Posted on Aug 15, 2024
Army sergeant pleads guilty to selling U.S. military secrets to China
1.73K
13
5
4
4
0
Posted 4 mo ago
Responses: 2
SFC Kelly Fuerhoff Great! A Frigging German American Like You and I! Then Again, I've Heard All the Wonderful Things Trump has Said about the Dictator of China!
(2)
(0)
SFC Kelly Fuerhoff
Fuerhoff is just my legal name - I didn't change it after my divorce. That's my existence name. His dad's side is very German. Pretty much all German. I only have a little on my mom's side. More Scottish and English ancestry.
(2)
(0)
PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
SFC Kelly Fuerhoff - Excellent! Love it! My Heritage? Nagel, Wesling, Ronsiek, Boverschmidt. Lietz, Miller, Most Definitely German. Dawes (Scottish). Devereux (English/Norman/French) Throckmorton (English).
(1)
(0)
That's one of 1.29 million active duty military personnel. Not bad odds if you ignore the consequences of the sergeant's perfidy. On another note, there are approximately 2.95 civilian federal civil servants. Using the same percentage, it's twice as likely that one of those have been up to no good. Maybe that's the one who stole everyone's Social Security number. Of course, stealing our SSN's isn't as consequential as selling military secrets, especially since no one is using SSN's for personal identification, right? (Look at your SS card if you can find it. It says right there, Not for Identification.)
(1)
(0)
SFC Kelly Fuerhoff
"Yes, a Social Security card can be used as an ID in the United States. However, the card is only official verification of the Social Security number (SSN) assigned to the person whose name is on the card. It's not proof of the cardholder's identity, citizenship, or noncitizen status."
"To use a Social Security card as ID, you can sign it and present it with photo ID that also has your signature. Acceptable forms of photo ID include: An unexpired driver's license, A government-issued ID card, Military identification, and A passport"
I don't care how few it is in the military selling classified or sensitive info. One is too many. ESPECIALLY when you're a 35 series.
"To use a Social Security card as ID, you can sign it and present it with photo ID that also has your signature. Acceptable forms of photo ID include: An unexpired driver's license, A government-issued ID card, Military identification, and A passport"
I don't care how few it is in the military selling classified or sensitive info. One is too many. ESPECIALLY when you're a 35 series.
(3)
(0)
Read This Next