Wow, the feds payed him 10, then 20, then 70k during the course of their operation. I’d really like to know the full story of how this guy got to this point.
And he even said in his email that he assumed the feds would never pay as much as 100k so it had to be legit. I suppose the fbi can now recover the money and if they can’t they can just seize this guy’s property to make the government whole.
I’m surprised you are being downvoted. I’ve seen events at my work that cost more than $100k. It’s literally nothing to large corporations and governments.
That is a bit interesting for scenarios like this, the gov may not be able to reclaim even the unspent crypto; well it's not that different from burying cash somewhere and not divulging after being caught.
If this guy was dumb enough to think he could get away with selling submarine secrets, I doubt he was smart enough to secure his private keys in an unseizable way, especially if the arrest was a surprise.
Feeling compelled to comply with a court order and voluntarily relinquish your property is still very different from being seizable without your consent.
Especially with the nature of civil asset forfeiture, in which many people never recover their money or property even after proving their innocence, unseizable property has it's appeal.
> Feeling compelled to comply with a court order and voluntarily relinquish your property is still very different from being seizable without your consent.
The difference between theory and practice is that in theory, there isn't one. In practice, there is.
The money is peanuts. You think the govt cares about $100k in crypto? The salaries of the FBI agents on this and the legal machine that's about to come down hard on these guys costs millions to maintain.
There's no need for a plea deal here because the evidence is slam dunk.. the emails .. the dead drop... The government will take their plea and still send them to jail forever. My point is, if i was the justice dept I'd be happy to go to trial.
This isn’t the type of case they are in a hurry to file in the back of a filing cabinet somewhere. This is the type of case they want to turn into a public flaying.
They’re going to hang him as high and hard as they can to make an example of him. If they could force CSPAN and CNN into the court room to watch you bet they would.
There's not going to be a plea deal. This is a national security issue, he is going to be convicted for the maximum penalty prosecutors can secure, regardless of how long it takes.
True, however, a trial may reveal methods* and create political embarrassment. A severe plea deal is therefore a possibility.
* It's quite possible this news story did not contain the entire truth. For example, it's not out of the realm of possibility the FBI knew before COUNTRY1 turned him in.
If the FBIs complaint is accurate this is a pretty simple matter
He was an amateur spy who was caught using good old police techniques. Whether they knew before shouldn't matter.
COUNTRY1 turned everything over and assisted the FBI in their investigation (signaling the suspect). I'm certain they'll send someone to testify in court if needed.
But it does matter. The prosecution isn't just to get a conviction and enforce the law, it's intended to advance national security.
If embarrassing details come out and harm it, the prosecutors would rather not have a trial.
It's quite possible to imagine various embarrassing details that might come out and are compatible with the story as reported - from possible spying on COUNTRY1's embassy, to how exactly did this engineer smuggle these secret documents to his house.
So whatever the foreign country is they must have decided that it was better for them to hand it over to the fbi. I assume then that they were willing to help by arranging the signal at the embassy.
If I suspect my mail is being intercepted, were I to receive a damaging letter my best course of action would be to immediately inform the authorities. I would assume they knew about it and let it through to try and entrap me as well as the sender.
No idea if this happened, but given it's common knowledge the US spies on foreign mail it wouldn't surprise me.
The contents of his messages make it clear he was very excited to play secret agent. Can't imagine how they must have felt at that third drop when the FBI busted them.
Get your kids out of that school asap. 4 years ago our daughter was the target of a sexual predator in the schools leadership team. The individual still works at the school.
The school has a long history of these issues. It is rotten to the core.
I’m aware of that. Tragic but happened decades ago. And the unfortunate subtext of it all is that blurring the line between adults and teenagers was an aspect of the sexual Revolution at the time.
Reading this press release, I'm a little confused. Was there a foreign government involved in this case, or was he interacting with the FBI the entire time?
The affidavit implies they were cooperative, including granting the FBI access to a building of theirs in D.C.
> During the weekend of May 29-30, 2021, the FBI conducted an operation in the Washington, D.C. area that involved placing a signal at a location associated with COUNTRY 1 in an attempted effort to gain bona fides with “ALICE.”
It doesn't matter who COUNTRY1 is. Once they have the information they can sell it for more money to any country/group which are adversaries (who might want to replicate or seek vulnerabilities in the systems) or friendly to the USA and just want to understand the naval capabilities more.
There are lots of interested parties in acquiring sensitive data like this and a 'country' or 'nation' might not even be involved.
The issue is a bit more complicated in real life. It’s almost impossible to do anything without some kind of trail, as you can see in the indictment. If you’re an intermediary in some way, or even just know about it and then don’t tell the source county, and then the source country finds out? Holy moly the blowback will be incredible. If you were a nominal ally? Even more so!
You’ve seen the level of hell leveled against Assange and Snowden, you could expect the same but against the whole country.
And you don’t know for sure that the source country doesn’t already know this leak is happening too and it isn’t setup to figure out who their friends are either, because that also happens.
So, which country is "COUNTRY1"? It seems like it would almost have to be Russia (or another potential adversary), but why would they then turn over his letter to the FBI?
> On or about December 20, 2020, the FBI’s attaché (“LEGAT”) in COUNTRY1 obtained a package representatives from COUNTRY1 had received in April 2020 through a mail carrier from the U.S. by an unidentified subject in an attempt to establish a covert relationship.
It sounds like he tried to contact a foreign country, that country turned him over to the FBI, and then an undercover FBI agent pretended to be an agent of that country.
If they didn't think there was a high chance of getting anything good from the guy, or expected a high chance of him getting caught nevertheless, why not score some political points by being nice instead?
Even if the risk of getting caught were low, for France (if it actually was France), the strategic risk of stealing the US nuclear subs' secrets is astronomical. Why in the world would they take that risk?
> the strategic risk of stealing the US nuclear subs' secrets is astronomical
The risk is none. What is going to happen exactly?
France probably routinely try to steal military secrets from the USA. That's business as usual for modern countries. The USA spies on all its allies. There was a minor scandal at the beginning of the year because it leaked that Denmark helped them spy on Germany.
The risk is asymmetric. France relies on the US for defense. The US does not rely on France. Therefore, it's unsurprising when the US spies on France (or Germany or other NATO ally).
They mostly rely on their nukes, their nuclear submarines and their army and their extensive diplomatic ties. France has some moderate capacity of projection. They would be fine defending themselves.
Eastern Europe relies on the USA for its protection, Germany somewhat does but actually would likely be fine without, France does not. That’s why they can say NATO is brain dead and push for more strategic autonomy in the EU.
And what will the USA do anyway. Withdraw their support because they are spied upon? What would they stand to gain from that?
It’s an ally country with a foreign language and of which a navy engineer thinks they might be interested in nuclear secrets from the USA. France or Israel?
What I noticed reading through the affidavit is that the undercover agents were obviously pretending to have not quite native English, by dropping classifiers like "a", "an", or "the" here and there. That's something not uncommon with Russians.
However, at one point the guy explains to them:
The [REDACTED] is the [REDACTED] provided to US Navy crews.
How to operate [REDACTED]. How to [REDACTED]. Troubleshooting
Problems. Routine Maintenance. Your naval experts will be
able to adapt these procedures to fit your own operations.
Operating a [REDACTED] has many unique aspects, and these
[REDACTED] reflect decades of U.S. Navy "lessons learned"
that will help keep your sailors safe.
Russia doesn't seem like the country that would need help with materials outlining best practices. China?
Here's something else I noticed:
[REDACTED] 7919 pages (4 pages per sheet). The [REDACTED]
reports the detailed results of all [REDACTED] done to
predict the behavior of the [REDACTED] during normal
[REDACTED]. The REDACTED] also documents the design basis
assumptions used to carry out these analvses. Your technical
experts should be able to use this information and the
(REDACTED] to verify the results using their own [REDACTED]
codes.
This really piqued my interest. To predict the behavior of...? What are the codes? And these analyses?
So I did a Google wildcard search
"behavior of * during normal *" "codes"
and believe I identified the jargon.
High-fidelity and accurate nuclear system codes play a key role in the design and analysis of complex nuclear power plants.
RELAP/SCDAPSIM is a best-estimate nuclear tool designed to
analyze the behaviour of reactor systems during normal and
accident conditions.
High-fidelity and accurate nuclear system codes play a key
role in the design and analysis of complex nuclear power
plants. Among such multiple subsystems, the behaviors of the
reactor core (and its fuel, burnable poisons, control
elements, etc.), the reactor internal structures, the vessel,
and the energy conversion subsystem and beyond to grid demand
affect to each one of them. Generally, the interplay between
these various subsystems is modeled by the use of coupled
codes, and in this matter, the most common is that of
thermal-hydraulics and neutronics codes. As regards this
issue, the present paper introduces the new features (NIRK3D
and 3DKIN) that have been added to RELAP/SCAPDSIM/MOD4.0
There isn't really a any utterance that explains motivations, but I imagine he is telling himself he is helping adversaries make their subs safer.
Thank you for your partnership as well, my friend. One day,
when it is safe, perhaps two old friends will have a chance
to stumble into each other at a cafe, share a bottle of wine
and laugh over stories of their shared exploits.....
er, I said classifiers, but I meant determiners. e.g. (missing words in brackets)
… as a sign of good faith and trust we wish to pay you [the] equivalent of 10,000 USD immediately on Monero to [an] address you provide.
Your thoughtful plans indicate you are not [an] amateur.
This method will build trust between us for a larger transaction in [the] future.
It certainly seems like it meets the definition. However, it seems excessive to charge espionage as a capital crime.
Per Wikipedia:
> Treason is the crime of attacking a state authority to which one owes allegiance.[1] This typically includes acts such as participating in a war against one's native country, attempting to overthrow its government, spying on its military, its diplomats, or its secret services for a hostile and foreign power, or attempting to kill its head of state. A person who commits treason is known in law as a traitor.
