Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Drone attack secrets leaker gets 45-month sentence

Government asked the court to sentence him to between nine and 11 years

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WASHINGTON (AFP) — A former intelligen­ce analyst was sentenced Tuesday to 45 months in prison for leaking secrets about the US military’s drone attacks that were the basis of a powerful 2015 news expose.

Daniel Everette Hale, 33, worked as an Air Force intelligen­ce officer developing targets for drone strikes in Afghanista­n in 2011-2012, an experience he said left him emotionall­y scarred.

After leaving military service, in 2014 he worked for a defense contractor for eight months which gave him access to top secret documents detailing the US government’s secretive drone assassinat­ions in Yemen, Afghanista­n and Somalia.

He fed the documents to The Intercept news outlet, which used them for an eight-part series that shook the administra­tion of president Barack Obama, raising broader questions about the increase in drone strikes and the killing of innocent non-combatants.

The sentence was far below the potential 50 years Hale faced on five charges.

In a case delayed by issues of classified informatio­n and by the Covid-19 pandemic, he unilateral­ly submitted a guilty plea to a single charge of “retaining and transmitti­ng national defense informatio­n.”

Citing his longstandi­ng “serious underlying mental health conditions” relating to a difficult childhood, Hale asked for a sentence of 12-18 months.

His lawyers argued in a court submission that his act of leaking the documents was not intended to harm the United States, but instead was “a crime of conscience.”

“He wanted to assuage his guilt and inform his fellow citizens in hopes of making America live up to its aspiration­s,” it said.

The government asked the court to sentence him to between nine and 11 years in prison, saying that he took the defense contractor job in 2014 with the express intent of stealing and leaking the documents, and that he caused significan­t damage to US national security.

 ?? IC/GLOBAL TIMES ?? TOURISTS play volleyball in two teams named after hot pot broths, 'Clear Broth Team' and 'Spicy Broth Team,' at a water park in Southwest China’s Chongqing Municipali­ty.
IC/GLOBAL TIMES TOURISTS play volleyball in two teams named after hot pot broths, 'Clear Broth Team' and 'Spicy Broth Team,' at a water park in Southwest China’s Chongqing Municipali­ty.

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