Ex-NSA worker accused of stealing top secret information to remain in custody
Ex-NSA worker accused of stealing top secret information to remain in custody
Posted by John P. Bradford // October 21, 2016
The information the former contractor was accused of stealing over two decades is something this countrys enemies would love to explore, a judge said
A former National Security Agency contractor accused in a massive theft of classified information will remain in custody as prosecutors continue building a criminal case against him, a federal judge ruled on Friday.
US magistrate Judge A David Copperthite agreed with prosecutors that Harold T Martin III of Glen Burnie, Maryland, represented a flight risk if released and said there was no doubt that the top secret information he was accused of stealing over two decades is something this countrys enemies would love to explore.
Martins lawyers foreshadowed their upcoming defense, describing him as a compulsive hoarder and saying there was no evidence he ever shared the information with a foreign country or even intended to do so.
Hes not Edward Snowden, said James Wyda, the federal defender representing Martin, referring to the former NSA contractor who three years ago disclosed to Guardian journalists secret information about government surveillance programs.
Wyda said Martin, a former US navy lieutenant, never intended to harm his country and was instead a voracious learner who got carried away over the years as he took home documents in a perhaps misguided effort to be as skilled at his job as he could be. He suggested Martin had mental health problems.
This was not spycraft behavior, Wyda said. This is not how a Russian spy or something like that would ever conduct himself.
This, he added, was the behavior of a compulsive hoarder.
The justice department presented a vastly different portrait.
Prosecutors have said FBI agents who searched Martins home and car in August found evidence of a breathtaking theft of top secret government information. Investigators found records dated from 1996 to 2016, seized dozens of computers and digital storage devices and, all told, recovered some 50 gigabytes of information or enough to fill roughly 200 laptops. A substantial amount of that information, prosecutors said, was highly classified.
There is no reason to believe that the defendant would have ever stopped but for the intervention of law enforcement, said Zachary Myers, assistant US attorney.