Wikipedia is good for general knowlege. Legal charges are made with respect to a specific statute. In the U.S. treason will only ever be charged when we are at war.
There was a US Senator (John Breckinridge) who got expelled from the Senate for committing treason during the American Civil War. He did that by skipping out of the US Senate and joining the Confederate Army. He had quite a colorful career in the Confederacy while it lasted, fled to Europe after the war, and eventually returned to the US after the US gave a general amnesty to ex-Confederates in 1868. Wow.
I suspect part of that, depends on who the “foreign country” is. John Pollard[0] gave asset secrets (among other stuff) to Israel. He spent a loooooong time in the hoosegow.
John Walker[1] gave sub secrets to Russia, and didn’t get a treason charge (but he may have turned state’s evidence to reduce his charge). He did die “mysteriously,” a year before he was eligible for parole. He was about as bad as you can get.
Country was founded by a bunch of traitors covering their butts. Article III:
> Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort. No person shall be convicted of treason unless on the testimony of two witnesses to the same overt act, or on confession in open court.
Yes, and no - I mean yes on the founders obviously, hah, but more specifically treason was so narrowly defined because historically it was used as a general catch call for anyone doing anything the government (Crown) didn’t like. And since it had such a harsh penalty (death), it was used as a weapon of terror a lot.
Clearly and narrowly defining it in the constitution was a step to stop the clear abuses they had witnessed.
Look around even in this thread with everyone talking Treason.
Because there's clear definitions of various crimes.
I mean why not call it terrorism? Because terrorism is a blanket term that puts people outside of the normal legal system - e.g. 'outlaws' - and has them taken off to inhumane internment camps like Guantanamo Bay, where rule of law or the Geneva convention no longer apply. Apparently.
One day the US will / should be tried for war crimes, but since they have nukes and veto rights in the UN that's unlikely to happen. They've already indicated they would not hesitate to deploy troops to The Hague to extract any of their (former) leaders if they end up there.
Doesn't sound like they ever managed to get the data to the foreign country, from the complaint. It sounds like the package was intercepted, and then the FBI began acting the part of the foreign country. Maybe I misread?
"On or about December 20, 2020, the FBI’s attaché (“LEGAT”) in COUNTRY1 obtained a package representatives from COUNTRY1 had received in April 2020 through a mail carrier from the U.S. by an unidentified subject in an attempt to establish a covert relationship."
Sub secrets are the most sensitive secrets we have
Source? I can't imagine what kind of secrets an opponent could want about a sub. I can see how operational data about the disposition of the fleet is useful, but the subs themselves? Subs have a ball of Pu powering a steam turbine that runs propulsion and onboard electronics. Some of them have strategic missiles for killing cities, some of them have torpedoes for killing ships and other subs.
Not asking for any secret data, obviously. Just wondering what kind of secret data is even useful to an adversary.
I'm no expert, but I think the most likely is stealth technology. This could be profiles of components designed to reduce turbulence and thus reduce vibration, or structures that minimize reflection from sonar etc.
Since military tech is a cat and mouse game, having access to stealth tech could put you ahead of your competitors in the arms race, until they design another level of protection that makes current tech obsolete.
Purely an uneducated guess, but I would expect that any information pertaining to noise suppression or operational tactics would be useful for someone trying to track them.
AIUI the mostly tightly held secrets are around the acoustics - acoustic signature, propeller design, that sort of thing. A sub relies on being hidden to carry out its mission, so anything that helps an opponent to find your subs has to be well guarded.
Interesting. I would have assumed a totally sealed Pu module, since it's a nice steady source of heat that lasts 80 years and as long the container doesn't rupture it's pretty safe. As opposed to HEU which AFAIK always requires moving parts to slow or stop the neutron cascade.
If you're talking about a Pu238 natural decay type device, like RTGs use, then at the level of power output you'd need to be able to supply propulsion the fact that you can't control the reaction rate would be a distinct negative, not a positive.
Naval reactors are basically a miniaturised version of a power station reactor. Some of the latest HEU ones are designed for the fuel to last for the life of the boat.
It's like asking why rocket engines are under ITAR. Rockets are just ICBMs without a warhead.
Knowing a technologies capabilities means you can focus on defeating the exact specs of the tech.
For example, F-22s purposely fly around with pods that deteriorate its stealth capabilities so nobody, not even allies, knows exactly how a F-22 looks like on radar/can study it closely.
Material composition of whatever sonar absorbing paint they use to emulate it, the shape of the propeller to figure out it's sound signature, specs of the sonar system so opposing subs can evade it better, there's definitely good intel to be had.
The Smarter Every Day channel on Youtube did a series onboard a sub, and a couple of specifics that I remember being censored from the videos were 1) Performance characteristics of the sub (ie, how fast it could dive, how deep) and 2) How it detected other submarines.
two security-related things that stuck with me were:
a) there is a door that leads to the reactor compartment, and that entire section of the ship is off-limits to him. he had a thorough background check before going, and someone from the Navy reviewed all his footage before he could publish it. but despite all that, he's not allowed to even be in the part of the ship where the reactor is. excellent defense-in-depth (pun not intended).
b) when discussing sonar, the XO was sitting right there along with the sonarman, to make sure nothing classified was recorded. there were a few times where the XO said "nope nope nope, can't talk about that". the most interesting one to me was, IIRC, a question about the active sonar system being relatively high frequency sound, and if they used any lower frequencies...they cut immediately after that.
My dad had a security clearance and spent most of his career working on navy projects ... Asking what he did at work during dinner would sometimes be interrupted by "I can't talk about that". It became normal for this phrase to cause a change of subject in our house.
I suspect a large portion of it is how to make those components sufficiently silent to be useful on a military submarine, where sonar is your enemy's primary way of finding you.
how to build a nuclear reactor is relatively well-known. but, how do you make a silent nuclear reactor? that's really only useful for a submarine. it wouldn't surprise me if existing commercial reactor designs would need to be completely redesigned for submarine use.
for an example of how much research goes into making subs silent, there is a very deep lake in Idaho the US Navy has used for acoustic testing since World War 2 [0]
the navy also has almost 70 years [1] of operational experience with nuclear reactors on subs. I imagine there's a enormous pile of "minor" things they've figured out as they chase down every last source of uncontrolled noise on the boat.
And a silent nuclear submarine can run without needing to resurface for far longer than a conventional diesel sub. This is why AUKUS was such a big deal. With diesel subs, Australia could venture out into the South China Sea for 11 days. Once they have nuclear submarines they can remain there for 77. With diesel subs they couldn't reach the East China Sea, but with nuclear subs they can stay there for up to 73 days.
It would have been nice from Australia to realise that from the start and not start a procurement program for a diesel-electric sub, and pick the diesel-electric version of a nuclear sub to boot.
Diesel-electric sub have advantage if you want sub to do costs protection. They are more silent and can remain in position for a long time as they don't need to move to cool their reactor. It means they can stay in pockets of silence longer if they need to(sub exploit variation of pressure, salt density and temperature underwater to find place where their sound waves diffuse poorly).
Honestly Australia doesn't need nuclear sub. The only things they can do that diesel-electric sub couldn't is offensive missions in water further for the Australian costs. That might be useful if Australia decides to go fight in an hypothetical war against China but that would mostly serve the interest of the USA.
Diesel-electric was probably a better choice because Australia would have been able to service them. As is, they will be bound to the USA.
They can pump water but it's noisy and when they don't move all the warm water they generate stay above them and they become easy to spot from the surface. Meanwhile a diesel-electric sub can just stay on batteries and is then close to entierely silent.
The dinner menu. Much more complicated to keep a hundred people happy under their sea for 3 month with no access to fresh food, than keeping a nuclear reactor running.
This is like saying you can’t see what the value of the internet is. If you can’t imagine _any_ reason why technical info on subs would be highly sensitive, you are going to need to read some books, because there’s literally thousands of reasons, and no one here, or any blog or article, is going to fill that gap.
Blind Mans Bluff is as good a place to start as any I guess.
My fluid mechanics prof told us a story about another prof who got in trouble for publishing the yield of the early A-bombs. He got off because he showed how the yield could be calculated from just the public films of the explosions.
Also this was supposedly restricted info. There is a whole hierarchy of secrets, like SBU, secret, top secret, super duper tippy top secret with access codes that are classified in their own right, etc. I don't know where "restricted" fits into this, or whether it just referred to an unspecified level.
Restricted Data and Formerly Restricted Data are classification markings that concern nuclear information. These are the only two classifications that are established by federal law, being defined by the Atomic Energy Act of 1954. Nuclear information is not automatically declassified after 25 years. Documents with nuclear information covered under the Atomic Energy Act will be marked with a classification level (confidential, secret or top secret) and a restricted data or formerly restricted data marking. Nuclear information as specified in the act may inadvertently appear in unclassified documents and must be reclassified when discovered. Even documents created by private individuals have been seized for containing nuclear information and classified. Only the Department of Energy may declassify nuclear information.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Classified_information_in_the_...
During and before World War II, the U.S. had a category of classified information called Restricted, which was below confidential. The U.S. no longer has a Restricted classification, but many other nations and NATO do. The U.S. treats Restricted information it receives from other governments as Confidential. The U.S. does use the term restricted data in a completely different way to refer to nuclear secrets, as described above.
A few weeks ago when the US/Australian sub deal was announced it was notable(outside of the diplomatic snafu) because it was only the second country the US has ever shared its propulsion technology with[1]. The only other country at that point was the UK.
Also see Q3 here: "Why is the technology so closely guarded?"[2]. Basically putting nuclear reactors on submarines and having those submarines remain silent is very hard to do.
> Not asking for any secret data, obviously. Just wondering what kind of secret data is even useful to an adversary.
