I never post news articles; therefore...
QuoteU.S. Space Researcher Arrested on Spy Charges
By EVAN PEREZ
WASHINGTON -- A top U.S. space researcher was arrested in a Federal Bureau of Investigation sting Monday and charged with attempting to spy for Israel.
Stewart Nozette, 52 years old, of Chevy Chase, Md., is a former government physicist who worked for agencies ranging from the Defense Department to the White House.
In exchange for thousands of dollars in cash and an Israeli passport, Mr. Nozette attempted to pass on U.S. top secret nuclear and space secrets to an FBI agent who was posing as an Israeli intelligence operative, according to an FBI affidavit filed with the criminal complaint in the case.
An attorney for Mr. Nozette didn't immediately respond to a call seeking comment. Mr. Nozette is expected to make his first appearance Tuesday in U.S. District Court in Washington, where if convicted he could face a life sentence.
The case recalls other alleged spy cases in recent years involving Israel, including one that collapsed in May against two former lobbyists for a pro-Israel group. U.S. officials said the Nozette case doesn't include allegations that Israel or its agents were involved.
The FBI affidavit doesn't explain how Mr. Nozette came to the attention of U.S. investigators. However, the affidavit describes Mr. Nozette's work over the past decade for an Israeli aerospace company that is wholly owned by the Israeli government. During a security search as he departed on a foreign trip in January, a security officer noted he was traveling with two small portable hard drives, which another government officer couldn't locate in a subsequent search as Mr. Nozette re-entered the U.S.
A spokesman for the Israeli Embassy in Washington didn't respond to a request for comment.
"Those who would put our nation's defense secrets up for sale can expect to be vigorously prosecuted," said Channing D. Phillips, acting U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia.
FBI wiretaps cited in the government affidavit quote Mr. Nozette telling the undercover federal agent that his former top secret security clearances allowed him access to sensitive nuclear and intelligence secrets.
"I don't get recruited by Mossad every day. I knew this day would come," Mr. Nozette allegedly is heard on wiretaps telling the FBI agent posing as an Israeli agent, according to the affidavit.
The FBI agent, using stock methods often found on the pages of John le Carré novels, arranged for Mr. Nozette to use "dead drops" at a post-office box in Washington, provided him a cellphone to send text messages, and set up an alias for use in his new Israeli identification documents, according to the affidavit.
In a post-office box dead drop last month, Mr. Nozette dropped off a sealed manila envelope containing an encrypted portable hard drive, the affidavit says. The drive contained classified information on satellite programs supporting U.S. military and intelligence operations.
Mr. Nozette, a Chicago native, was prominent in his field, working at government laboratories and research centers for decades. He helped develop a radar experiment, now displayed at the National Air and Space Museum in Washington, that is said to have detected water on the moon's south pole.
America's lead in moon water detection must be maintained!
QuoteA spokesman for the Israeli Embassy in Washington didn't respond to a request for comment.
His Out-Of-Office reply on Outlook must've been forwarded to Beijing.
Quote from: CountDeMoney on October 19, 2009, 10:08:00 PM
QuoteA spokesman for the Israeli Embassy in Washington didn't respond to a request for comment.
His Out-Of-Office reply on Outlook must've been forwarded to Beijing.
He knew his day would come.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AV9BPyWCKTg
QuoteStewart Nozette, 52 years old, of Chevy Chase
Spies like us? :D
You know, when Iran nukes Israel, it won't have been a minute too soon.
I have to wonder why we put up with shit like this from Israel. Any other country stealing our military secrets would be a grave threat, but I would be surprised if the State Department sends a strongly worded statement.
Quote from: Faeelin on October 20, 2009, 08:49:08 AM
I have to wonder why we put up with shit like this from Israel. Any other country stealing our military secrets would be a grave threat, but I would be surprised if the State Department sends a strongly worded statement.
Don't any of you actually read the article? :lol:
Quote from: Malthus on October 20, 2009, 08:50:11 AM
Quote from: Faeelin on October 20, 2009, 08:49:08 AM
I have to wonder why we put up with shit like this from Israel. Any other country stealing our military secrets would be a grave threat, but I would be surprised if the State Department sends a strongly worded statement.
