Difference between revisions of "Smuggling classified secret cyber documents to Russia"

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<p style="color:#aaa;font-size:2em;font-weight:bold">Smuggling classified secret cyber documents to Russia</p>
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::''See also: [[Smuggling State of Utah information to Russia]]''
 
::''See also: [[Smuggling State of Utah information to Russia]]''

Latest revision as of 06:49, 7 June 2024

Smuggling classified secret cyber documents to Russia

See also: Smuggling State of Utah information to Russia

One has not only a legal but a moral responsibility to obey just laws. Conversely, one has a moral responsibility to disobey unjust laws. — Martin Luther King (1963)

<pdf width="600" height="400">File:Cyber Range EoA Study Guidance Summary Overall Classification Secret.pdf</pdf>
Finding a secret cyber-security document

On May 5, 2015 I was in downtown DC and happened to see a blue manila folder sitting left on a concrete raised 3 foot high block in front of the apartment. Intrigued, I exited my vehicle and opened it, it was a "Cyber Range EoA Study Guidance Summary Overall Classification: Secret". At FedEx I made a copy of the document.


Giving the document to the Washington Post

The media do not necessarily tell your what to think, but they tell you what to think about, and how to think about it. -- Robert McChesney.

Does the American press serve the people or those in power?

That same day, I took the original color document to the Washington Post. The security guard at the entrance, a fat black former military man, was hostile saying that I should drop it off at the post office. The woman security guard told me to drop it off at the back at the mail room. I could not find the back of the building so I returned. The black man threatened me with trespassing. The black woman guided me to the back of the building where the mail drop was located.

I also recorded the mail room woman Miss Pollard in the back of the building taking the document and telling me the name of the editor, Martin Barton, who she promised she would give it too.


E-mailing the Washington Post
2018-05-22 21 36 26-Brian Fung - The Washington Post.png

That same day I had an Uber ride with a USA Today Reporter, followed immediately by Brian Fung brian.fung@washpost.com who was going to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC). I explained the whole story and got Fung's business card. Fung promised to respond to my e-mail.

I received no response.

I then emailed foreign@washpost.com and Fung and received no response.

Ever.

Moving to Russia

I scanned the copy I made and moved to Russia in September 2015, while seeking political asylum in Mid 2016, I emailed the document to wikileaks and also to the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB), the current version of the KGB.

Russian temporary refuge application, 2019.
Short link: https://tinyurl.com/moscowamericansmuggled