I don't know either. And if Russians wanted it, they wouldn't have had an interest in a wayward scientist — that would be just too American style.
Rather, I'd say they would've gone after a person who could've given it to them on a golden platter, rather than having to read through somebody amateurish spy scoop compilation. That would be more Russian.
They had few spooks, but they spared no expense, and went to any lengths in getting somebody high rank like Ames, or Hansen.
The number of nations with nuclear submarines is so small it’s clearly one of the strongest strategic advantages a nation state can have.
An example of how seriously the US takes this kind of thing look back to history. After Walker leaked secrets the US started getting even more protective of its submarine programs. The combination of power, propulsion, stealth, and attack capabilities make them the pinnacle of deployable mobile power. A carrier group can start a war, a single submarine can finish one with 24x12 100kt warheads.
The density of sensitive information relating to submarines is very very high.
A lot of people here are assuming COUNTRY1 is an adversary. I'm going to guess India. It's plausible to think that India would love to be able to build nuclear submarines with equivalent technology to the Virginia-class. It isn't crazy to think they might be willing to pay money for secrets. But it's also equally plausible that they would immediately tell the US to avoid diplomatic complications if it was discovered. It's also easier to justify selling to a friendly country instead of an enemy. He and his wife might have thought, "It's not like India is going to use the information to attack the US. What's the harm?"
It would make some sense ( from his point of view). India have nuclear powered ballistic missile subs, but no attack ones, and if i recall correctly they're working with Naval Group on an indigenous nuclear attack sub design.
I was watching a youtube video that how different densities of water caused by differing temperatures make sound waves to bend in water and under some circumstance it can render pockets of water invisible to sound waves there could be lot of know how on to induce that or how to find those pockets in deep sea etc.
Missile subs are probably the most dangerous weapon in the world. Each can carry 200 independently targetable nuclear warheads with a 4,000 mile range.
Not an expert but Smarter Everyday has a playlist on a Nuclear Submarine. He explains the complicated math involved in various operations of the Submarine. As few others have pointed out, it also involves keeping the sub silent.
Subs are a big deal, when it comes to deterrence (M.A.D.). If a nation is wiped out by a first strike, the subs can pop up, six months later, and take out the attacker.
If a nation knows too much about the subs of the other nation, then it's quite possible that they may consider a first strike.
It's a horrible thought, but people can be really barking mad.
The Virginia-class sub is a fast attack sub; not a boomer, but the tech used between them is very similar.
I'm actually surprised that people don't know why subs are such a big deal, but I guess shouldn't be. The Cold War was really bad (my father was in the CIA). People, these days, may not know what it was like. I grew up in the Cold War. the current couple of generations have had the luxury of not growing up in that, but we may be bringing the band back together for a reunion tour.
> Jonathan Toebbe sent a package to a foreign government, listing a return address in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, containing a sample of Restricted Data and instructions for establishing a covert relationship to purchase additional Restricted Data.
This isn't entrapment. In fact, the FBI relies on people thinking it is entrapment, so people are more likely to do really stupid shit like do a dead drop at a park with a LITERAL SURVEILLANCE TOWER.
Even if this was entrapment (not the legal definition) it would be the OSI doing it and they are well within their purview to test anyone holding a security clearance at any time. They do this often and people do get caught. You accept this risk and responsibility when you get a clearance or hold a position that has access to anything sensitive.
>On June 8, 2021, the undercover agent sent $10,000 in cryptocurrency to Jonathan Toebbe as “good faith” payment. ... After retrieving the SD card, the undercover agent sent Jonathan Toebbe a $20,000 cryptocurrency payment. In return, Jonathan Toebbe emailed the undercover agent a decryption key for the SD Card. A review of the SD card revealed that it contained Restricted Data related to submarine nuclear reactors.
Forgive my ignorance here, but this actually made me curious. At this point, he's been given $30k almost entirely out of good faith. What legal trouble - if any - would be be in if he gave them the key, and when they decrypted it they found hours and hours of porn or some other junk? As though he wasn't interested in giving them documents, but rather bilking some foreign country out of cash.
They'd probably nab him for bullshit and then make him waste at least 30k defending himself in court. Three letter agencies didn't get their reputation for being vengeful jerks from nowhere.
You're not wrong but just going by TLA press releases it's pretty impossible to tell genuine moles from people getting railroaded because the TLAs are allergic to being wrong.
It’s pretty close to the plot of “Burn After Reading.”
Two people have access to (what they believe to be) state secrets and try to sell them to a foreign government, but are unknowingly dealing with a US agent the whole time
I just watched it recently and I made similar connection. I naturally hope the connection is in my head only. Plus, in this case, it would appear the couple was already a part of IC. Does someone remember of the top of their head percent of US population engaged in it? Past 10% leaks like that are practically guaranteed.
The initial package with the "teaser" documents alone would probably be a lot of trouble given the claim that it already had restricted documents.
And probably a bunch of extra violations around military or clearance holder rules, depending on what specifically applies to him. Presumably doing things that make you an extortion target for a foreign power is not well-regarded for such personnel.
> Income from illegal activities, such as money from dealing illegal drugs, must be included in your income on Schedule 1 (Form 1040), line 8, or on Schedule C (Form 1040) if from your self-employment activity.
You're theoretically safe from them disclosing this to other law enforcement agencies. (I wouldn't want to test that, though.)
> If you tell the IRS you made $1 million from stealing money or dealing drugs, does the agency tip off the cops?
> Legally, it can't, unless a law-enforcement agency gets a court order granting it access to a specific taxpayer's return. The IRS isn't supposed to proactively alert other agencies about misdeeds unless terrorism is involved. In that case, it still needs a court order to disclose anything, but the IRS can initiate the legal process on its own.
If the IRS asked for records or sources of the income, I would guess you can legally not answer those requests by pleading the 5th. Of course that would be a big red flag...
Weed is illegal under US law. Nothing meaningful about the federal prohibition on weed has changed for decades.
AFAICT all dispensaries are admitting federal crimes when they file federal tax returns. I believe the statute of limitations on controlled substances violations is 5 years, meaning dispensers are theoretically always under threat that the next administration will bring down the hammer and prosecute them for sales occurring today.
To get around this restriction, IRS special agents work on task forces w/DEA, FBI or Homeland Security (aka Customs) so they can request the records directly.
See my comment about the Chicago Outfit in this thread. They figured out the best way if you have a lot of illegal income.
You report the amount as "other income", I believe. You don't have to say that it is from crimes.
I don't do crypto currency and have been wondering whether you are supposed to report it and pay tax on it when you receive it, or only when you sell it. Before you sell it, maybe it is an unrealized gain, which is currently not taxed.
It is an unrealized gain if you bought it and it appreciates. If you receive it in exchange for services, it is income. This is the same for non-crypto:
1. You buy an artwork by a famous artist for $10k and it appreciates to $20k. This is an unrealized gain and you are not taxed until you sell it. Note that trading one crypto for another is effectively a sale of the first crypto and a purchase of the second, such that you pay gain depending on the value of the second crypto at the time of the trade.
2. Someone gives you a $10k artwork as partial payment for some work you do, eg web design. This is income and taxed as if they paid you $10k. Mining crypto is also income I believe.
3. Someone gifts you an artwork worth $10k. You don’t pay tax.
Etc.
I would think the best way to characterize this transaction is that it is income, although it’s certainly unusual enough that I won’t say I’m certain.
In point 1, why does trading of crypto incur a taxable event? If I buy a Picasso for $20 million and then later trade it to a friend for a Van Gogh which is worth $40 million, is that taxable?
You would need a valuation for the painting you disposed of. The fact that you never actually received USD is irrelevant.
I had this problem in 2018 - I bought BTC in 2017 before the boom, exchanged a bunch for ETH at the peak of 2018, and then rode the ETH all the way back down. I had to pay a bunch of taxes on the BTC gains I “realised” even though I didn’t get any actual cash out. I had to pick a price settle for BTC/USD on the day I bought ETH.
Same in French law if you move a company abroad: You need a valuation on the day of departure, and are taxed on it, even if you don’t realize the gains.
If you receive it as income then it's taxable at that point at $ value. If you later sell or trade it you realize capital gains (or losses) and that is a further taxable event.
The Chicago Outfit figured this out after Capone's conviction. What you do is fill out a tax return and pay the tax owed, without a signature, without any form of identification. Failure to file when taxes are paid is a misdemeanor; the maximum penalty, 365 days in jail (minus 55 days for good time=310 days, minus 3 months halfway house). So it's not the end of the world. Failure to file when taxes are owed is a felony and a whole other matter entirely: five years (or is it 10? I don't remember and I'm too lazy to look it up)in federal prison.
You are dreaming if you think a tax return which shows both illegal income and personal identifying information won't be shared with other enforcement agencies. Even the Post Office reports suspicious mail. Ditto FedEx and the "American kilo" (two pounds instead of 2.2). Even Amtrak alerts the DEA of suitcases containing legally-purchased California weed when the train will leave the State.
If he is dealing with a government agent and receiving money then he has to report it at his work.
Even if he 'knows' it's an undercover US department.
So, they would and should still throw the book at him.
He'd be secretly dealing in 'data', fake or not, and money related to his classified job. Not hard to see that's very illegal. He would be leaking info as well just talking to them. They might collate speech structure that links him to other non classified/leaked projects. Or know where he lives or work hours.
I’m no lawyer but I do recall an episode of Cops waaaay back where a guy got busted for selling “weed” except it was actually oregano. He still got charged with something. But I can’t remember what.
Conspiracy requires intent, which has to be proven beyond reasonable doubt. Good luck convincing a jury that cleaner had intent to sell gov. secrets, and it wasnt a joke.