Don't any of you actually read the article? :lol:
The part where he was caught in a sting by an FBI agent pretending to be working for an Isareli company?
Quote from: Malthus on October 20, 2009, 08:50:11 AM
Quote from: Faeelin on October 20, 2009, 08:49:08 AM
I have to wonder why we put up with shit like this from Israel. Any other country stealing our military secrets would be a grave threat, but I would be surprised if the State Department sends a strongly worded statement.
Don't any of you actually read the article? :lol:
Most of us do.
Quote from: Faeelin on October 20, 2009, 08:52:44 AM
Quote from: Malthus on October 20, 2009, 08:50:11 AM
Quote from: Faeelin on October 20, 2009, 08:49:08 AM
I have to wonder why we put up with shit like this from Israel. Any other country stealing our military secrets would be a grave threat, but I would be surprised if the State Department sends a strongly worded statement.
Don't any of you actually read the article? :lol:
The part where he was caught in a sting by an FBI agent pretending to be working for an Isareli company?
Yeah, that part.
What part of that justifies a "strongly worded statement" to Israel? How would you word it? "We the State Department are really, really angry at you, because the FBI
pretended to be from your country as bait for a sting"?
Quote from: Malthus on October 20, 2009, 09:02:08 AM
Yeah, that part.
What part of that justifies a "strongly worded statement" to Israel? How would you word it? "We the State Department are really, really angry at you, because the FBI pretended to be from your country as bait for a sting"?
As i was reading this article, I knew what i was going to find in the Languish responses - a bunch of angry diatribes against Israel because an FBI agent successfully impersonated an Israeli.
I was correct, and as expected these diatribes came from The Usual Suspects.
:lol: We should have the FBI pretend to be Iranian so we can have an excuse to bomb them.
In poor Faeelin's defense the missing disc drives does raise the possibility that he *was* passing secrets.
Quote from: Admiral Yi on October 20, 2009, 09:22:32 AM
:lol: We should have the FBI pretend to be Iranian so we can have an excuse to bomb them.
In poor Faeelin's defense the missing disc drives does raise the possibility that he *was* passing secrets.
After Malthus pointed that out, I was going to apologize and retract my statement, but grumbler has goaded me into blaming the j00s.
Quote from: Faeelin on October 20, 2009, 09:27:43 AM
After Malthus pointed that out, I was going to apologize and retract my statement, but grumbler has goaded me into blaming the j00s.
That'll happen.
Ah, Israel. The best ally money can buy.
I want a refund.
Quote from: Faeelin on October 20, 2009, 09:27:43 AM
Quote from: Admiral Yi on October 20, 2009, 09:22:32 AM
:lol: We should have the FBI pretend to be Iranian so we can have an excuse to bomb them.
In poor Faeelin's defense the missing disc drives does raise the possibility that he *was* passing secrets.
After Malthus pointed that out, I was going to apologize and retract my statement, but grumbler has goaded me into blaming the j00s.
Historically, an excellent (or at least the usual) choice. :D
Quote from: Faeelin on October 20, 2009, 09:27:43 AM
Quote from: Admiral Yi on October 20, 2009, 09:22:32 AM
:lol: We should have the FBI pretend to be Iranian so we can have an excuse to bomb them.
In poor Faeelin's defense the missing disc drives does raise the possibility that he *was* passing secrets.
After Malthus pointed that out, I was going to apologize and retract my statement, but grumbler has goaded me into blaming the j00s.
You should still desire the destruction of Israel. They have still passed American secrets obtained by their spies on to the Chinese. They have still attacked and killed Americans.
Amazing that such a ploy could work, since Israel has never tried to buy secrets before.
(I want to be a usual suspect!)
Entrapment defense?
Quote
"Those who would put our nation's defense secrets up for sale can expect to be vigorously prosecuted," said Channing D. Phillips, acting U.S. attorney for the District of Columbia.
On a scale of 1 to 10, how vigorously will they be prosecuted? How much vigor can we expect to be brought to the prosecution? Will any vim accompany it?
This statement unfortunately raises more questions than it answers. :(
Quote from: Admiral Yi on October 20, 2009, 09:22:32 AM
In poor Faeelin's defense the missing disc drives does raise the possibility that he *was* passing secrets.
