A former Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) software engineer who was convicted for carrying out the largest theft of classified information in the agency’s history and of charges related to child abuse imagery was sentenced to 40 years in prison on Thursday.

The 40-year sentence by US district judge Jesse Furman was for “crimes of espionage, computer hacking, contempt of court, making false statements to the FBI, and child pornography”, federal prosecutors said in a statement. The judge did not impose a life sentence as sought by prosecutors.

Joshua Schulte was convicted in July 2022 on four counts each of espionage and computer hacking and one count of lying to FBI agents, after giving classified materials to the whistleblowing agency WikiLeaks in the so-called Vault 7 leak. Last August, a judge mostly upheld the conviction.

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  • @[email protected]
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    3610 months ago

    It will never stop disappointing me when someone looks down on Snowden after all he gave up for your benefit.

    • @fishos
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      1710 months ago

      Yeah. Nothing precludes Russia from simply being the enemy of the US and “the enemy of my enemy is my friend”. Of course they’d love Snowden. Doesn’t mean he was a Russian plant from the get go. That’s just conspiracy theory nonsense. I’ll give OP that Russia is probably doing many shady things. But let’s not turn everything that favors them into some grand, all-enconpassing, conspiracy. That’s how you start to become a whack job. Plenty of things are just happenstance.

      • @lennybird
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        10 months ago

        It doesn’t take much ink to connect these dots. It would be woefully naive if not daft to suggest this is some McCarthy hysteria after all that has been exposed in the last decade. Of all the places Snowden flees to and the complete shift to a Kremlin mouthpiece Greenwald has become, it absolutely is worthy of suspicion.

          • @lennybird
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            110 months ago

            A fair point, though I do wonder if someone is willing to live in exile in Russia of all places, I wonder why they might not take the Ellsberg approach. Just a strange notion to protest an act of your own government, then flee to an objectively more corrupt police state and attain citizenship no less. Either way I won’t die on the hill to claim he sold out for Russia versus just being their useful pawn. And of course it doesn’t change the fact that what was exposed needed to be.