Fraud, entering into a contract without intent to fullfill it? I don't think it works if the obligations would be illegal
> If he is dealing with a government agent and receiving money then he has to report it at his work.
Has to, or get fired, and probably never have a security clearance again. But is it a criminal matter? No idea. (This hypothetical is probably not the most important part of this story, obviously, but it does seem to have captured our interest)
Generally just the notion of doing this qualifies as a conspiracy against the United States. It’s one of the core statutes that Federal Prosecutors abuse to ensnare defendants.
No it isn't. Many schools do DARPA work on their own or in partnership with commercial operations. These frequently involve data with restricted access (not classified but still sensitive) and there are active espionage efforts to retrieve that information by taking advantage of lax academic security.
I’m not sure what secret information the US thinks it has about nuclear science that you can’t just buy from Russia, India or China if you are a nation state.
Though maybe not for $30,000, so if anything this article is more of an advertisement than a warning to others, isn’t it? Though often these kind of information spreads are more about public agencies showing the politicians that they aren’t a waste of money. Because what if that hadn’t been a honey pot, but ISIS or whatever!!! Best keep spending those surveillance billions.
Suppose I tell you - give me $50,000 and I will assassinate the president. If i never had intention of doing so, and just meant to keep the money, i dont know what crime this would be.
If you wanted to sue me foe fraud, you would be admitting to hiring an assasin
Well, if anyone desired they could arrest you both for conspiracy, since ‘I was just joking’ is a pretty hard defense to prove. If you had a bunch of documents showing you were actually not intending to do it and just scamming, and they were all solidly timestamped maybe. If you had an independent co-conspirator who could attest, also maybe.
I believe that generally folks don’t do this type of thing often because the type of person that would pay you $50k in this situation might also be very prone to just murder you if they thought you were playing with them hah
Except for narcotics conspiracies (Title 21), plain old Title 18 conspiracies require an act "in furtherance" of the conspiracy by ONE of the conspirators. Buying a map of the area around the bank your team plans to rob is sufficient.
(A drug conspiracy requires no "act in furtherance.")
So if you are "just joking" with your team and one of them takes your joke seriously and purchases bank robbery supplies or puts an SD card into a sandwich you are liable.
A transaction where you lied about your side of the deal is still fraud, and yes that can still be charged by the state independently.
Also conspiracy doesn't require you to be proficient at executing your plan but rather the intention and motivation and opportunity to do so. You can still shoot a gun and cause harm even if you don't know how to shoot, and there's no way to really prove you don't either.
If you are the FBI, like in this case, admitting your part would not be much of a hurdle - unless you crossed over into entrapment territory, and even then the agent wouldn't go to prison for entrapment.
> Suppose I tell you - give me $50,000 and I will assassinate the president.
There is a specific law for exactly that, however, making threats against the president. And those threats do not actually have to be communicated to the president in order for them to be illegal.
This would be illegal. You have credibly expressed an intention to murder someone. However, if during your trial you could somehow prove that you had planned not to actually harm anyone, that would certainly reduce the severity of the crime.
Expressing a credible threat of violence is a crime in most countries, I believe.
This is called conspiracy. [1] How intentional, motivated, and opportunistic you were, and what actions you actually undertook all add up to the offense you committed.
A random person saying they'll assassinate the president probably won't be a serious threat, but if you have military clearance, access to secrets, show intent to trade those secrets, and initiate communications with foreign powers then that's more than enough to prosecute. Saying you were "just joking" to scam some money isn't much of a defense.
It's all in good faith, and you can't trust criminals because, well, criminals lol.
That said, on the other hand, if someone wants repeat business they will do what you pay them for. It's why ransomware works - if a ransomware guy doesn't unlock things after being paid, nobody will pay ransomware guys.
TL;DR like most business, it's based on trust.
Anyway, anyone want to buy some secret documents? Just send me 50K worth of bitcoin, you can trust me.
At an old job we used to get regular talks given by the FBI about espionage cases. A common theme was just how cheaply most sell themselves for. Motivations tend to be as much titillation (playing spy) and revenge (passed over for promotion, for example) as it is for pure money.
Or just political beliefs/idealism. Some people thought for instance that being the sole possessor of atomic weapons was too much power for any country, even the US. I believe I read something that gave the impression that certain secrets were given to the Soviets, not for money, out of narcissism, or love of Communism, but just the belief that a balance of power was better for the world.
"In her 2020 book, Atomic Spy: The Dark Lives of Klaus Fuchs, Nancy Thorndike Greenspan concluded that "Fuchs sought 'the betterment of mankind' [when sharing secrets with the Soviets] ... because "his goal became to balance world power and to prevent nuclear blackmail" according to a New York Times review by the conservative historian Ronald Radosh. Radosh wrote that "this was a post facto justification. The reason Fuchs spied was simply that he was a Communist and a true believer in Stalin and the Soviet Union"."
Huh. That kind of makes sense. The thought of a single country being able to nuke anyone it disagrees with basically without consequence is pretty terrifying.
It kinda makes sense, because MAD has kept people from nuking freely. But there were a few close calls.
That said, if e.g. only the US had nukes after WW2, they would be the world's dictator. I mean they already are very influential everywhere, but they don't have absolute power at least. Still wouldn't want to be at war with them though.
"the earlier development of the Soviet bomb may have had one significant benefit to the world, a balance of power; the author is convinced that this prevented the United States from using their bomb on North Korea"
The other side of the coin was the Rosenbergs were blamed for casualties in the Korean war.
If he didn't transmit sensitive information, I don't see how he could be convicted of doing so. Maybe some other lesser charge of some kind? (The idea of prosecuting such a person for fraud is hilarious but seems unlikely).
I'm sure he wouldn't have a security clearance ever again.
Don't you need standing in order to bring fraud charges? If so, you would have to be admitting that you solicited someone for government secrets, which is very illegal.
The complaint was filed by FBI Special Agent Justin Van Tromp. That definitely sounds like a character in a Coen brothers movie.
Something I've always wondered is, why are they all special agents? Is there some place they put all the ordinary agents? Are they the ones that just spend their whole careers in cubicles?
Attempt is a crime.
So is conspiracy. His wife was in on it.
But there are two questions: how did the FBI find out about it? Was Toebbe targeted by an informant?
Secondly, which country was he offering the secrets to? This makes a big difference. "Enemy" or ally? Maybe he felt sorry for the way France was effed over by AUKUS and wanted to make amends.
Looks like there was no informant. He contacted the French Embassy on his own and after that, the French government cooperated with the FBI.
Prediction: he'll take a plea. In mitigation, France is an ally. Aggravation: these are nuclear secrets. France will not come to his aid, as Israel did for Pollard for many years, unsuccessfully. Fortunately, there was no real harm. 20 years unless he gets a particularly harsh judge. Worst case: 40.
If he's willing to sell the information to France, France would rightly be concerned that he'd be willing to also sell the information to countries France isn't friendly with.
Even if France didn't care about the information being shared elsewhere, they would still likely care about potentially breaching the classified information treaty they signed with the USA back in 1977[1]. When France received the information, they may have assumed it was a test from the USA to see if France was still upholding their treaty obligations to report unauthorised distribution of US classified information?
Makes a big difference to what, are you suggesting?
In the law? How does Russia vs France make a difference? we have declared war against neither. Sharing national security secrets with either is a crime in fact.
How it looks in the news and to the social media mob? Sure.
Not reporting a 30k lump sum from a foreign agency, or even from a domestic one, would alone be enough for them to loose their security clearances. Then there is failure to report communications with a foreign agency. Once they travel to hand over physical object, even if blank, then there is probably enough for a conspiracy charge.
they couldn't be charged for fraud. illegal activities don't get legal protection. this is why you can't e.g. sue your drug dealer for breach of contract because he didn't deliver those kilos of cocaine he promised.
they could get them on tax evasion, though, assuming they didn't report their ill-gotten gains (which you can do without incriminating yourself, amazingly.)
I don't think that protects the buyers of the fake illegal drugs, it just allows prosecutors to charge dealers of fake illegal drugs as if they were the real deal.
Under the Analog Act, fake drugs are considered as illegal as what they're represented to be (even if it's just baby powder.) I assume CA's law is the state counterpart of that Federal statute.
And as someone below mentioned he was selling these secrets to France, which has got to be somewhat like stealing a bicycle and then pawning it 6 blocks away.
What an incredibly risky and stupid move. I am so interested in the circumstances around this. Why did an (apparently) intelligent person do something so incredibly stupid?
> Why did an (apparently) intelligent person do something so incredibly stupid?
I suspect more information about the motives in this case will come to light, but two explanations come to mind: 1) People who are incredibly intelligent in one domain, are often not particularly intelligent in another. Especially with a highly specialized discipline like engineering, if you spend a lot of time developing your abilities in one area, it often comes at the expense of other areas. 2) People often make entirely rational decisions according to their circumstances, that may appear irrational to someone who can't see the whole picture. Perhaps there was some kind of duress or other factor that caused them to take a risk that seems stupid without being able to see the whole picture.
This started in April of 2020 according to the FBI complaint.
If it was France, maybe he selected a an ally which isn't an adversary to the US but has been critical of the USA (in particular of the former administration)
It s probably not France, the dude translated ffs, I know we re slow but come on, we can read sub spec and traitor cover letters in English if we must.
It must be more exotic like Turkey or Iran no? And even then...
And I cant find a cause we d incarnate for an american traitor: their either want a lot of money, which we wouldnt provide when we already have nuclear subs and a mature military research industry, are very communists which we're not or very far right lunatics which we're not.
I think Israel is more likely (underdog in a sea of sharks for some), Iran (unfairly treated), Russia/China (will show those libtards) or an oil giant in the middle east (money) or maybe some south american thing.
I mean the guy is an idiot but France, I wouldnt betray any other country for it and Im French... what we dont do ourselves we dont deserve.
