Senators seek answers on alleged NSA leaker’s security clearance – The Hill

Posted: June 15, 2017 at 8:57 pm

The leaders of a key Senate panel are pressing the federal government for information about the security clearance of a government contractor recently accused of passing classified material to a news outlet.

Reality Leigh Winner was arrested by the FBI in early June and charged in federal court with violating a section of the Espionage Act. Her arrest has been linked to The Intercepts publication of a purported classified National Security Agency document detailing Russian hacking efforts aimed at U.S. election and voting infrastructure.

Winner, an Air Force veteran, had worked as a contractor at Pluribus International Corporation, was assigned to a government facility in Georgia and held a top-secret clearance, according to the criminal complaint.

The leaking of classified information jeopardizes our national security, McCaskill said in a statement. We need to determine if Ms. Winners security clearance process was handled correctly or if we missed any red flags.

Together, Johnson and McCaskill lead theSenate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee.

The letter was sent to Kathleen McGettigan, acting director of OPM. The lawmakers also asked the agency to explain the process by which a member of the military has a security clearance reactivated or transferred in order to be employed by the intelligence community, given Winners previous service in the Air Force.

Additionally, the senators asked what OPM is doing to comply with with a provision included in an appropriations measure passed last year that mandated a review of the federal governments enhanced security clearance program.

Winner was arrested at her home in Georgia on June 3 and the Department of Justice announced the charges days later. Winner allegedly printed and improperly removed classified intelligence in early May and later sent it by mail to an online news outlet.

Winners arrest was the latest in a string of leak incidents, an issue that has attracted attention since ex-NSA contractor Edward Snowdens disclosures to news publications in 2013.

In February, former NSA contractor Harold Martin was indicted for stealing thousands of intelligence files, including classified documents from the NSA, CIA and U.S. Cyber Command.

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Senators seek answers on alleged NSA leaker's security clearance - The Hill

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