I always figured this was the guy who either leaked or lost control of all 
those years-old NSA cyberwar tools ('Shadowbrokers')

Packrat... Terrabytes of data stored EVERYWHERE.

"...just days before Martin was arrested in 2016, a group known as the Shadow 
Brokers began leaking classified NSA hacking tools online. A Twitter account 
that was allegedly Martin’s messaged someone the words “shelf life, three 
weeks,” according to a prior ruling from the judge. Hours later, stolen 
government documents were posted online, according to prosecutors. No direct 
link between the Shadow Brokers and Martin’s case has been made."


"Former NSA contractor Harold T. Martin was sentenced Friday to nine years in 
federal prison for his role in a massive theft of classified documents.

Martin was responsible for one of the largest leaks of U.S government secrets, 
collecting up to 50 terabytes of classified government documents over the 
course of two decades.

U.S. District Judge Richard Bennett’s sentence falls short of the maximum 
number of years Martin previously faced — 10 years for each of the 20 counts 
against him — for unauthorized and willful retention of national defense 
information. However, the sentence aligns with the plea agreement his public 
defenders reached with the U.S. government.

The U.S. attorneys said his theft called for “significant” prison time, 
according to the government’s sentencing memorandum, which CyberScoop obtained.

“The exceptionally grave nature and circumstances of the defendant’s criminal 
conduct call for a significant prison term,” they write. “For nearly twenty 
years he chose to violate the public’s trust and the nation’s laws by stealing 
and retaining national defense information. The defendant knew the entire time 
he was committing these crimes.”

Martin’s public defenders wrote in their sentencing memorandum, obtained by 
CyberScoop, that in all the government’s efforts to investigate him, they did 
not find the NSA contractor committed treason.

“The government never uncovered any evidence that he was a traitor or a danger 
to our nation,” the public defenders write.

Martin will receive credit for time already served since 2016. Martin has also 
been sentenced to three years of supervised release.

Between 1996 and August 2016, Martin smuggled out thousands of pages of 
documents on classified government programs, and stored them in his home, shed, 
and car. The documents detailed computer infrastructure, U.S. Cyber Command 
targets and weaknesses as well as details on NSA capabilities, targeting 
information, and foreign cyber intrusion techniques. Some documents also 
touched on CIA foreign intelligence sources and National Reconnaissance 
Organization secrets.

These documents remain classified, according to the government’s sentencing 
memorandum.

Even though Martin knows his fate, the broader mystery surrounding the massive 
leak remains unresolved — just days before Martin was arrested in 2016, a group 
known as the Shadow Brokers began leaking classified NSA hacking tools online. 
A Twitter account that was allegedly Martin’s messaged someone the words “shelf 
life, three weeks,” according to a prior ruling from the judge. Hours later, 
stolen government documents were posted online, according to prosecutors. No 
direct link between the Shadow Brokers and Martin’s case has been made.

Bennett reminded U.S. attorneys of the tweet and the timeline on Friday in 
court. Assistant U.S. Attorney Zachary Myers said the U.S. government would not 
be commenting further than noting that the timeline is, indeed, in the facts of 
the case.

Jim Wyda, Martin’s public defender, said Friday there was no indication Martin 
intended for any transaction to take place by that tweet.

Attacks linked with the tools and clues about who may be behind the group, 
however, continue to surface. At least a year before the Shadow Brokers 
released the tools en masse in April 2017, a hacking group with ties to the 
Chinese government known as BuckEye was already using the tools, according to 
Symantec research issued this year.

It is still unknown how the Shadow Brokers gained access to the tools, whether 
the group had access into an NSA server to steal the or obtained them from an 
insider at the agency. The group is at the center of a counterintelligence 
investigation, as CyberScoop previously reported. The FBI would neither confirm 
nor deny the existence of the probe.

Hal Martin’s Mental Health

Martin’s public defenders have long argued that Martin’s mental health 
contributed to his theft. The sentencing memorandum submitted last week argued 
the same.

“As his mental health declined, Mr. Martin continued to obsessively immerse 
himself in work. He began taking documents and other materials home from work, 
initially justifying his behavior by convincing himself that it would allow him 
to do his job better,” his public defenders wrote. “Over time, Mr. Martin’s 
actions became a hoarding disorder.”

Myers told the court Friday that the U.S. government believes the way the files 
were found does not indicate he had a hoarding problem.

“This is not a case of hoarding, this is stealing,” Myers said Friday at a 
federal court house in Baltimore. The stolen information “was not in a 
disorganized manner,” he said, adding what the government found was “logical” 
and “repetitive.”

Bennett noted Friday he had concerns about the case regarding whether Martin’s 
alleged hoarding problem, noting that for someone who is a hoarder, he seemed 
well organized.

Martin began serving in the U.S. Navy on active duty in 1988, for which he 
maintained a secret clearance. In 1994 while serving in the U.S. Naval Reserve, 
his clearance was upgraded to top secret, after which he worked for several 
government contractors, including Booz Allen Hamilton. Between 2012 and 2015 he 
worked at the NSA.

Martin spoke at length Friday, reading directly from his allocution, 
apologizing to friends and family. He noted his methods were “uncanny” and 
“unauthorized, warning “please do not copy this” and that “loose lips sink 
ships.”

Many other NSA contractors have been caught for leaking classified information 
in recent years.

Last year, Reality Winner, a contractor for Pluribus International Corp., was 
sentenced to more than five years in prison after leaking a classified report 
on Russian spearphishing in the 2016 election cycle. Former NSA employee Nghia 
H. Pho was also sentenced last year to five-and-a-half years in prison for 
stealing classified hacking tools."


https://www.cyberscoop.com/hal-martin-sentence-nsa-shadow-brokers/


Rr
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