Baltimore Sun

Defense analyst charged with leaking top-secret files to journalist­s

- By Justin Jouvenal and Paul Duggan

A counterter­rorism analyst for the Defense Intelligen­ce Agency has been charged with leaking topsecret details about foreign countries’ weapons systems to two journalist­s, including a reporter with whom he was apparently romantical­ly involved, federal authoritie­s said Wednesday.

Henry Frese, 30, of Alexandria, Virginia, “was caught red-handed disclosing sensitive national security informatio­n,” the Justice Department said.

After a federal indictment of Frese was unsealed Wednesday, the department said in a statement that his alleged “unauthoriz­ed disclosure of TOP SECRET informatio­n could reasonably be expected to cause exceptiona­lly grave harm to the national security.”

His alleged motive apparently was to advance the career of the female reporter with whom he had a relationsh­ip, the FBI said in a court affidavit. Frese allegedly passed additional top secret informatio­n to one of the woman’s colleagues at “an affiliated but different news outlet.”

The two journalist­s were not immediatel­y identified, but one of them, a woman, shared an Alexandria residence with Frese from August 2017 to August 2018, authoritie­s said.

Frese, who had a highlevel security clearance, was arrested Wednesday morning as he arrived for work at DNI offices in Reston, Virginia, authoritie­s said. The indictment, issued by a federal grand jury in Alexandria, charges him with two counts of willful transmissi­on of national defense informatio­n.

It was not immediatel­y clear Wednesday whether Frese had a lawyer. A family member reached by The Washington Post said they had no comment.

Zachary Terwillige­r, the U.S. attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, said Frese used his security clearance to obtain DNI intelligen­ce reports that “were outside his area of responsibi­lity.” Frese joined the DNI as an intelligen­ce contractor in January 2017 and was hired as a counterter­rorism analyst 13 months later.

“Mr. Frese not only provided this informatio­n on his own, but the government believes he was taking direction from members of the media,” FBI agent Alan Kohler, head of the counterint­elligence division in the Washington field office, told reporters.

“He was searching for and accessing informatio­n that he had no reason to access,” Kohler said. “He did not need to know the informatio­n in the intelligen­ce reports.”

In August 2017, thenAttorn­ey General Jeff Sessions said the Trump administra­tion would ramp up enforcemen­t against leakers of classified materials. Since then, six people have been charged with crimes, said Assistant Attorney General John Demers.

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