Kevin Mallory, 60, of Leesburg was arrested yesterday and made an initial appearance in US District Court in Alexandria, Virginia. The self-employed consultant who speaks Chinese is charged under the federal Espionage Act and could face life in prison.
In fact, if certain conditions are met, the charges could make Mallory eligible for the death penalty, prosecutor John Gibbs said at Mallory's initial appearance.
Court records indicate that Mallory was an Army veteran and worked as a special agent for the Diplomatic Security Service at the US State Department from 1987 to 1990.
According to the affidavit, Mallory travelled to Shanghai in April, and was interviewed by Customs agents at O'Hare Airport in Chicago after he failed to declare USD 16,500 in cash found in two carry-on bags.
More From This Section
The FBI interviewed him the next month, and he admitted that he met with two people from a Chinese think tank, the Shanghai Academy of Social Sciences, that he now believed were Chinese intelligence agents.
According to the affidavit, Mallory told the FBI agents that the only documents he transferred were two unclassified "white papers" he had written on US policy matters, for which he said he was paid USD 25,000.
But FBI agents searched the device and found other documents and messages that Mallory thought had been deleted, according to the affidavit. In one message, Mallory wrote to the suspected Chinese agent, "your object is to gain information, and my object is to be paid."
The agent responded, "my current object is to make sure your security and to try to reimburse you."
An analysis of the documents on the device found four classified documents, including three with a Top Secret classification.
Indeed, according to the affidavit, the Chinese agent asked Mallory in one of the messages found on the device why there was blacked-out information on the top and bottom of certain pages. Mallory responded that the black was to cross out the Top Secret designations on the page. But he assured the agent that the information was valuable. "Unless read in detail, it appeared like a simple note," he wrote.
Dana Boente, acting assistant attorney general for national security and the US Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, where the case will be prosecuted, said in a statement that the charges "should send a message to anyone who would consider violating the public's trust and compromising our national security by disclosing classified information."