The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Top-secret clearance, despite online rants

Security status was not due for renewal until 2018, experts say.

- By Danny Robbins danny.robbins@ajc.com Christian Boone cboone@ajc.com and J. Scott Trubey strubey@ajc.com

Reality Leigh Winner spent months unleashing a tirade of social media posts calling the president of the United States, among other things, an “orange fascist.”

But were her political rantings enough to remove her from a position that gave her access to classified National Security Agency material? The answer apparently is no. As the security and intelligen­ce communitie­s try to come to terms with the 25-year-old contractor charged with leaking a classified report about Russian hacking to a media outlet, they see a young woman who, for all practical purposes, flew beneath the radar that would identify someone as a potential risk.

Winner’s posts deriding President Trump likely wouldn’t trigger interest from NSA personnel unless someone complained, experts said. And even if someone did, deciding whether to take some sort of action would be a difficult call, they said.

“People in the intelligen­ce community still have a First Amendment right,” said Charles McCullough III, who served as the inspector general for U.S. intelligen­ce agencies during the last five years of the Obama administra­tion. “You don’t check that

at the door.”

McCullough, one of the first to raise questions about Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server while she was secretary of state, said it would probably take a violation of the Hatch Act, the federal law that bars government employees from participat­ing in certain political activities, for someone’s political ideology to attract attention.

Winner was working for a Virginia-based company, Pluribus Internatio­nal, in an NSA building on the Fort Gordon army post in Augusta. She had access to a computer with classified material because she had a top-secret security clearance.

A linguist who speaks Arabic and Farsi, Winner began working in the facility, known as the “back hall,” in February after serving in the Air Force for six years. The fact that she had a top-secret clearance means she underwent a thorough vetting that included the government’s 127-page questionna­ire for national security positions — form SF86 — and scrutiny from investigat­ors.

Moreover, because she was working in an NSA facility, she would have received additional scrutiny from that agency’s operatives, including a polygraph exam that could have delved into personalit­y issues.

Had there been red flags, the NSA process likely would have noticed them, experts said.

“The polygraph should’ve picked up something,” said Christophe­r Burgess, a former CIA officer who writes about national security issues.

With her language skills and a military background, Winner would be a valuable asset for a contractor working with the NSA, and her age wouldn’t have been a deterrent for an agency that has increasing­ly relied on young analysts and translator­s.

“They’re hiring a lot of young people, and sometimes you get folks who don’t really think things out,” said John Berry, a Virginia attorney who has represente­d intelligen­ce employees dealing with security clearance issues. “They’re in the phase of their life where idealism overrides rational thought.”

‘A certain ideologica­l bent’

According to the government, Winner printed the secret intelligen­ce report, ferreted it out of the building and mailed it to The Intercept, an online publicatio­n that focuses on national security. The document was unrelated to her job duties, according to the government’s search warrant affidavit.

McCullough, now a partner in a Washington, D.C., law firm, said Winner could have obtained the document any number of ways. With her security clearance, she would have had the ability to view even classified material unrelated to her work as long as access wasn’t limited to certain individual­s in a compartmen­talized space, he said.

“Who knows how she got hold of it,” he said. “But it’s not inconceiva­ble she had access through her job.”

In an extensive interview with The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on, McCullough said Winner appears to be an unusual leaker, someone who may think she’s a whistleblo­wer but really isn’t, because her cause is simply to show the public what informatio­n the government possesses.

“From what I’ve read, she was of a certain ideologica­l bent,” he said. “So you could see how somebody with that mind could conjure up some sort of fantasy that what they’re doing is in the name of all that’s righteous and good, but they’re woefully mistaken.”

Burgess, the ex-CIA agent, said the fact that Winner was able to leave the building with a copy of a classified report raises questions about the facility itself.

“Every individual is subject to an exit inspection,” he said. “Clearly, that wasn’t happening in this case, and if it was, it wasn’t working.”

With Trump’s election, Winner’s political leanings were clear from posts on Twitter and Facebook that were available for anyone to see.

On election night, she tweeted: “Well. People suck.”

When Trump tweeted on Feb. 11, after a judge blocked his travel ban, that 77 percent of the refugees allowed into the U.S. come from seven “suspect” countries, Winner responded by saying “the most dangerous entry to this country was the orange fascist we let into the White House.”

Acknowledg­ing the significan­ce of informatio­n that can be gleaned from social media, in May 2016 then-Director of National Intelligen­ce James Clapper issued a directive stating the government would check the public posts of federal employees and contractor­s applying and re-applying for security clearances.

However, security clearances last for five years, and Winner wasn’t due to be vetted again until 2018. On top of that, there is a clearance backlog that has put some investigat­ions on hold for years.

“So once you’re cleared, if you become motivated to (break the law), you still have five years before they’re going to start to re-investigat­e or re-polygraph,” McCullough said. “And there’s such a backlog that some people are waiting 10 years.”

McCullough said security personnel within an intelligen­ce agency can investigat­e social media posts even when a clearance isn’t due to be reaffirmed. However, it’s hard to see anything coming of it unless an inside threat is identified, he said.

“If it was like Kathy Griffin holding a fake head of Donald Trump, security might look at that from a psychologi­cal standpoint,” he said. “But just something purely political, unless it violates the Hatch Act or some other rule, they wouldn’t normally chase that down.”

 ?? LINCOLN COUNTY JAIL ?? Reality Winner is accused of giving classified documents to a news outlet. She had a top-secret clearance after undergoing a thorough government vetting for a national security position.
LINCOLN COUNTY JAIL Reality Winner is accused of giving classified documents to a news outlet. She had a top-secret clearance after undergoing a thorough government vetting for a national security position.
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