It can't be Iran, since there's no embassy (or "building associated with Iran") in Washington DC for the FBI to signal from. It's not going to be Russia or China, because the FBI's story implies cooperation.
The guy is an idiot but I guess he knows something about nuclear submarines. If you're Turkey or Israel or Saudi you don't want nuclear subs, and he must have known that.
Nuclear subs don't make sense over diesel+AIP in the Med or the Persian Gulf or Red Sea - these seas are too narrow or too shallow, so nuke subs would be detected much sooner, cost much more, and be far larger.
Having longer trips does not cover all these drawbacks for countries that must base in these areas. Nuclear subs are for blue-water navies, not green-water navies.
Iran/Russia/China are out for reasons pointed out elsewhere in the comments. UK wouldn't need translation (though the idea of 'translating' a spynote into Chav is IMHO incredibly amusing). South American governments obviously don't have money for this.
That leaves us with France or - more exotically - Spain/South Korea/Japan. The latter three don't have nuclear subs, but wouldn't be entirely mad to consider them. However, if the recipient has an existing industry, France is the only remaining logical contender.
I wonder if the government ever looks at the laughable compensation of its employees as a security risk. Every time I see salary numbers — even for very specialized and prestigious jobs — I’m shocked at how little they make.
I've often met people who seem to think that the answer for corruption is to pay people less, so that "greedy" people aren't drawn to important jobs. This moralistic viewpoint in which money and wealth are seen as sins is very dangerous. There are some countries, like Singapore, which pay key public positions generously to prevent corruption, and it works!
Little by SV standards, but pretty decent for the rest of the country. It’s easy to make 6 figures plus excellent benefits for a job that’s relatively low stress.
> In actuality, that person was an undercover FBI agent.
Does the FBI catch any actual real criminals these days or just entrap people? Every single major bust they do is just them raking in a few people stupid enough to engage with an informant.
How many of the Michigan kidnappers were FBI informants? How many people who organized and broke into the capital on Jan 6 were FBI informants? How many people who organized Charlottesville were FBI informants?
While the FBI's behavior in many cases is extremely suspect in this case there seems to have been legitimate contact between these suspects and real foreign agents in early 2020, prior to any FBI involvement.
> On or about December 20, 2020, the FBI’s attaché (“LEGAT”) in COUNTRY1 obtained a package representatives from COUNTRY1 had received in April 2020 through a mail carrier from the U.S. by an unidentified subject in an attempt to establish a covert relationship.
How many Navy nuke engineers sent docs to a foreign government with contents of enough class'd info to prove legitimacy, before that foreign government turned it over to an FBI attache in-country?
In this case, 1!
You should read the indictment in place of the motivated reasoning minus facts on display here.
No part of the story told in this indictment fits the definition of "entrapment". The case started when the FBI interdicted secrets being sent to a foreign intelligence agency.
This is a sting not entrapment. Entrapment is where they force someone to commit a crime against their will then arrest them for it. Enticing or baiting them to commit a crime is how you prevent bad people from committing real crimes.
The Jan 6 insurrectionists and Charlottesville white supremacist mob were acting of their own free will at every step of the way. They were not induced or threatened except by the president. We don't know about any informants among the crowds and even if there were some that doesn't constitute entrapment at all.
I had each of them as a teacher in Denver when they taught there. Mr. Toebbe would tell me to stop “spinning my wheels” and try harder. I guess trying harder means selling nuclear secrets!
You know… It’s advice without context like this that isn’t helpful! Sometimes being under federal indictment is just as much luck and circumstance as it is hard work!
This reminds me of a chemistry professor I had in undergrad in his 50's who repeatedly made vague remarks regarding his prior career in military intelligence (when students showed up late to class, he'd sometimes talk about the days when "Uncle Sam" would wake him up at 2AM to get on plane to an unknown destination.) It always struck me because I came from a military community and many of my teachers had served at one point or another, but nobody bragged about it like this guy did.
A couple years after I left school, he was arrested for stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars in various microscopes and other lab equipment and selling it all online. It was so bizarre seeing his mugshot on the front page of the local paper.
This couple just wrecked their lives and you have a story to tell. But regardless of their curent reputation, he may have meant what he said and wanted to genuinely help you but in the wrong way.
Ouch, I did not know about that. This makes their situation radically worse. I almost feel bad for their mistake, greed got the best of them. Hope many will think twice before going for easy money. It’s not that easy after all
I don't understand how reasonably smart people can trust that someone on the other end of this would not be fake like in this case or be genuine but someone else on the other end of the chain won't be a double agent and sell the information back to the host country. They are lucky to be in US, in the vast majority of the world this would result in summary executions.
Wait for the jury trial because prosecutors lie and "national security" is the thing that gets lied about the most.
EDIT: The other thing to watch out for is an FBI sting where they convince a guy to do something he would never have otherwise done. It seems like every publicly touted victory from them ends up that way once the truth comes out.
You wanna wait to see additional context. Sometimes allegations are completely made up, sometimes there's an alternative explanation that isn't obvious.
They made multiple drops, one for $30,000, another for $70,000, following months of correspondence. There's plenty of context if you read the link -- unless you are for some reason accusing the FBI of wholesale fabrication of a story leading to the arrest of two relatively unimportant scientists.
Oh, and of course, US v. Reynolds, in which the state secrets privilege was invented, from whole cloth, based on fraudulent and perjurious claims of the US Government.
It looks like Toebbe had no contact with an informant. He offered information to the French Embassy and the French government turned this over to the FBI. So there will be no entrapment defense.
But otherwise you are correct, more than one of these sensational cases were hatched by commission-earning FBI informants: the Liberty City 7 (a few acquitted and the others out now), the mentally ill 17-year old who was convinced to blow up a saloon near Wrigley Field (A.Daoud); the Michigan militia plan to kill the governor of that State, many many others.
i recently read "the bomb in my garden" by mahdi obeidi (sic) who was the head of the iraqi uranium enrichment effort under Saddam Hussein. they started out with nothing and had to do everything from scratch. they were able to spin their centrifuge up to 20k rpm or something like that before it flew apart. you need 50k to enrich uranium. spinning a tube at that speed requires sophisticated machinery and knowledge that can only be gained after decades of hard work. but Saddam insisted that enriched uranium be produced in only a few years in light of the situation with iran. and when he insisted something be done, people would do it or else be killed. and so this required the enrichment engineers to seek equipment and knowledge from more advanced states. its amazing how casual the process of getting these things was for them. at one point they gathered data from a book in the stacks of a college library, a book that was not meant to be lent out to anyone who wasnt willing to provide ID, by simply asking the librarian if she could hand over the book really quick just to be sure its the right book. a lot of the things that stand in the way of people trying to do these things arent super specific but are just things like having the ability to machine metal within a certain tolerance or produce bearings that are within a certain spec. but they they did get their hands on some very important design documents that allowed them to succeed in producing enriched uranium in a very short period of time. its a fantastic book.
I'm always shocked seeing how little money an individual (private person or even politicians!) will require to be corrupted or do some awful, future hampering act.
30k$ for nuclear secrets? I've read O(100k) for corrupt high officials. That's not enough money to cover your future and retire on, but the consequences are that... you don't have a future anymore. I'd think people would need at least a couple millions?
both in their mid-40s with two kids and middle-class jobs to boot. Truly nuts, they've screwed their entire family over for what, less than they make in a year?
Would he still be indicted if he took the crypto and sent some fake nuclear info knowing that he gets paid one time only before the other party realizes it’s not real? Just wondering...
Is it a crime to pretend you’d sell top sectet info, take the money and give garbage in return?
I'm still reading, but it looks like the key point in gaining Toebbe's trust to do a physical dead drop was the FBI dropping some physical signal in a nation's embassy or other location associated with them:
>During the weekend of May 29-30, 2021, the FBI conducted an operation in the Washington, D.C. area that involved placing a signal at a location associated with COUNTRY 1 in an attempted effort to gain bona fides with “ALICE.”
This makes me wonder if, as some are speculating, COUNTRY 1 is some US ally. Maybe the US had some cooperation in the investigation. It also makes me wonder who they haven't caught, if anyone. Nuclear proliferation is a scary idea....
This makes me wonder if, as some are speculating, COUNTRY 1 is some US ally. Maybe the US had some cooperation in the investigation. It also makes me wonder who they haven't caught, if anyone. Nuclear proliferation is a scary idea....
I don't think it even has to be an ally to get cooperation, I'm sure even Russia or China would be happy to cooperate on apprehending an amateur spy. They have their own spies to worry about.
Matt Blaze explains why he thinks COUNTRY 1 is France[0].
Specifically, Russia and China are not likely to turn over the agent. We know from the correspondence that the suspects mentioned a poor translation, so you can surmise that it is not an English speaking country. We know that COUNTRY 1 has an Embassy in the US and a legal attache, so that rules out Iran or North Korea.
It doesnt make sense, nothing make sense nowadays... The incredible effort being spent by all those countries for some bullshit that doesnt make sense... While we are scientifically exponentially growing all they care about hurting,accessing another one. Couldnt anyone figure out yet that all superpowers has the ability to destroy world/end human life... Hello! What was your cause? I am in early fourties and feel like in my twenties it was more about development, there was people we unquestionably get exited and follow, nowadays I feel like its only feel about destruction , all this 3~ letters forget its cause... Global warming, lack of resources, you still spent your best resourcess with some thousand year old traditional bs. Right now I was only listening one of my favorite band from childhood @Turkey (which I guess disbanded now) thought its lyrics would fit here (WARNING BRUTAL):
Who cares? My secrets, regret, mislead
You're the victim of your ownself; it's your mistake
I'll fight, to get my life, take it back
Work hard, save money, get married, buy your own grave
Make a wish; it's for your bliss
Enter the world of pink dreams, here are the keys
Enforced, classified, qualified, a robot mind
Die for your, pray for your, pay for your state, it's payback time
Can't feel, my heartbeats, like steel, I'm cold
Hate me, kick me, bomb me, feed me, are you that bold?
