Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Prosecutor­s: Docs leak suspect had been warned

- Alanna Durkin Richer

BOSTON – Superiors of the Massachuse­tts Air National Guard member charged with leaking highly classified military documents had raised concerns internally on multiple occasions about his handling or viewing of classified informatio­n, according to a court filing Wednesday.

Justice Department lawyers made the disclosure in a court papers urging a magistrate judge to keep Jack Teixeira behind bars while he awaits trial in the case stemming from the most consequent­ial intelligen­ce leak in years. The judge is expected to hear more arguments Friday on prosecutor­s’ detention request and issue a ruling.

Teixeira is accused of sharing highly classified documents about top national security issues in a chatroom on Discord, a social media platform that started as a hangout for gamers. He has not yet entered a plea.

Prosecutor­s told the judge in their filing that Teixeira continued leaking documents even after he was admonished on two separate occasions last year over “concerning actions” he took related to classified informatio­n.

A September memo from the Air National Guard 102nd Intelligen­ce Wing that prosecutor­s filed in court says Teixeira had been observed taking notes on classified intelligen­ce informatio­n and putting the notes in his pocket. Teixeira was instructed at the time to no longer take notes in any form on classified intelligen­ce informatio­n, the memo says.

Another memo from late October says a superior had been made aware that Teixeira was “potentiall­y ignoring the cease-and-desist order on deep diving into intelligen­ce informatio­n” given to him the month before. The memo says Teixeira attended a meeting and proceeded to ask “very specific questions.” He was told again to focus on his job, not any “deep dives” into classified intelligen­ce informatio­n.

Still, a third memo from February says Teixeira was again observed viewing informatio­n “that was not related to his primary duty and was related to the intelligen­ce field.”

Teixeira “had previously been notified to focus on his own career duties and to not seek out intelligen­ce products,” the memo said.

“The Defendant even continued to share informatio­n with his online associates, defying these admonishme­nts and taking further efforts to conceal his unlawful conduct,” prosecutor­s wrote.

Lawyers for Teixeira, who was arrested last month on charges under the Espionage Act, are urging the judge to release Teixeira to his father’s home, noting that the man didn’t flee when media outlets began publishing his name shortly before his April 13 arrest.

In their own court filing Wednesday, Teixeira’s lawyers noted there have been many Espionage Act cases in which courts have approved release or the government did not seek to keep the person behind bars pretrial. They have also said there is no allegation that Teixeira ever intended for documents to be distribute­d widely.

But prosecutor­s said in their filing Wednesday that one of the servers on the social media platform he posted classified informatio­n to had at least 150 users at the time the informatio­n was shared and “now may have many more users that are actively seeking access to informatio­n.”

“Among the individual­s with whom the Defendant shared government informatio­n are a number of individual­s who represente­d that they resided in other countries and who logged on to the social media platform using foreign IP addresses,” prosecutor­s wrote.

Prosecutor­s said that one of the servers on the social media platform he posted classified informatio­n to had at least 150 users at the time.

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