Terry J. Albury, a former Special Agent of the FBI, pleaded
guilty today in the District of Minnesota in connection with his unauthorized
disclosure and retention of classified national defense information.
Assistant Attorney General for National Security John C.
Demers, U.S. Attorney Tracy Doherty-McCormick foar the Eastern District of
Virginia, and Assistant Director Bill Priestap of the FBI’s Counterintelligence
Division announced the plea. The plea
was entered before U.S. District Judge Wilhelmina M. Wright.
“Today, Terry Albury admitted to violating his oath to
protect our country by disclosing to a reporter classified information that, as
an FBI agent, he was entrusted to protect,” said Assistant Attorney General
Demers. “Albury admitted that his
actions put America at risk. As this
prosecution demonstrates, we will not waver in our commitment to pursue and
hold accountable government officials who violate their obligations to protect
our nation’s secrets and break the laws they have sworn to uphold.”
“Terry Albury betrayed the trust bestowed upon him by the
United States,” said U.S. Attorney Doherty-McCormick. “Today’s guilty plea should serve as a
reminder to those who are entrusted with classified information that the
Justice Department will hold them accountable.”
“Mr. Albury was entrusted by the FBI with a security
clearance, which included a responsibility to protect classified national
defense information. Instead, he knowingly disclosed that material to someone
not authorized to receive it,” said Assistant Director Priestap. “The FBI will work tirelessly to bring to
justice those who would expose America’s secrets. Today, as the result of the hard work of
dedicated special agents, analysts, and prosecutors, Mr. Albury has taken
responsibility for his illegal action.”
“In violating his oath of office Terry Albury not only
betrayed the American people, but also his fellow FBI employees who work to
safeguard sensitive information on a daily basis," said Special Agent in
Charge Laycock. “No one is above the law
and the FBI will continue to investigate individuals who disclose classified
material to those who are not authorized to receive it.”
Albury, 39, worked as an FBI Special Agent in the
Minneapolis field office at the time of the disclosures. At the time, Albury also worked as a liaison
with Customs and Border Protection at the Minneapolis-St. Paul International
Airport. In connection with his FBI employment,
Albury held a Top Secret//Sensitive Compartmented Information security
clearance, and his daily duties provided him access to sensitive and classified
FBI and other U.S. government information.
According to court documents, beginning in 2016 and continuing through
August 2017, Albury knowingly and willfully disclosed national defense
information, classified at the Secret level, to a reporter. Albury employed methods to avoid detection,
including printing documents that he created by cutting and pasting portions of
an original document into a new document so as to avoid leaving a record of
having printed the original, classified document. Albury also accessed documents on a
classified computer and took pictures of the computer screen in order to
photograph certain classified documents.
Those additional classified documents were recovered on an electronic
storage device found during a search of his home.
As set forth in the plea agreement, Albury was never
authorized to retain the documents at issue at his residence or to transmit
them to any person not entitled to receive them. Albury knew that he was not authorized to
remove documents containing National Defense Information and classified
information from secure locations, and further knew that he was not authorized
to retain them at his residence or to transmit them to any person not
authorized to receive them.
Albury pleaded guilty to one count of making an unauthorized
disclosure of national defense information and one count of unlawful retention
of national defense information. Albury
faces a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison per count. The maximum potential sentence is prescribed
by Congress and are provided here for informational purposes only, as any
sentencing of the defendant will be determined by the assigned judge.
This investigation was conducted by the FBI’s Washington
Field Office. The prosecution was
handled by Assistant U.S. Attorney Danya E. Atiyeh of the Eastern District of
Virginia and Trial Attorneys Patrick T. Murphy and David C. Recker of the
National Security Division’s Counterintelligence and Export Control Section.
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