U.S. Magistrate Judge A. David Copperthite agreed with prosecutors that Harold T. Martin III of Glen Burnie, Maryland, represented a flight risk if released and said there was no doubt that the top secret information he was accused of stealing over two decades is something "this country's enemies would love to explore."
Martin's lawyers foreshadowed their upcoming defense, describing him as a "compulsive hoarder" and saying there was no evidence he ever shared the information with a foreign country or even intended to do so.
Wyda said Martin, a former U.S. Navy lieutenant, never intended to harm his country and was instead a "voracious" learner who got carried away over the years as he took home documents in a perhaps misguided effort to be as skilled at his job as he could be. He suggested Martin grappled with mental health issues.
Prosecutors have said FBI agents who searched Martin's home and car in August found evidence of a "breathtaking" theft of top secret government information. Investigators found records dated from 1996 to 2016, seized dozens of computers and digital storage devices and, all told, recovered some 50 terabytes of information or enough to fill roughly 200 laptops. A substantial amount of that information, prosecutors said, was highly classified.
A complaint unsealed earlier this month charged Martin with theft of government property and unauthorized removal and retention of classified materials, which together carry a combined maximum of 11 years in prison. But Myers said in court yesterday that the Justice Department has evidence to bring additional charges under the Espionage Act, which would expose Martin to far more severe penalties if convicted.
Though authorities are still reviewing the records to determine the appropriate classification level, they say they already have found many that are clearly marked as classified including one top secret email chain that appeared to have been printed off Martin's government account.
Those documents were leaked by a group calling itself the "Shadow Brokers," but there is nothing in court filings and nothing said in court yesterday that connects Martin to that group.
Martin, like Snowden, worked as a contractor for Booz Allen Hamilton. The company has said he's since been fired.
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