17 May,2018 04:02 AM IST | Washington | IANS
The US government has identified a suspect in the 2017 leak of a large portion of the Central Intelligence Agency's computer hacking arsenal, the cyber-tools the agency had used to conduct spying operations overseas, the media reported.
But despite months of investigation, prosecutors had been unable to bring charges against the 29-year-old man, who was identified on Tuesday as a former CIA employee being held in a Manhattan jail on unrelated charges, the Washington Post reported.
Joshua Adam Schulte, who worked in the CIA's Engineering Development Group tasked with designing computer codes to spy on foreign adversaries, was behind the "Vault 7" leaks of top-secret CIA information, the daily said.
ALSO READ
Garcetti vows commitment to protect minorities, amidst Bangladesh atrocities
Donald Trump invites China's Xi Jinping to his January 20 inauguration
Biden admin expects continuation of bipartisan support to India-US relationship
Trump mocks Justin Trudeau, calls him 'Governor of the great state of Canada'
‘Mind-boggling’ quantum computing chip unveiled
He is believed to have provided the confidential data to WikiLeaks.
According to the Post, federal prosecutors obtained a search warrant in 2017 for personal computers and hand-written notes from his apartment, but no evidence linking Schulte to the disclosure was found.
A government prosecutor disagreed with what he called the "characterisation" by Schulte's attorney that "those search warrants haven't yielded anything that is consistent with (Schulte's) involvement in that disclosure".
But the prosecutor, Matthew Laroche, an assistant US attorney in New York, said that the government has not brought an indictment and that the investigation "is ongoing" and Schulte "remains a target of that investigation," according to a court transcript of the January 8 hearing that escaped public notice at the time.
Part of that investigation, Laroche said, was analysing whether a technology is known as Tor, which allows Internet users to hide their location, "was used in transmitting classified information".
Schulte said in a statement to the Post that he was innocent, arguing that the CIA targeted him because he was the only member of his team to leave the agency after reporting "incompetent management" to its inspector general.
"Due to these unfortunate coincidences the FBI ultimately made the snap judgment that I was guilty of the leaks and targeted me," Schulte said.
He is currently in custody for "possessing, receiving and transporting child pornography", according to an indictment lodged in September. He has pleaded not guilty.
According to certain current and former intelligence officials, the Vault 7 disclosures could cause more damage than those done by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.
During his tenure at NSA, Snowden downloaded tens of thousands of classified top secret US documents.
Catch up on all the latest Crime, National, International and Hatke news here. Also, download the new mid-day Android and iOS apps to get latest updates