It's pretty weak. He is an engineer for a wholly owned Israeli government company. Bringing a thumb drive on a trip to israel is not remotely inherently suspicious - indeed the article makes clear the inspector saw the drives and passed him through.
I find it difficult to keep what I pass secret.
Fin.
QuoteChevy Chase scientist pleads guilty in espionage case
Stewart D. Nozette admits to trying to sell secrets to agent posing as Israeli officer
By Mary Pat Flaherty, The Washington Post
8:42 PM EDT, September 7, 2011
Stewart D. Nozette of Chevy Chase was a gifted scientist privy to America's top secrets.
On Wednesday, he admitted trying to sell those secrets to a foreign government. With his guilty plea to attempted espionage, the astrophysicist was rebranded a would-be traitor.
Nozette, 54, stood in an orange prison jumpsuit in the District of Columbia's federal court as he conceded that he had accepted $11,000 in cash in 2009 in exchange for passing classified materials about U.S. satellite defense systems to a person Nozette believed was an Israeli intelligence officer.
Nozette answered "yes" when U.S District Judge Paul L. Friedman asked whether he understood that he faced 13 years in federal prison.
The purported Israeli was actually an FBI employee in an undercover espionage investigation launched after Nozette drew law enforcement attention for fraud he had committed through an aerospace consulting company he owned.
During a 2007 search of his home in the contracting case, officers discovered classified materials and an email in which Nozette threatened to take a program he was working on to a foreign country "or Israel," court records show. The court files do not say to whom that email was sent, and prosecutors declined to give more details Wednesday.
Nozette's intertwined cases are complicated, but court records make this clear: Just months after he'd acknowledged ripping off the government as a consultant, Nozette was ready to do business selling state secrets to a man who had called him claiming to be part of Israel's Mossad.
U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr. said Nozette had gone from a "once-trusted scientist" with high-level clearances to "a disgraced criminal who was caught red-handed attempting to trade American secrets for personal profit."
Nozette had admitted overbilling the government through his company for $265,000 from 2000 to 2006 and using the money to pay credit card bills, maintain his swimming pool and cover the cost of sedan service. He pleaded guilty, but his admission was sealed in court in January 2009, and sentencing was held off as Nozette agreed to help investigators expose other government corruption, prosecutors said.
Yet by September 2009, Nozette was passing classified information to the undercover agent and discussing how he could get more cash and help with a passport and a new identity to travel overseas.
Singapore appealed to him because "it's clean, it's nondescript, they speak English there," according to a video of Nozette talking to the undercover agent Oct. 19, 2009, at the Mayflower Hotel on Connecticut Avenue. But at a minimum, Nozette wanted a place with no extradition, he confirmed to the agent.
Nozette was arrested that day and has been jailed since.
Nozette held a variety of sensitive military and civilian jobs, including service on the National Space Council at the White House in 1989 and 1990 and work at the Energy Department's Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory from 1990 through 1999, prosecutors have said.
Nozette held top-secret clearance and had regular access to classified information until 2006. Many of his friends described him as brilliant and ambitious.
The indictment against Nozette does not allege that the Israeli government committed any offense. Nozette was originally indicted on two counts of attempted espionage shortly after his arrest. Two more counts of attempted espionage were added in a November 2010 indictment, and Nozette pleaded guilty to one of those charges Wednesday. Nozette's attorneys — Robert L. Tucker and John C. Kiyonaga — declined comment after the hearing.
Attempted espionage is a felony that carries a death penalty, but federal prosecutors took that off the table in late 2010.
The 13-year sentence covers the attempted espionage conviction and the prior fraud and tax evasion convictions. On the day of his arrest, court files show, Nozette told the undercover agent that "I've crossed the Rubicon," and said, "I've made a career choice," and laughed.
lolz.
Quote from: CountDeMoney on September 08, 2011, 12:16:15 AM
Nozette's intertwined cases are complicated, but court records make this clear: Just months after he'd acknowledged ripping off the government as a consultant, Nozette was ready to do business selling state secrets to a man who had called him claiming to be part of Israel's Mossad.
This is why intelligence and wisdom are separate stats. :nerd:
must be some swimming pool
Almost two years from arrest to guilty plea?
Must be a new record.