The Commercial Appeal

Soldier accused of selling secrets to China

- Evan Mealins and Angele Latham

A U.S. Army soldier from Fort Campbell was indicted on charges of selling national defense secrets to China, U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Tennessee Henry C. Leventis announced Thursday.

Sgt. Korbein Schultz was an Army intelligen­ce analyst with the First Battalion of the 506th Infantry Regiment at Fort Campbell, Leventis said. He was arrested earlier Thursday.

“He traded our national defense informatio­n for cash,” Leventis said. Schultz received $42,000 over 14 payments, Leventis said.

The indictment charges Schultz with six counts, including conspiracy to unlawfully communicat­e defense informatio­n, unlawful export of defense articles to China and bribery of a public official, Leventis said.

The indictment alleges that starting in June 2022, Schultz collected and shared with a co-conspirato­r in China informatio­n about U.S. military operations, including advanced military helicopter­s, high-mobility artillery rocket systems, defensive missile systems, and Chinese military tactics, as well as the Tactics Techniques and Procedures manuals for the F22-A fighter jet and interconti­nental missiles.

Some of his duties included training others on the proper handling, storage and disseminat­ion of confidenti­al informatio­n, Leventis said.

“Illegal disseminat­ion of national defense informatio­n puts our country, our fellow citizens, members of our military and our allies at risk,” Leventis said. “We are reminded again that those threats sometimes come from our most esteemed institutio­ns.”

A spokespers­on from Fort Campbell confirmed to The Tennessean that Schultz was assigned to the Clarksvill­e post, but provided no further details.

“We have and will continue to cooperate with the US Attorney’s Office,” said Lt. Col Tony Hoefler, a spokespers­on for Fort Campbell.

On Friday morning, Schultz made his first court appearance and pleaded not guilty. Schultz walked into U.S. Magistrate Judge Barbara D. Holmes’ courtroom at the Fred D. Thompson U.S. Courthouse in downtown Nashville just after 11:40 a.m. CT Friday.

He was wearing a plain dark khaki shirt with no design or lettering, black pants and tan boots. His shirt was stretched and distressed at the neck. His hair was in a typical Army cut, and he had tattoos on both forearms. He was shackled at the ankles in orange cuffs.

Schultz appeared despondent when entering and kept his eyes down when seated before the hearing began —except for glances to the gallery. None of Schultz’s family was present in the courtroom.

But a family member on Thursday said he was confused, devastated and torn apart by the indictment.

Kolby Weldon is Schultz’s second cousin, and lives at the family’s brick ranch home in Clarksvill­e, Tennessee. Weldon said in an interview the arrest came as a complete surprise for the family.

“All we knew was he was writing papers (on the computer),” Weldon said.

Weldon, who also served in the U.S. Army at Fort Campbell, and Schultz shared a bond and the charges hurt on a deeper level.

“It really pisses me off,” Weldon said.

Indictment outlines details of conspiracy

According to the indictment, Schultz told a conspirato­r in August 2022 that he “wished he could be ‘Jason Bourne.’” A month later, he stated that he thought about “‘moving to Hong Kong and working for you in person,’” according to the indictment.

The conspirato­rs drew Schultz in with promises of wealth and racing-related perks, which Schultz appears to hold an affinity for, according to the indictment and a review of his social media.

On May 20, 2023, a conspirato­r told Schultz that he would “like to meet him at a Formula 1 race overseas,” according to court documents, and make Schultz a “senior partner” with a “big signing bonus.”

Schultz replied, “Oh snap!”

According to the indictment, the conspirato­r’s first request for Schultz was to provide informatio­n on the “lessons that could be learned from Russia’s war with Ukraine,” and with that, “what the United States could and should do to help defend Taiwan from an attack.”

After Schultz sent the conspirato­r a draft document pertaining to his request, Schultz was paid $200 on July 6, 2022, according to the indictment. Two days later, Schultz told the conspirato­r that he would like to turn their relationsh­ip into a “long-term partnershi­p.”

Shortly after Schultz began transmitti­ng informatio­n in June 2022, the conspirato­r informed Schultz that if documents were classified, Schultz could receive more money.

According to the indictment, the conspirato­r then went on to instruct Schultz to acquire more “sensitive” military informatio­n, including informatio­n on “hypersonic equipment, studies on future developmen­t of U.S. military forces, studies on major countries such as the People’s Republic of China, and summaries of military drills/operations.”

The conspirato­r and Schultz also discussed how to hide their activities, debating — among other things — describing their online financial transactio­ns as being related to “car customizat­ions.”

On Aug. 4, 2022, the conspirato­r told Schultz that if a document the sergeant shared contained any classified informatio­n pertaining to the Philippine Sea, the conspirato­rs would “pay [Schultz] more money,” according to the indictment. Schultz responded, “I hope so! I need to get my other BMW back!”

The conspirato­r purportedl­y lives in Hong Kong and works for a “geopolitic­al consulting firm,” according to the indictment.

Schultz case latest case involving military secrets

Online public records show Schultz is 24 years old. In a video from 2021, Schultz shared that he was originally from Wills Point, a city in East Texas.

Leventis made the announceme­nt at 3 p.m. CT Thursday in the Fred D. Thompson U.S. Courthouse in downtown Nashville. He was joined by FBI Special Agent in Charge Douglas Depodesta.

The incident follows shortly after a civilian U.S. Air Force employee in Nebraska was arrested for allegedly sharing classified informatio­n on a foreign dating website with a person claiming to be a Ukrainian woman.

David Franklin Slater, 63, was arrested on March 2 on charges of conspiring to transmit and transmitti­ng classified informatio­n about Russia’s war in Ukraine over a three-month period in early 2022, at the beginning of Russia’s invasion.

A Navy sailor out of San Diego was similarly sentenced to 27 months in federal prison in January after being charged with selling sensitive informatio­n to China.

Petty Officer Wenheng Zhao, 26, pleaded guilty in October 2023 to one count each of conspiring with an intelligen­ce officer and receiving a bribe while serving at Naval Base Ventura County in Port Hueneme.

Craig Shoup and Kirsten Fiscus contribute­d to this report.

Evan Mealins is the justice reporter for The Tennessean. Contact him at emealins@gannett.com or follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter, @Evanmealin­s.

 ?? STEPHANIE AMADOR/THE TENNESSEAN ?? U.S. Attorney Henry C. Leventis announces the indictment of U.S. Army soldier Korbein Schultz, from Fort Campbell, on charges of selling national defense secrets to China, at the Fred D. Thompson U.S. Courthouse and Federal Building in Nashville on Thursday. Standing next to Leventis are FBI Special Agent in Charge Douglas Depodesta and Special Agent Roy T. Cochran, a senior counterint­elligence executive with the Department of the Army.
STEPHANIE AMADOR/THE TENNESSEAN U.S. Attorney Henry C. Leventis announces the indictment of U.S. Army soldier Korbein Schultz, from Fort Campbell, on charges of selling national defense secrets to China, at the Fred D. Thompson U.S. Courthouse and Federal Building in Nashville on Thursday. Standing next to Leventis are FBI Special Agent in Charge Douglas Depodesta and Special Agent Roy T. Cochran, a senior counterint­elligence executive with the Department of the Army.

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