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NSA leak suspect Reality Winner wrote ‘burn the White House down’

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A 25-year-old intelligence contractor accused of leaking a top secret report on Russian meddling in last year's US election wrote in a note that she wanted to "burn the White House down," prosecutors said.

Reality Winner appeared in federal court Thursday in Georgia and pleaded not guilty to a charge of "willful retention and transmission of national defense information," ABC News reported.

Winner's is the latest in a string of cases involving breaches at the National Security Agency, a code-breaking agency still smarting from Edward Snowden's 2013 disclosures of its global surveillance programs.

The former Air Force linguist was arrested last Saturday for allegedly giving a document to news website The Intercept that detailed attempts by hackers from Russian military intelligence to penetrate a company that sells voter registration software as well as local election officials.

Assistant US Attorney Jennifer Solari said agents searching Winner's home found handwritten notes in several languages, including one that said, "I want to burn the White House down," ABC News and The Augusta Chronicle reported.

Her social media accounts had revealed a deep dislike of President Donald Trump, with one post calling him "the orange fascist."

Other notes found at her home included details on how to access the "dark web," set up a burner email account and listed the names of Taliban leaders, news reports said.

Winner, who worked for NSA contractor Pluribus International Corporation in Augusta, Georgia, was a specialist in Pashto, Farsi and Dari, languages spoken in Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan, her mother has said.

Solari warned that Winner may possess more stolen secrets.

Judge Brian Epps denied bail, meaning Winner will stay behind bars until trial, after Solari said some of the evidence was "downright frightening."

Her lawyer Titus Nichols rejected that characterization, saying his client has no history of violence. He said his Winner is just a millennial comfortable with technology.

A 25-year-old intelligence contractor accused of leaking a top secret report on Russian meddling in last year’s US election wrote in a note that she wanted to “burn the White House down,” prosecutors said.

Reality Winner appeared in federal court Thursday in Georgia and pleaded not guilty to a charge of “willful retention and transmission of national defense information,” ABC News reported.

Winner’s is the latest in a string of cases involving breaches at the National Security Agency, a code-breaking agency still smarting from Edward Snowden’s 2013 disclosures of its global surveillance programs.

The former Air Force linguist was arrested last Saturday for allegedly giving a document to news website The Intercept that detailed attempts by hackers from Russian military intelligence to penetrate a company that sells voter registration software as well as local election officials.

Assistant US Attorney Jennifer Solari said agents searching Winner’s home found handwritten notes in several languages, including one that said, “I want to burn the White House down,” ABC News and The Augusta Chronicle reported.

Her social media accounts had revealed a deep dislike of President Donald Trump, with one post calling him “the orange fascist.”

Other notes found at her home included details on how to access the “dark web,” set up a burner email account and listed the names of Taliban leaders, news reports said.

Winner, who worked for NSA contractor Pluribus International Corporation in Augusta, Georgia, was a specialist in Pashto, Farsi and Dari, languages spoken in Afghanistan, Iran and Pakistan, her mother has said.

Solari warned that Winner may possess more stolen secrets.

Judge Brian Epps denied bail, meaning Winner will stay behind bars until trial, after Solari said some of the evidence was “downright frightening.”

Her lawyer Titus Nichols rejected that characterization, saying his client has no history of violence. He said his Winner is just a millennial comfortable with technology.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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