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Scientist Stewart Nozette Pleads Guilty to Attempted Espionage

Stewart Nozette, a space scientist who was deeply involved in many of the nation’s most highly classified technology programs, pleaded guilty to attempted espionage for providing classified information to an undercover FBI agent posing as an Israeli intelligence officer. According to a “factual proffer” (pdf) presented by the government in court yesterday, “The defendant [Nozette] […]

09.08.11 | 1 min read
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House Turns to FY2012 Intelligence Authorization Act

The House Intelligence Committee issued its report on the FY2012 intelligence authorization act on September 2, and the bill is expected to go to the House floor on September 9. The White House issued a veto threat against the bill yesterday based on its opposition to two provisions:  a requirement to produce State Department cables […]

09.08.11 | 2 min read
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Leak Prosecutors Press Again for Subpoena of Risen

Prosecutors in the case of former CIA officer Jeffrey Sterling, who is suspected of leaking classified information to author and New York Times reporter James Risen, last week renewed their request (pdf) for a subpoena to compel Risen to testify at Sterling’s upcoming trial. A July 29 court order, issued by Judge Leonie M. Brinkema, […]

09.06.11 | 3 min read
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2011 Secrecy Report Sees Signs of Openness

The latest annual report on secrecy (pdf) from the pro-transparency coalition Openthegovernment.org finds some positive signs of increasing openness amidst a continuing expansion of secret government. “We are not as yet at the level of ‘unprecedented transparency’ the Obama Administration promises, but we are beginning to see signs that at least some of the Administration’s […]

09.06.11 | 2 min read
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A Spotlight on “Top Secret America”

Most people can vaguely recall that there was once no U.S. Department of Homeland Security and that there was a time when you didn’t have to take your shoes off before boarding an airplane or submit to other dubious security practices. But hardly anyone truly comprehends the enormous expansion of the military, intelligence and homeland […]

09.01.11 | 4 min read
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Philosophy in the Laboratory

Last month Sandia National Laboratories published an unlikely account of the thought of C.S. Peirce (1839-1914), the American pragmatist philosopher.  See “Peirce, Pragmatism, and the Right Way of Thinking” (pdf) by Philip L. Campbell of the Sandia Networked Systems Survivability and Assurance Department, Sandia Report SAND2011-5583, August 2011. What is the connection between Peirce’s philosophy […]

09.01.11 | 1 min read
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Govt Asks Court to Reconsider Subpoena for Reporter Risen

Prosecutors in the case of former CIA officer Jeffrey Sterling, who is accused of leaking classified information to author James Risen, have asked a federal court to reconsider (pdf) the July 29 ruling that narrowly limited Risen’s obligation to testify at the trial of Mr. Sterling. (“Reporter Risen Will Not Have to Identify Source in […]

08.26.11 | 2 min read
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Govt Will Not Declassify 2001 Opinion on Surveillance

The Department of Justice refused this month to declassify a 2001 legal Office of Legal Counsel opinion by John C. Yoo concerning the legality of the Bush Administration’s warrantless surveillance program. The redacted information in the OLC opinion “is classified, covered by non-disclosure provisions contained in other federal statutes, and is protected by the deliberative […]

08.26.11 | 1 min read
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Court Denies Motions to Dismiss Kim Leak Case

A federal court yesterday rejected (pdf) multiple defense motions to dismiss Espionage Act charges against former State Department contractor Stephen Kim, who is accused of leaking classified information to a Fox News reporter. Mr. Kim’s defense team had marshalled a series of seemingly ingenious arguments for dismissal.  The use of the Espionage Act to punish […]

08.25.11 | 2 min read
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A Correction on Nuclear Secrecy

On August 22 (“Some New Wrinkles in Nuclear Weapons Secrecy”), Secrecy News mistakenly wrote that the SILEX uranium enrichment process is “a unique case in which information that was privately generated was nevertheless classified by the government.  As far as could be determined, the decision to classify this non-governmental information under the Atomic Energy Act […]

08.25.11 | 2 min read
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NRO Has “Most Aggressive” Launch Record in 25 Years

The National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), which builds, launches and operates the nation’s intelligence satellites, has been unusually active over the past year. “We are nearly through the most aggressive launch campaign in over 25 years,” said Betty J. Sapp, the NRO Principal Deputy Director, at a March 15, 2011 hearing of the House Armed Services […]

08.25.11 | 2 min read
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Open Up Open Source Intelligence

If the Obama Administration wants to advance the cause of open government, one particularly fruitful way to do so would be to share unclassified open source intelligence publications with the public. The Federation of American Scientists offered that suggestion in response to a White House call for public input into the development of the pending […]

08.24.11 | 1 min read
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