Ex-FBI agent charged with leaking
sentenced to 48 months
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[October 19, 2018]
By Mark Hosenball and Sarah N. Lynch
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A federal judge in
Minnesota sentenced former FBI agent Terry Albury to 48 months in prison
on Thursday for leaking classified information to a journalist,
according to the U.S. Justice Department.
Albury's sentence is much harsher than his defense lawyers had hoped,
but slightly less severe than the 52-month prison term that federal
prosecutors were seeking.
Albury pleaded guilty to two counts of leaking classified materials
earlier this year. Joshua Dratel, Albury's lawyer who earlier confirmed
the sentence to Reuters, declined to comment further.
Albury's attorneys have said that he was a whistleblower and portrayed
his decision to leak information related to the FBI's
counterintelligence program as "an act of conscience."
A source familiar with the case previously told Reuters that the online
news organization The Intercept was the recipient of the information
Albury was charged with leaking.
The leaks by Albury, who was the only African-American field agent in
the region at the time, related to his concerns that the FBI's tactics
for countering violent extremist groups amounted to racial profiling and
intimidating minority communities.
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In January 2017, The Intercept published a series titled "The FBI's
Secret Rules" based on Albury's leaked documents, which showed the
depth and broad powers of the FBI expansion since the Sept. 11,
2001, attacks, according to Minnesota Public Radio.
Intercept editor-in-chief Betsy Reed did not confirm that her
website was a recipient of documents leaked by Albury, but in a
statement said of him, "He faced prosecution under the Espionage Act
not because he harmed national security but because authorities
found his disclosures inconvenient or embarrassing."
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Albury's sentencing came a day after a U.S. Treasury Department
employee was charged for leaking confidential documents related to
former Trump campaign manager Paul Manafort.
Both cases reflect part of a broader crackdown by Attorney General
Jeff Sessions on media leaks.
(Additional reporting by Makini Brice; editing by Mary Milliken)
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