Regime Clampdown: State Department Analyst Pleads Guilty To Giving Info To Fox News
Feb 8, 2014 No Comments ›› Chuck Biscuits
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A
former U.S. State Department analyst pleaded guilty on Friday to
sharing secret information about North Korea with a reporter for Fox
News, becoming the latest government employee convicted in a campaign
against unapproved leaks to the media.
Stephen Kim, 46, entered the plea in U.S. District Court to avoid a
trial scheduled for April. Under an agreement with prosecutors, he
admitted to the unauthorized disclosure of U.S. national defense
information but will not face a charge that he lied about the leak to
the FBI.
Kim’s attorneys and prosecutors agreed on a sentence of 13 months in
prison, but that is subject to the approval of Judge Colleen
Kollar-Kotelly. She scheduled sentencing for April 2.
The case is one of 11 times in U.S. history that prosecutors have
brought charges for disclosing information to a newspaper, blog or other
media outlet. Eight cases have been brought since President Barack
Obama took office in 2009.
After Kim’s court hearing, his attorney Abbe Lowell issued a statement attacking the case as unfair.
“Lower-level employees like Mr. Kim are prosecuted because they are
easier targets or often lack the resources or political connections to
fight back. High-level employees leak classified information to forward
their agenda or to make an administration look good with impunity,”
Lowell said.
The case took a toll on Kim’s family that rivaled what some of them
went through as Korean War refugees, a sister, Yuri Lustenberger-Kim,
said in a separate statement.
“The decision to plead has been the most wrenching, painful decision in our collective family experience,” she said.
Kim is a U.S. citizen who was born in Seoul and has a doctorate in
history. He was not accused of stealing secrets or of working as a spy
on behalf of another government, but he also did not claim to be blowing
the whistle on U.S. government fraud or misconduct.
SHARED WITH REPORTER
Instead, prosecutors said Kim let his guard down too far with
reporter James Rosen and shared information about North Korea’s military
capability and preparedness that was top secret.
On June 11, 2009, they spoke briefly by phone and then met outside
the State Department, where Kim was on contract as a senior adviser with
top secret clearance. Later that day, Rosen reported on Fox News’
website that North Korea was planning a nuclear test in response to
heightened sanctions.
Investigators used phone records and security logs to piece together the meeting. A grand jury indicted Kim in 2010.
“We will not waver in our commitment to pursuing and holding
accountable government officials who blatantly disregard their
obligations to protect our nation’s most highly guarded secrets,” the
chief prosecutor, U.S. Attorney Ronald Machen, said in a statement after
the court hearing.
Without specifying what damage Kim might have caused, prosecutor
Michael Harvey said in court that the leak could have harmed U.S.
national security or been used by other governments.
Lowell said in his statement that Kim did not reveal intelligence
sources or methods, and that the information was nothing significant.
The FBI interviewed Kim about the Fox News report, and according to
the FBI, Kim lied about having spoken with Rosen. Lowell in court
disputed the charge, but it was dropped as part of the plea agreement.
The maximum penalty Kim faces under the law is 10 years.
In developments last year that drew outcry from advocates for press
freedom, the FBI obtained Rosen’s emails as part of its investigation
into Kim and described Rosen in a search warrant affidavit as a possible
criminal co-conspirator.
Rosen was never charged, and the Justice Department said there were no plans to charge him.
On Obama’s orders, the Justice Department revised its guidelines and
said it would not seek search warrants against journalists for carrying
out “ordinary news-gathering activities.”
Representatives for Fox News were not immediately available to comment on Friday.
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