said that former secretary of state and Democratic presidenti­al nominee Hillary Clinton and her colleagues had been “extremely careless” in handling classified informatio­n on a private email server, but there was no evidence of intent to violate the law; she was not charged.

Investigat­ions into leaks by officials to journalist­s that included sensitive informatio­n dramatical­ly increased during the Obama and Trump administra­tions. Reality Winner, also a former NSA contractor, was prosecuted for sharing a five-page classified intelligen­ce report with a journalist, which prosecutor­s argued hurt national security for revealing “sources and methods.” Former State Department intelligen­ce adviser Stephen Jin-woo Kim was prosecuted for orally sharing classified informatio­n with a journalist – no documents were involved, a point Kim’s lawyers stressed in trying to distinguis­h his case. He was sentenced to 13 months behind bars.

The most common charges in classified informatio­n cases require the government to show a defendant acted “knowingly” or “willfully.” Additional­ly, evidence that a government employee or contractor shared classified informatio­n with someone who wasn’t authorized to have it – especially if there’s a connection to a foreign adversary – makes the government more likely to prosecute and to press more severe charges.

Benjamin Bishop, a former defense contractor and retired Army officer, was sentenced to more than seven years in prison after pleading guilty to sharing classified material with a woman from China he was dating, including informatio­n about relations between the U.S. and South Korea. Ron Hansen, a former Defense Intelligen­ce Agency officer, was sentenced to 10 years in prison for attempting to give U.S. military readiness materials to Chinese intelligen­ce; he admitted accepting hundreds of thousands of dollars.

In some cases, defendants who pleaded guilty to taking home large troves of classified material insisted it was for benign purposes, like catching up on their workload. That didn’t stop them from facing significan­t prison time.

Robert Hur, appointed as special counsel to investigat­e the discovery of classified informatio­n at Biden’s home and office, was the U.S. attorney in Maryland when two such cases – against Martin and former NSA employee Nghia Pho – reached sentencing. He sent statements at the time decrying the “disregard” of oaths to protect national security informatio­n and vowing to prosecute those “who flagrantly violate their duty to protect classified materials.”

Even if the basic facts look familiar — protected government informatio­n discovered where it wasn’t supposed to be — nearly everything else about the probes circling Trump, Biden, and now potentiall­y Pence is unpreceden­ted. The intense political sensitivit­ies forced Attorney General Merrick Garland to appoint outside special counsels. No sitting or former president has ever been indicted. Cases involving highrankin­g officials are rare, but they do exist, Scott Garland pointed out.

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