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Nuclear Engineer Arrested On Charges Of Espionage And Selling Restricted Data



Reports said that a nuclear engineer and his wife have been arrested in West Virginia on charges of espionage and selling restricted data.


It has been reported that the couple sold classified information regarding the designs of nuclear-powered warships to an individual they believed to represent a foreign nation for almost a year.


However, the contact was an undercover United States Federal Bureau of Investigation agent who sent payments for the data in cryptocurrency.


The report said that Jonathan and Diana Toebbe were apprehended by the FBI and the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) on Saturday. They will appear in federal court on Tuesday.


Attorney General Merrick B. Garland said:

“The complaint charges a plot to transmit information relating to the design of our nuclear submarines to a foreign nation.”

Likewise, Jonathan Toebbe served as a nuclear engineer assigned to the Naval Nuclear Propulsion Program and held active national security clearance through the US Department of Defense. In April 2020, the FBI became suspicious of Toebbe after spotting that he sent a package containing sample data and instructions on how to establish covert communications and purchase more information.


In June 2021, an undercover agent sent $10,000 in an unspecified cryptocurrency to Toebbe as “good faith” payment after receiving some sample data. The couple used a “dead drop” to hide an SD card containing more information inside half a peanut butter sandwich for which the agent paid a further $20,000 in crypto for the decryption keys. A second dead drop saw the FBI pay a further $70,000 worth of crypto to Toebbe in exchange for further data on US nuclear submarines.

The FBI nabbed the couple after a third drop was organized. The incident is not the first time US federal agencies have used cryptocurrency as part of investigations targeting criminal activity.


Thus, in August, the US State Department began offering compensation in the form of cryptocurrency through its “rewards for Justice” website in exchange for information leading to the capture of high-ranking foreign terrorism suspects.


Source: Cointelegraph


 

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