Make a wish; it's for your bliss
Enter the world of pink dreams, here are the keys
I find it curious that they haven't named the "foreign government." I guess we can rule out China and Russia because that would have been revealed in the indictment.
Any speculation what "foreign power" they contacted?
> For almost a year, Jonathan Toebbe, 42, aided by his wife, Diana, 45, sold information known as Restricted Data concerning the design of nuclear-powered warships to a person they believed was a representative of a foreign power. In actuality, that person was an undercover FBI agent. The Toebbes have been charged in a criminal complaint alleging violations of the Atomic Energy Act.
I can't help but suspect that there wasn't even a crime ro the idea of a crime before these agents came into play.
The FBI notorious for this kind of things and is full of ladder climbers agents who entrap otherwise innocent people so they can have their names in a serious and scary looking press release.
If you read the indictment, you'll see Toebbes reached out to COUNTRY1 with clear intent and proof docs, and COUNTRY1 turned over the evidence to the FBI attache who was local. If you don't believe the indictment, different story though.
391 comments
[ 1.9 ms ] story [ 297 ms ] thread100k for an op isn't really that much. especially when it comes to subjects like this.
now, I'm not saying it was worth it... I dont have all the details.
it was too reasonable :-P
That is a bit interesting for scenarios like this, the gov may not be able to reclaim even the unspent crypto; well it's not that different from burying cash somewhere and not divulging after being caught.
If you're ordered to turn the money over by the courts, they can hold you as long as you remain in contempt of court.
Rubber-hose decryption in general has a pretty solid track record.
Especially with the nature of civil asset forfeiture, in which many people never recover their money or property even after proving their innocence, unseizable property has it's appeal.
The difference between theory and practice is that in theory, there isn't one. In practice, there is.
You can't think small with these things, if he had real ambition and vision, he could be running Goldman Sacks!
or the justice dept can accept the plea deal so they can quickly move to other cases.
True, however, a trial may reveal methods* and create political embarrassment. A severe plea deal is therefore a possibility.
* It's quite possible this news story did not contain the entire truth. For example, it's not out of the realm of possibility the FBI knew before COUNTRY1 turned him in.
He was an amateur spy who was caught using good old police techniques. Whether they knew before shouldn't matter.
COUNTRY1 turned everything over and assisted the FBI in their investigation (signaling the suspect). I'm certain they'll send someone to testify in court if needed.
But it does matter. The prosecution isn't just to get a conviction and enforce the law, it's intended to advance national security.
If embarrassing details come out and harm it, the prosecutors would rather not have a trial.
It's quite possible to imagine various embarrassing details that might come out and are compatible with the story as reported - from possible spying on COUNTRY1's embassy, to how exactly did this engineer smuggle these secret documents to his house.
Great lifehack
No idea if this happened, but given it's common knowledge the US spies on foreign mail it wouldn't surprise me.
It isn’t very fun to think about, but there is a reason behind a lot of the crazy stuff that governments do.
https://twitter.com/Pinboard/status/1447308841524203521
My favorite detail: the first SD card the guy delivered, he hid in half a peanut butter sandwich.
The school has a long history of these issues. It is rotten to the core.
Assuming anyone knows the wallets of the accused, this should be easy enough to figure out.
> During the weekend of May 29-30, 2021, the FBI conducted an operation in the Washington, D.C. area that involved placing a signal at a location associated with COUNTRY 1 in an attempted effort to gain bona fides with “ALICE.”
There are lots of interested parties in acquiring sensitive data like this and a 'country' or 'nation' might not even be involved.
You’ve seen the level of hell leveled against Assange and Snowden, you could expect the same but against the whole country.
And you don’t know for sure that the source country doesn’t already know this leak is happening too and it isn’t setup to figure out who their friends are either, because that also happens.
> On or about December 20, 2020, the FBI’s attaché (“LEGAT”) in COUNTRY1 obtained a package representatives from COUNTRY1 had received in April 2020 through a mail carrier from the U.S. by an unidentified subject in an attempt to establish a covert relationship.
It sounds like he tried to contact a foreign country, that country turned him over to the FBI, and then an undercover FBI agent pretended to be an agent of that country.
The risk is none. What is going to happen exactly?
France probably routinely try to steal military secrets from the USA. That's business as usual for modern countries. The USA spies on all its allies. There was a minor scandal at the beginning of the year because it leaked that Denmark helped them spy on Germany.
They mostly rely on their nukes, their nuclear submarines and their army and their extensive diplomatic ties. France has some moderate capacity of projection. They would be fine defending themselves.
Eastern Europe relies on the USA for its protection, Germany somewhat does but actually would likely be fine without, France does not. That’s why they can say NATO is brain dead and push for more strategic autonomy in the EU.
And what will the USA do anyway. Withdraw their support because they are spied upon? What would they stand to gain from that?
I think France should be the short-priced favourite though.
>Theory: The redacted country is France, which appears to have collaborated with the FBI on this investigation.
>This would explain even more so why France viewed the AUKUS deal as such a betrayal
>The indictment strongly implies that the country already posses nuclear subs.
>That means Russia, China, India, UK and France. First 3 wouldn’t cooperate with us. And he wouldn’t contact UK. That leaves… France
>Oh. And he told his fake handler that he wants to one day meet them in a cafe and have a bottle of wine. Case closed
https://twitter.com/DAlperovitch/status/1447324061667930116
He also apologizes for a badly translated email early on. Which would rule out the UK.
However, at one point the guy explains to them:
Russia doesn't seem like the country that would need help with materials outlining best practices. China?Here's something else I noticed:
This really piqued my interest. To predict the behavior of...? What are the codes? And these analyses?So I did a Google wildcard search
and believe I identified the jargon.High-fidelity and accurate nuclear system codes play a key role in the design and analysis of complex nuclear power plants.
There isn't really a any utterance that explains motivations, but I imagine he is telling himself he is helping adversaries make their subs safer.https://www.researchgate.net/publication/221915511_Safety_St...
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/328499091_CANDU_6_A...
https://www.researchgate.net/profile/C-Allison/publication/3...
This though, gave me a belly laugh:
He (and his wife) will be old and grey, before they’ll be able to walk more than 100 yards, in a straight line.
Sub secrets are the most sensitive secrets we have (probably on par with the names of highly-placed assets). There will be no leniency.
The foreign country probably knew they’d be up shit’s creek, if they got caught.
Per Wikipedia:
> Treason is the crime of attacking a state authority to which one owes allegiance.[1] This typically includes acts such as participating in a war against one's native country, attempting to overthrow its government, spying on its military, its diplomats, or its secret services for a hostile and foreign power, or attempting to kill its head of state. A person who commits treason is known in law as a traitor.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_C._Breckinridge
https://uscode.house.gov/view.xhtml?path=/prelim@title18/par...
I think the problem is that it needs to involve an enemy of the USA to be treason. Enemy as in declared enemy, not just hostile to.
John Walker[1] gave sub secrets to Russia, and didn’t get a treason charge (but he may have turned state’s evidence to reduce his charge). He did die “mysteriously,” a year before he was eligible for parole. He was about as bad as you can get.
[0] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jonathan_Pollard
[1] https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Anthony_Walker
> Treason against the United States, shall consist only in levying war against them, or in adhering to their enemies, giving them aid and comfort. No person shall be convicted of treason unless on the testimony of two witnesses to the same overt act, or on confession in open court.
Clearly and narrowly defining it in the constitution was a step to stop the clear abuses they had witnessed.
Look around even in this thread with everyone talking Treason.
I mean why not call it terrorism? Because terrorism is a blanket term that puts people outside of the normal legal system - e.g. 'outlaws' - and has them taken off to inhumane internment camps like Guantanamo Bay, where rule of law or the Geneva convention no longer apply. Apparently.
One day the US will / should be tried for war crimes, but since they have nukes and veto rights in the UN that's unlikely to happen. They've already indicated they would not hesitate to deploy troops to The Hague to extract any of their (former) leaders if they end up there.
"On or about December 20, 2020, the FBI’s attaché (“LEGAT”) in COUNTRY1 obtained a package representatives from COUNTRY1 had received in April 2020 through a mail carrier from the U.S. by an unidentified subject in an attempt to establish a covert relationship."
Source? I can't imagine what kind of secrets an opponent could want about a sub. I can see how operational data about the disposition of the fleet is useful, but the subs themselves? Subs have a ball of Pu powering a steam turbine that runs propulsion and onboard electronics. Some of them have strategic missiles for killing cities, some of them have torpedoes for killing ships and other subs.
Not asking for any secret data, obviously. Just wondering what kind of secret data is even useful to an adversary.
Since military tech is a cat and mouse game, having access to stealth tech could put you ahead of your competitors in the arms race, until they design another level of protection that makes current tech obsolete.
AIUI the mostly tightly held secrets are around the acoustics - acoustic signature, propeller design, that sort of thing. A sub relies on being hidden to carry out its mission, so anything that helps an opponent to find your subs has to be well guarded.
Naval reactors are basically a miniaturised version of a power station reactor. Some of the latest HEU ones are designed for the fuel to last for the life of the boat.
It's like asking why rocket engines are under ITAR. Rockets are just ICBMs without a warhead.
Knowing a technologies capabilities means you can focus on defeating the exact specs of the tech.
For example, F-22s purposely fly around with pods that deteriorate its stealth capabilities so nobody, not even allies, knows exactly how a F-22 looks like on radar/can study it closely.
