Daniel Everette Hale
Daniel Everette Hale (whistleblower) | |
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Member of | Sam Adams Award |
In a previously sealed Indictment from the US Attorney’s Office, Eastern District of Virginia, unsealed on Thursday 9 May 2019, former intelligence analyst Daniel Everette Hale, 31, of Nashville, Tennessee is charged with giving top secret US defence documents and information to a reporter.
The reporter is not named in the Indictment but is likely investigative journalist and author Jeremy Scahill, according to The Washington Post and other media.
Scahill is a founder of the online news site The Intercept.[1]
Hale Indictment
Daniel Everette Hale's 17-page Indictment can be read here.[2]
Background
Hale served in the US Air Force from July 2009 to July 2013, during which time he was assigned to the National Security Agency, according to the Indictment. He was deployed to Afghanistan, where he worked as an intelligence analyst.
Context
Hale’s arrest comes amid a crackdown on leakers to journalists by the Trump administration. Last month, the US charged WikiLeaks' Julian Assange with allegedly helping veteran intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning crack a computer password to steal classified documents. In October, a Treasury Department employee was charged with sharing financial information on targets of the Mueller investigation with BuzzFeed.
Last year, two purported Intercept sources were also prosecuted. Former NSA contractor Reality Winner was sentenced to 63 months in prison for leaking classified information about Russian election interference to The Intercept. In October, former FBI agent Terry Albury was sentenced to four years in prison after he pleaded guilty to making an unauthorised disclosure of national defence information, apparently related to how the FBI recruits informants.[3]
Related Document
Title | Type | Publication date | Author(s) | Description |
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Document:Craig Murray - Political Prisoner of the British State | Speech | 30 July 2021 | Craig Murray | "This is selective prosecution. This is political persecution. And I have no doubt whatsoever that I go to jail as a political prisoner" (extract from Craig Murray's speech two days before going to Edinburgh's Saughton Jail). |