A few weeks ago, a tweet from Pete Strzok came across my Twitter timeline. (Pete is a former FBI agent whose anti-Trump text exchanges with FBI lawyer Lisa Page, while the two were carrying on an affair, became a matter of great notoriety. The two became frequent targets of Trump's tweeting wrath, and he still goes after them now and again. Drummed out of the FBI, Pete now writes, teaches at Georgetown, and frequently shows up on MSNBC. His voice is quite similar to that of another Peter: Buttigieg. Although Pete B is cuter, they even vaguely resemble each other. For the record, I'm a fan of both.)
Anyway, Pete tweeted: Hard to envision more inculpatory evidence. This comment was followed by a screen shot of an excerpt from a Department of Justice filing outlining charges against former U.S. Army Sergeant Joseph Schmidt.
Schmidt's google searches and click throughs included "chinese consulate" "soldier defect" and "can you be indicted for treason"
Pete's next tweet, Oh Wait, was accompanied by another highlighted screen shot from the filing:
Oh Wait is right.
In early October, Schmidt was arrested after deplaning a flight from Hong Kong to San Francisco. He's been indicted for "retention of an attempt to deliver national defense information," and is facing 10 years in prison and a hefty fine for each charge.
Schmidt, who is 29, left the military in 2020:
During a trip to Istanbul the same month he left military, Schmidt made nearly 30 Google searches related to defection and spilling military secrets, ranging from “countries with most negative relations with US” to “what is China’s intelligence agency?” and “soldier defect,” according to an FBI investigative report.
Other search terms included “subreddit spying” and “looking for a subreddit about spy stuff.”
Schmidt also queried Google Maps for driving directions from Beijing’s airport to the headquarters of China’s Ministry of State Security, which has a similar role to the CIA.
On Feb. 24, 2020, Schmidt sent a message to the Chinese Consulate in Istanbul requesting a meeting, calling himself a United States citizen looking to move to China.”
“I also am trying to share information I learned during my career as an interrogator with the Chinese government,” he wrote.
“I have a current top-secret clearance, and would like to talk to someone from the Government to share this information with you if that is possible.” (Source: NY Post)
“I don’t talk about it often, but I learned some really terrible things about the American government while I was working in the Army, and I no longer feel safe living in America,” he wrote, according to the report.Not saying that the American government hasn't done some terrible things, but how is it that Schmidt wasn't familiar with the government of China?
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