A US state department official has pleaded guilty to passing classified information on North Korea to an American journalist.
Stephen Kim, 46, now faces a 13-month sentence as part of a plea
deal.The case began after Fox News journalist James Rosen published a
story in June 2009 about US intelligence on North Korea.It is one in a
series of recent prosecutions against unauthorised leaks from government
sources.
The Obama administration has prosecuted more leakers than all previous US administrations combined.
Kim, who was a former senior adviser for intelligence to an assistant secretary of state, will be sentenced on April 2 if a judge accepts his plea.
Kim, who was a former senior adviser for intelligence to an assistant secretary of state, will be sentenced on April 2 if a judge accepts his plea.
The information found in Rosen’s article came from an intelligence
report sent to several officials, including Kim, on the same morning
Rosen’s story was published, according to prosecutors.
Rosen reported US intelligence officials had warned the president
and other administration advisers that North Korea would respond to a
United Nations resolution condemning nuclear tests with another nuclear
test.Kim’s lawyer, Abbe Lowell, had previously said the information his
client was accused of passing on was neither eye-catching nor truly
secret.”The US government has a very legitimate interest in protecting
the real national security secrets of our nation,” Lowell said.
“The problem is that so much information is improperly classified
that you can’t distinguish between the real national secrets and those
that just have a stamp on it that says secret.”
The case had also become controversial because an FBI affidavit characterised Rosen as a “co-conspirator” with Kim, and suggested there was probable cause to believe the reporter committed a crime.
Rosen has not been charged, but authorities used the affidavit as legal cover to search Rosen’s private emails and to track his comings and goings from the state department.
The case had also become controversial because an FBI affidavit characterised Rosen as a “co-conspirator” with Kim, and suggested there was probable cause to believe the reporter committed a crime.
Rosen has not been charged, but authorities used the affidavit as legal cover to search Rosen’s private emails and to track his comings and goings from the state department.
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