A former FBI agent who pleaded guilty
to child pornography charges earlier this year will also plead guilty to
leaking classified information about an Al Qaeda bomb plot to The
Associated Press -- in a case of spilled secrets that the Justice
Department called one of the most serious in U.S. history.
Donald John Sachtleben of Carmel, Ind., a former FBI technician and
government contractor, has signed plea agreements in both cases, the
U.S. attorney’s office said Monday.
“I am deeply sorry for my actions,” Sachtleben said in a written
statement. “While I never intended harm to
the United States or to any
individuals, I do not make excuses for myself. I understand and accept
that today’s filings start the process of paying the full consequences
of my misconduct, and I know that the justice system I once served so
proudly will have its say."
Charges in the child pornography case
against Sachtleben were filed in May 2012 after law enforcement
officials said they found child porn they were able to trace to his home
computer. That complaint alleges that an examination of Sachtleben’s
laptop revealed the presence of about 30 images of child porn that he is
accused of trading with other people using the email address
pedodave69@yahoo.com.
Nine days before those charges were filed, prosecutors say Sachtleben
gave up national defense information to a news reporter related to a
disrupted terrorist plot.
The documents in the AP leaker case were filed Monday in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Indiana.
Charging documents allege Sachtleben knew that information would
compromise national security. They also claim the information related to
a foiled plot by Yemen-based terrorist organization Al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula to bomb a U.S.-bound airliner.
“We were given the task of uncovering who had threatened a sensitive
intelligence operation and endangered lives by illegally disclosing
classified information relating to a disrupted Al Qaeda suicide bomb
plot,” U.S. Attorney Ron Machen said. “That plot could not have been
more serious. … This prosecution demonstrates our deep resolve to hold
accountable anyone who would violate their solemn duty to protect our
nation’s secrets and to prevent future, potentially devastating leaks by
those who would wantonly ignore their obligations to safeguard
classified information.”
The investigation into who leaked top secret information to the AP began a national debate over the rights of the press.
AP President Gary Pruitt said at the time that “there can be no
possible justification for such an overbroad collection of the telephone
communications of The Associated Press and its reporters.”
Sachtleben had been employed in the Department of Forensic Sciences
at Oklahoma State University. He spent over 25 years as a special agent
bomb technician in the FBI before retiring in 2008. He specialized in
counter terrorism and bombing investigations.