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SFC Joe S. Davis Jr., MSM, DSL
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel thanks for sharing.
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MAJ Bob Miyagishima
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What a foolish old man, the article isn't detailed enough. Does the woman work for company in China? Was he getting paid or was he being compensated in other ways? Anyway at 60 he's not going to survive prison.
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SrA John Monette
SrA John Monette
2 y
There are a lot of questions that cannot be answered at the present time. I'm sure the investigation is still ongoing.
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SGT Mary G.
SGT Mary G.
2 y
The lack of pertinent details in reporting leaves too much open for speculation. It happens too much. If we are lucky, broadcast reporters do NOT speculate! When they do their speculating is too often considered to be factual. Look at the problems that type of reporting about covid caused! If only broadcast journalists would simply say something like: we do not yet know more details.
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SGT Unit Supply Specialist
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PO1 William "Chip" Nagel
..."Mark Unkenholz of Hanover is charged with 13 counts of willfully transmitting classified materials and 13 counts of willfully storing classified materials in a place they aren’t meant to be. Prosecutors say Unkenholz, 60, used his personal email address on 13 separate occasions to send information classified as SECRET and TOP SECRET to a woman working for an unnamed company.

All the emails were sent between Feb. 14, 2018, and June 1, 2020, according to court filings. Prosecutors identified the recipient by her initials, R.F., but did not reveal where she worked. It’s not clear whether R.F. is facing criminal charges. The emails were uncovered after an FBI investigation, federal prosecutors said.

Online court records do not list a defense attorney for Unkenholz. Attempts to reach Unkenholz on Thursday were unsuccessful.

Unkenholz was an NSA engineer focused on encryption technology and at one point worked on the agency’s Signals Intelligence program. Signals Intelligence, or SIGINT , is government intelligence derived from hacking into foreign agents’ communication systems, radar and other electronic devices.

At one point during their correspondence, R.F. held a top-secret security clearance with the NSA, according to court filings. Prosecutors say R.F.’s clearance expired in July 2019 when she changed jobs, and at no point was she supposed to receive classified material through her company email server.

Each of Unkenholz’s 26 counts carries a maximum 10-year prison sentence. If convicted, it is unlikely he would face the maximum penalty."
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SGT Mary G.
SGT Mary G.
2 y
There used to be a different "maxium penalty" for what he did.
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SGT Unit Supply Specialist
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2 y
SGT Mary G. I'm not aware of potential sentencing
Guidelines.
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