Not an expert, but that's what comes to mind.
two security-related things that stuck with me were:
a) there is a door that leads to the reactor compartment, and that entire section of the ship is off-limits to him. he had a thorough background check before going, and someone from the Navy reviewed all his footage before he could publish it. but despite all that, he's not allowed to even be in the part of the ship where the reactor is. excellent defense-in-depth (pun not intended).
b) when discussing sonar, the XO was sitting right there along with the sonarman, to make sure nothing classified was recorded. there were a few times where the XO said "nope nope nope, can't talk about that". the most interesting one to me was, IIRC, a question about the active sonar system being relatively high frequency sound, and if they used any lower frequencies...they cut immediately after that.
how to build a nuclear reactor is relatively well-known. but, how do you make a silent nuclear reactor? that's really only useful for a submarine. it wouldn't surprise me if existing commercial reactor designs would need to be completely redesigned for submarine use.
for an example of how much research goes into making subs silent, there is a very deep lake in Idaho the US Navy has used for acoustic testing since World War 2 [0]
the navy also has almost 70 years [1] of operational experience with nuclear reactors on subs. I imagine there's a enormous pile of "minor" things they've figured out as they chase down every last source of uncontrolled noise on the boat.
0: https://jalopnik.com/the-navys-most-vital-and-secretive-subm...
1: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/USS_Nautilus_(SSN-571)
https://www.economist.com/img/b/640/724/90/sites/default/fil...
Honestly Australia doesn't need nuclear sub. The only things they can do that diesel-electric sub couldn't is offensive missions in water further for the Australian costs. That might be useful if Australia decides to go fight in an hypothetical war against China but that would mostly serve the interest of the USA.
Diesel-electric was probably a better choice because Australia would have been able to service them. As is, they will be bound to the USA.
why do you think nuclear subs have to be moving to cool the reactor?
Blind Mans Bluff is as good a place to start as any I guess.
Enjoy
During and before World War II, the U.S. had a category of classified information called Restricted, which was below confidential. The U.S. no longer has a Restricted classification, but many other nations and NATO do. The U.S. treats Restricted information it receives from other governments as Confidential. The U.S. does use the term restricted data in a completely different way to refer to nuclear secrets, as described above.
[1] https://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/2021/09/15/us-will-s...
[2] https://defense360.csis.org/what-is-the-importance-of-the-au...
I don't know either. And if Russians wanted it, they wouldn't have had an interest in a wayward scientist — that would be just too American style.
Rather, I'd say they would've gone after a person who could've given it to them on a golden platter, rather than having to read through somebody amateurish spy scoop compilation. That would be more Russian.
They had few spooks, but they spared no expense, and went to any lengths in getting somebody high rank like Ames, or Hansen.
Now... https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/jan/29/trump-russia...
An example of how seriously the US takes this kind of thing look back to history. After Walker leaked secrets the US started getting even more protective of its submarine programs. The combination of power, propulsion, stealth, and attack capabilities make them the pinnacle of deployable mobile power. A carrier group can start a war, a single submarine can finish one with 24x12 100kt warheads.
The density of sensitive information relating to submarines is very very high.
India is a stretch. Having routinely dealt with Indian companies, there would be endless negotiations and squabbling over money. Endless.
The first contact was in april 2020. It's either Russia or China.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XFJnWp1tAdU
If a nation knows too much about the subs of the other nation, then it's quite possible that they may consider a first strike.
It's a horrible thought, but people can be really barking mad.
The Virginia-class sub is a fast attack sub; not a boomer, but the tech used between them is very similar.
I'm actually surprised that people don't know why subs are such a big deal, but I guess shouldn't be. The Cold War was really bad (my father was in the CIA). People, these days, may not know what it was like. I grew up in the Cold War. the current couple of generations have had the luxury of not growing up in that, but we may be bringing the band back together for a reunion tour.
Was the 100K total payments in USD or fiat value? [1]
Taxpayers hope for the former.
[1] https://finance.yahoo.com/news/sweden-government-forced-pay-...
He seems to have kicked it off all by himself.
Forgive my ignorance here, but this actually made me curious. At this point, he's been given $30k almost entirely out of good faith. What legal trouble - if any - would be be in if he gave them the key, and when they decrypted it they found hours and hours of porn or some other junk? As though he wasn't interested in giving them documents, but rather bilking some foreign country out of cash.
Two people have access to (what they believe to be) state secrets and try to sell them to a foreign government, but are unknowingly dealing with a US agent the whole time
And probably a bunch of extra violations around military or clearance holder rules, depending on what specifically applies to him. Presumably doing things that make you an extortion target for a foreign power is not well-regarded for such personnel.
And there's always tax fraud.
https://www.irs.gov/publications/p17
> Income from illegal activities, such as money from dealing illegal drugs, must be included in your income on Schedule 1 (Form 1040), line 8, or on Schedule C (Form 1040) if from your self-employment activity.
You're theoretically safe from them disclosing this to other law enforcement agencies. (I wouldn't want to test that, though.)
https://money.cnn.com/2013/02/28/news/economy/illegal-income...
> If you tell the IRS you made $1 million from stealing money or dealing drugs, does the agency tip off the cops?
> Legally, it can't, unless a law-enforcement agency gets a court order granting it access to a specific taxpayer's return. The IRS isn't supposed to proactively alert other agencies about misdeeds unless terrorism is involved. In that case, it still needs a court order to disclose anything, but the IRS can initiate the legal process on its own.
In theory. In actuality I think you could make a reasonable argument that the suspicion of parallel construction means that you may plead the 5th.
IRS is federal isn’t it? Does that mean they would consider weed sales illegal?
Weed is illegal under US law. Nothing meaningful about the federal prohibition on weed has changed for decades.
AFAICT all dispensaries are admitting federal crimes when they file federal tax returns. I believe the statute of limitations on controlled substances violations is 5 years, meaning dispensers are theoretically always under threat that the next administration will bring down the hammer and prosecute them for sales occurring today.
See my comment about the Chicago Outfit in this thread. They figured out the best way if you have a lot of illegal income.
You report the amount as "other income", I believe. You don't have to say that it is from crimes.
I don't do crypto currency and have been wondering whether you are supposed to report it and pay tax on it when you receive it, or only when you sell it. Before you sell it, maybe it is an unrealized gain, which is currently not taxed.
1. You buy an artwork by a famous artist for $10k and it appreciates to $20k. This is an unrealized gain and you are not taxed until you sell it. Note that trading one crypto for another is effectively a sale of the first crypto and a purchase of the second, such that you pay gain depending on the value of the second crypto at the time of the trade.
2. Someone gives you a $10k artwork as partial payment for some work you do, eg web design. This is income and taxed as if they paid you $10k. Mining crypto is also income I believe.
3. Someone gifts you an artwork worth $10k. You don’t pay tax.
Etc.
I would think the best way to characterize this transaction is that it is income, although it’s certainly unusual enough that I won’t say I’m certain.
Not tax advice / speak to your own accountant.
I had this problem in 2018 - I bought BTC in 2017 before the boom, exchanged a bunch for ETH at the peak of 2018, and then rode the ETH all the way back down. I had to pay a bunch of taxes on the BTC gains I “realised” even though I didn’t get any actual cash out. I had to pick a price settle for BTC/USD on the day I bought ETH.
https://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/42/2274
You are dreaming if you think a tax return which shows both illegal income and personal identifying information won't be shared with other enforcement agencies. Even the Post Office reports suspicious mail. Ditto FedEx and the "American kilo" (two pounds instead of 2.2). Even Amtrak alerts the DEA of suitcases containing legally-purchased California weed when the train will leave the State.
Even if he 'knows' it's an undercover US department.
So, they would and should still throw the book at him.
He'd be secretly dealing in 'data', fake or not, and money related to his classified job. Not hard to see that's very illegal. He would be leaking info as well just talking to them. They might collate speech structure that links him to other non classified/leaked projects. Or know where he lives or work hours.
Conspiracy requires intent, which has to be proven beyond reasonable doubt. Good luck convincing a jury that cleaner had intent to sell gov. secrets, and it wasnt a joke.
Fraud, entering into a contract without intent to fullfill it? I don't think it works if the obligations would be illegal
Has to, or get fired, and probably never have a security clearance again. But is it a criminal matter? No idea. (This hypothetical is probably not the most important part of this story, obviously, but it does seem to have captured our interest)
Though maybe not for $30,000, so if anything this article is more of an advertisement than a warning to others, isn’t it? Though often these kind of information spreads are more about public agencies showing the politicians that they aren’t a waste of money. Because what if that hadn’t been a honey pot, but ISIS or whatever!!! Best keep spending those surveillance billions.
He allegedly sent a package to a foreign government offering to sell them classified info, and the foreign government gave that package to the FBI.
EDIT: Also the initial package contained classified info, which doesn't help.
If you wanted to sue me foe fraud, you would be admitting to hiring an assasin
I believe that generally folks don’t do this type of thing often because the type of person that would pay you $50k in this situation might also be very prone to just murder you if they thought you were playing with them hah
Either way, no fun for anyone.
(A drug conspiracy requires no "act in furtherance.")
So if you are "just joking" with your team and one of them takes your joke seriously and purchases bank robbery supplies or puts an SD card into a sandwich you are liable.
I think the most solid proof thats its not a geuine conspiracy would be
A) if you lied to the person giving you the money, about owning a gun or something else relevant, showing your intentions weren't genuine
B) showing the conspiracy is not credible, i.e. you are conspiring ro use a sniper rifle but you don't k ow how to shoot.
Also conspiracy doesn't require you to be proficient at executing your plan but rather the intention and motivation and opportunity to do so. You can still shoot a gun and cause harm even if you don't know how to shoot, and there's no way to really prove you don't either.
There is a specific law for exactly that, however, making threats against the president. And those threats do not actually have to be communicated to the president in order for them to be illegal.
Expressing a credible threat of violence is a crime in most countries, I believe.
