NSA employee who brought hacking tools home sentenced to 66 months in prison
Nghia Hoang Pho, a 68-year-old former National Security Agency employee who worked in the NSA's Tailored Access Operations (TAO) division, was sentenced today to 66 months in prison for willful, unauthorized removal and retention of classified documents and material from his workplace—material that included hacking tools that were likely part of the code dumped by the individual or group known as Shadowbrokers in the summer of 2016.
Pho, a naturalized US citizen from Vietnam and a resident of Ellicott City, Maryland, had pleaded guilty to bringing home materials after being caught in a sweep by the NSA following the Shadowbrokers leaks. He will face three years of supervised release after serving his sentence. His attorney had requested home detention.
In a letter sent to the court in March, former NSA Director Admiral Mike Rogers told Judge George Russell that the materials removed from the NSA by Pho "had significant negative impacts on the NSA mission, the NSA workforce, and the Intelligence Community as a whole." The materials Pho removed, Rogers wrote, included:
[S]ome of NSA's most sophisticated, hard-to-achieve, and important techniques of collecting [signals intelligence] from sophisticated targets of the NSA, including collection that is crucial to decision makers when answering some of the Nation's highest-priority questions... Techniques of the kind Mr. Pho was entrusted to protect, yet removed from secure space, are force multipliers, allowing for intelligence collection in a multitude of environments around the globe and spanning a wide range of security topics. Compromise of one technique can place many opportunities for intelligence collection and national security insight at risk.
Previously: Former NSA Employee Nghia Pho Pleads Guilty to Willful Retention of National Defense Information
Related: "The Shadow Brokers" Claim to Have Hacked NSA
The Shadow Brokers Identify Hundreds of Targets Allegedly Hacked by the NSA
Former NSA Contractor May Have Stolen 75% of TAO's Elite Hacking Tools
Former NSA Contractor Harold Martin Indicted
(Score: 2) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Thursday September 27 2018, @05:32PM (2 children)
- les to CERT
The NSA really does do defensive work like SELinux.
Discovering an exploit then keeping it secret leaves us vulnerable to the Soviets
Yes I Have No Bananas. [gofundme.com]
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday September 27 2018, @08:15PM (1 child)
was a summer intern's project, based off an internal framework the NSA had used for commercial unixes or BSD, if I remember correctly.
Calling it an NSA project would imply far more manpower and focus than was really put into it when originally released.
(Score: 2) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Thursday September 27 2018, @08:46PM
-rity that the NSA really does have a completely unclassified division.
That division's work is detailed by James Bamford in "The Puzzle Palace".
Yes I Have No Bananas. [gofundme.com]