General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsDefense Contractor Pleads Guilty to Sharing State Secrets with His Chinese Girlfriend
U.S. Defense Contractor Pleads Guilty to Sharing State Secrets with His Chinese Girlfriend
Theirs was an unconventional love story. He was a 59-year-old, married defense contractor with a Top Secret security clearance. She was a 27-year-old Chinese national with a student visa. They met at a defense conference in Hawaii, where he lived, and began an illicit, long-distance romance that lasted nearly three years and saw him give her reams of classified U.S. military secrets.
But like all good love stories, this one ends unhappily. On Thursday, Benjamin Bishop pled guilty in federal court to charges of unlawfully transmitting and retaining classified national defense information.
When the couple began the ill-fated love affair, Bishop was working in cyber defense at the U.S. Pacific Command, and the young woman was attending graduate school in the United States on a J-1 visa. Their courtship was unusual from the beginning: According to an FBI affidavit, she repeatedly asked Bishop not to give her classified information, but nevertheless persisted in asking him questions about his work at Pacific Command. At one point, she even asked him to conduct research for her on "what Western nation's [sic] know about the operation of a particular naval asset of the People's Republic of China," according to the affidavit. Bishop, who is a lieutenant colonel in the Army Reserve, managed to obtain the information she wanted by misrepresenting himself as an active-duty officer to U.S. government personnel.
For obvious reasons, various media have branded her a Chinese "honeytrap," fueling speculation that she's actually a spy who seduced Bishop in order to gain access to sensitive military information. Who needs sophisticated hacker groups, after all, when you have 27-year-old co-eds? FBI Special Agent Scott Freeman acknowledged in an affidavit that that the young woman may have attended the conference in Hawaii "in order to target individuals such as Bishop."
But in court, Bishop's attorney, Birney Bervar, characterized the couple's exchange of secret information as an act of love, not espionage.
http://blog.foreignpolicy.com/posts/2014/03/13/how_to_set_a_honeytrap_us_defense_contractor_pleads_guilty_to_sharing_state_secrets
http://news.yahoo.com/us-man-plead-guilty-espionage-charges-121024892.html?.tsrc=attmp
NV Whino
(20,886 posts)Act of love my arse.
okaawhatever
(9,461 posts)want to keep your client thinking that to make his jail time go by faster, that's fine. But please understand if the rest of us see the act of espionage, and the act of not-so-much love.
geek tragedy
(68,868 posts)Magneto, in X2.
Or, as they say in the State Department, always sleep NATO.