Posted on Apr 23, 2015
CPT J2 X
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CPT J2 X
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I think this is another case of Rankism, if this was just an "ordinary Joe," the consequences would've been more severe, especially for spilling classified information.
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LTC Yinon Weiss
LTC Yinon Weiss
>1 y
It's tough to know, as there are very few cases of more junior folks in a similar situation (giving access to a biographer who is a service member, etc.). It's a very rare case.
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GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad
GySgt Wayne A. Ekblad
>1 y
It may be a rare case but that does not excuse anything. This guy held some of the highest "special trust and confidence" positions within our national security apparatus and FAILED --- he should be held fully accountable for his actions.
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1SG Brian Adams
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He was a General Officer and the CIA Director? Sentencing does not fit the crime! I have seen enlisted members that have done less get more punishment then that!
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SFC Operations Nco
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If a Sergeant or an analyst had done the same he would get decades in prison. Rankism at it's most obvious.
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SFC Operations Nco
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>1 y
A quantified need-to-know. She is a biographer, not someone that is "read into" whatever classified information that was divulged. I have a clearance, that doesn't mean I can walk into CIA HQ and start looking at anything I want that is at my clearance level. I would have to have a reason to know that information.

If his journal had classified information in it, then it had the same classification as the original operation/program/document. Thus it is subject to the same storage, and security rules as the originals.

Why do you think you cannot take anything that could be a recording device into a classified area? I've been in briefings, or "read in's" that I wasn't even allowed to take notes in (reference his journal). Secrets won't remain secrets if too many people know about them, or if that information is just floating around in a journal.

She as a private citizen, clearances or not, can claim Free Speech. Prosecuting her would be considerably more difficult.
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SFC Operations Nco
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That is something you should ask the federal prosecutors office.
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