WikiLeaks published the tools and techniques the CIA uses to break into phones, computers and smart TVs.
A federal jury has found former CIA engineer Joshua Schulte guilty of what authorities are calling the largest theft of secret information in the organization’s history. Schulte was detained in connection with the substantial collection of papers that Wikileaks had made public in 2017. The “Vault 7” series of CIA disclosures revealed the methods and devices the organization employed to get into Android and iPhone devices for international espionage. It included information on the CIA’s methods for hacking computers and converting smart TVs into listening devices. Schulte was found guilty by a federal jury on nine charges, including illegally acquiring and disseminating information related to national defense.
According to The New York Times, Schulte was arrested after investigators traced the leaks to him. The former CIA engineer worked with a team in a secret building protected by armed guards to create tools, like malware, that were used to target the devices of suspected terrorists. In 2018, he was formally charged with 13 counts that included theft of classified information, obstruction of justice, as well as possessing and sending images and videos with child pornography. He’s still awaiting trial on charges of possessing child pornography, which he allegedly downloaded from 2009 until March 2017.
Schulte’s original trial back in 2020 was declared a mistrial after jurors couldn’t come to an agreement regarding some of hist most serious charges, illegally gathering and transmitting national defense information included. After that event, the former CIA engineer had decided to represent himself. As part of his closing arguments, he told the jurors that the CIA and the FBI made him a scapegoat for their embarrassing failure, repeating what his side had been saying from the time he was arrested.
While the judge, AP said, was impressed with his closing arguments, they weren’t enough to get the jury on his side. In court, he argued that the government’s case is full of holes and that he didn’t even have motive to leak the CIA’s hacking tools. Prosecutors, however, accused him of being a disgruntled employee who felt that he was disrespected when the agency ignored his complaints about his work environment. As retaliation, he allegedly tried “to burn [the CIA] to the ground.” US Attorney Damian Williams said his actions rendered the “most valuable intelligence-gathering cyber tools used to battle terrorist organizations and other malign influences around the globe” essentially useless. Williams also accused Schulte of trying to leak more classified materials against the government while he was behind bars.
Schulte will have to face the court again to face charges related to possession of child pornography before a sentencing date can be set. The nine counts he was convicted of, however, are enough to keep him in prison for up to 80 years.