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US official pleads guilty to North Korea leaks | US official pleads guilty to North Korea leaks |
(35 minutes later) | |
A US state department official has pleaded guilty to passing classified information on North Korea to an American journalist. | A US state department official has pleaded guilty to passing classified information on North Korea to an American journalist. |
Stephen Kim, 46, now faces a 13-month sentence as part of a plea deal. | |
The case began after Fox News journalist James Rosen published a story in June 2009 about US intelligence on North Korea. | |
It is one in a series of recent prosecutions against unauthorised leaks from government sources. | |
The Obama administration has prosecuted more leakers than all previous US administrations combined. | The Obama administration has prosecuted more leakers than all previous US administrations combined. |
Kim, who was a former senior adviser for intelligence to an assistant secretary of state, will be sentenced on 2 April if a judge accepts his plea. | |
Journalist 'co-conspirator' | Journalist 'co-conspirator' |
The information found in Rosen's article came from an intelligence report sent to several officials, including Kim, on the same morning Rosen's story was published, according to prosecutors. | The information found in Rosen's article came from an intelligence report sent to several officials, including Kim, on the same morning Rosen's story was published, according to prosecutors. |
Rosen reported US intelligence officials had warned the president and other administration advisers that North Korea would respond to a United Nations resolution condemning nuclear tests with another nuclear test. | |
Kim's lawyer, Abbe Lowell, had previously said the information his client was accused of passing on was neither eye-catching nor truly secret. | |
"The US government has a very legitimate interest in protecting the real national security secrets of our nation," Mr Lowell said. | "The US government has a very legitimate interest in protecting the real national security secrets of our nation," Mr Lowell said. |
"The problem is that so much information is improperly classified that you can't distinguish between the real national secrets and those that just have a stamp on it that says secret." | "The problem is that so much information is improperly classified that you can't distinguish between the real national secrets and those that just have a stamp on it that says secret." |
The case had also become controversial because an FBI affidavit characterised Rosen as a "co-conspirator" with Kim, and suggested there was probable cause to believe the reporter committed a crime. | The case had also become controversial because an FBI affidavit characterised Rosen as a "co-conspirator" with Kim, and suggested there was probable cause to believe the reporter committed a crime. |
Rosen has not been charged, but authorities used the affidavit as legal cover to search Rosen's private emails and to track his comings and goings from the state department. | Rosen has not been charged, but authorities used the affidavit as legal cover to search Rosen's private emails and to track his comings and goings from the state department. |
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