'Credible' is a key word though, a random joe who doesn't own a gun is not credible to assasinate a President.
A random person saying they'll assassinate the president probably won't be a serious threat, but if you have military clearance, access to secrets, show intent to trade those secrets, and initiate communications with foreign powers then that's more than enough to prosecute. Saying you were "just joking" to scam some money isn't much of a defense.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conspiracy_(criminal)
That said, on the other hand, if someone wants repeat business they will do what you pay them for. It's why ransomware works - if a ransomware guy doesn't unlock things after being paid, nobody will pay ransomware guys.
TL;DR like most business, it's based on trust.
Anyway, anyone want to buy some secret documents? Just send me 50K worth of bitcoin, you can trust me.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Falcon_and_the_Snowman
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klaus_Fuchs
"In her 2020 book, Atomic Spy: The Dark Lives of Klaus Fuchs, Nancy Thorndike Greenspan concluded that "Fuchs sought 'the betterment of mankind' [when sharing secrets with the Soviets] ... because "his goal became to balance world power and to prevent nuclear blackmail" according to a New York Times review by the conservative historian Ronald Radosh. Radosh wrote that "this was a post facto justification. The reason Fuchs spied was simply that he was a Communist and a true believer in Stalin and the Soviet Union"."
That said, if e.g. only the US had nukes after WW2, they would be the world's dictator. I mean they already are very influential everywhere, but they don't have absolute power at least. Still wouldn't want to be at war with them though.
The other side of the coin was the Rosenbergs were blamed for casualties in the Korean war.
I'm sure he wouldn't have a security clearance ever again.
This sounds increasingly like a Coen brothers movie though, yeah.
Something I've always wondered is, why are they all special agents? Is there some place they put all the ordinary agents? Are they the ones that just spend their whole careers in cubicles?
Because that's the job title?
> Is there some place they put all the ordinary agents?
Training. That is, the lowest rank on the FBI agent career path is apparently “New Agent Trainee” and the next step up is “Special Agent”.
But there are two questions: how did the FBI find out about it? Was Toebbe targeted by an informant?
Secondly, which country was he offering the secrets to? This makes a big difference. "Enemy" or ally? Maybe he felt sorry for the way France was effed over by AUKUS and wanted to make amends.
Prediction: he'll take a plea. In mitigation, France is an ally. Aggravation: these are nuclear secrets. France will not come to his aid, as Israel did for Pollard for many years, unsuccessfully. Fortunately, there was no real harm. 20 years unless he gets a particularly harsh judge. Worst case: 40.
Even if France didn't care about the information being shared elsewhere, they would still likely care about potentially breaching the classified information treaty they signed with the USA back in 1977[1]. When France received the information, they may have assumed it was a test from the USA to see if France was still upholding their treaty obligations to report unauthorised distribution of US classified information?
[1] https://treaties.un.org/doc/Publication/UNTS/Volume%201114/v...
Makes a big difference to what, are you suggesting?
In the law? How does Russia vs France make a difference? we have declared war against neither. Sharing national security secrets with either is a crime in fact.
How it looks in the news and to the social media mob? Sure.
they could get them on tax evasion, though, assuming they didn't report their ill-gotten gains (which you can do without incriminating yourself, amazingly.)
https://codes.findlaw.com/ca/health-and-safety-code/hsc-sect...
Under the Analog Act, fake drugs are considered as illegal as what they're represented to be (even if it's just baby powder.) I assume CA's law is the state counterpart of that Federal statute.
What an incredibly risky and stupid move. I am so interested in the circumstances around this. Why did an (apparently) intelligent person do something so incredibly stupid?
I suspect more information about the motives in this case will come to light, but two explanations come to mind: 1) People who are incredibly intelligent in one domain, are often not particularly intelligent in another. Especially with a highly specialized discipline like engineering, if you spend a lot of time developing your abilities in one area, it often comes at the expense of other areas. 2) People often make entirely rational decisions according to their circumstances, that may appear irrational to someone who can't see the whole picture. Perhaps there was some kind of duress or other factor that caused them to take a risk that seems stupid without being able to see the whole picture.
Perhaps he misread the situation and imagined France would be receptive given that fact.
If it was France, maybe he selected a an ally which isn't an adversary to the US but has been critical of the USA (in particular of the former administration)
It must be more exotic like Turkey or Iran no? And even then...
And I cant find a cause we d incarnate for an american traitor: their either want a lot of money, which we wouldnt provide when we already have nuclear subs and a mature military research industry, are very communists which we're not or very far right lunatics which we're not.
I think Israel is more likely (underdog in a sea of sharks for some), Iran (unfairly treated), Russia/China (will show those libtards) or an oil giant in the middle east (money) or maybe some south american thing.
I mean the guy is an idiot but France, I wouldnt betray any other country for it and Im French... what we dont do ourselves we dont deserve.
Nuclear subs don't make sense over diesel+AIP in the Med or the Persian Gulf or Red Sea - these seas are too narrow or too shallow, so nuke subs would be detected much sooner, cost much more, and be far larger. Having longer trips does not cover all these drawbacks for countries that must base in these areas. Nuclear subs are for blue-water navies, not green-water navies.
Iran/Russia/China are out for reasons pointed out elsewhere in the comments. UK wouldn't need translation (though the idea of 'translating' a spynote into Chav is IMHO incredibly amusing). South American governments obviously don't have money for this.
That leaves us with France or - more exotically - Spain/South Korea/Japan. The latter three don't have nuclear subs, but wouldn't be entirely mad to consider them. However, if the recipient has an existing industry, France is the only remaining logical contender.
Does the FBI catch any actual real criminals these days or just entrap people? Every single major bust they do is just them raking in a few people stupid enough to engage with an informant.
How many of the Michigan kidnappers were FBI informants? How many people who organized and broke into the capital on Jan 6 were FBI informants? How many people who organized Charlottesville were FBI informants?
> On or about December 20, 2020, the FBI’s attaché (“LEGAT”) in COUNTRY1 obtained a package representatives from COUNTRY1 had received in April 2020 through a mail carrier from the U.S. by an unidentified subject in an attempt to establish a covert relationship.
In this case, 1!
You should read the indictment in place of the motivated reasoning minus facts on display here.
The Jan 6 insurrectionists and Charlottesville white supremacist mob were acting of their own free will at every step of the way. They were not induced or threatened except by the president. We don't know about any informants among the crowds and even if there were some that doesn't constitute entrapment at all.
A couple years after I left school, he was arrested for stealing hundreds of thousands of dollars in various microscopes and other lab equipment and selling it all online. It was so bizarre seeing his mugshot on the front page of the local paper.
EDIT: The other thing to watch out for is an FBI sting where they convince a guy to do something he would never have otherwise done. It seems like every publicly touted victory from them ends up that way once the truth comes out.
https://thehill.com/opinion/criminal-justice/427738-guilty-u...
The Liberty City 7 A. Daoud Michigan Militia Assassination
und und und
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_v._Swartz
https://slate.com/news-and-politics/2016/09/the-case-of-scie...
https://www.latimes.com/style/la-bk-barrysiegel22-2008jun22-...
But otherwise you are correct, more than one of these sensational cases were hatched by commission-earning FBI informants: the Liberty City 7 (a few acquitted and the others out now), the mentally ill 17-year old who was convinced to blow up a saloon near Wrigley Field (A.Daoud); the Michigan militia plan to kill the governor of that State, many many others.
There was a very high chance that their client was going to blackmail them after a few transactions to decrease the price or stop paying completely.
https://wiseinternational.org/book/export/html/1516
Query whether such would be the case today.
30k$ for nuclear secrets? I've read O(100k) for corrupt high officials. That's not enough money to cover your future and retire on, but the consequences are that... you don't have a future anymore. I'd think people would need at least a couple millions?
Is it a crime to pretend you’d sell top sectet info, take the money and give garbage in return?
I'm still reading, but it looks like the key point in gaining Toebbe's trust to do a physical dead drop was the FBI dropping some physical signal in a nation's embassy or other location associated with them:
>During the weekend of May 29-30, 2021, the FBI conducted an operation in the Washington, D.C. area that involved placing a signal at a location associated with COUNTRY 1 in an attempted effort to gain bona fides with “ALICE.”
This makes me wonder if, as some are speculating, COUNTRY 1 is some US ally. Maybe the US had some cooperation in the investigation. It also makes me wonder who they haven't caught, if anyone. Nuclear proliferation is a scary idea....
I don't think it even has to be an ally to get cooperation, I'm sure even Russia or China would be happy to cooperate on apprehending an amateur spy. They have their own spies to worry about.
Specifically, Russia and China are not likely to turn over the agent. We know from the correspondence that the suspects mentioned a poor translation, so you can surmise that it is not an English speaking country. We know that COUNTRY 1 has an Embassy in the US and a legal attache, so that rules out Iran or North Korea.
[0] https://twitter.com/mattblaze/status/1447367518012776454
Who cares? My secrets, regret, mislead You're the victim of your ownself; it's your mistake I'll fight, to get my life, take it back Work hard, save money, get married, buy your own grave
Make a wish; it's for your bliss Enter the world of pink dreams, here are the keys
Enforced, classified, qualified, a robot mind Die for your, pray for your, pay for your state, it's payback time Can't feel, my heartbeats, like steel, I'm cold Hate me, kick me, bomb me, feed me, are you that bold?
Make a wish; it's for your bliss Enter the world of pink dreams, here are the keys
Won't make a wish, we've got the real keys
https://youtu.be/m8BA9lxkHz4?t=591
Any speculation what "foreign power" they contacted?
I can't help but suspect that there wasn't even a crime ro the idea of a crime before these agents came into play.
The FBI notorious for this kind of things and is full of ladder climbers agents who entrap otherwise innocent people so they can have their names in a serious and scary looking press release.