Originally published July 31, 2010 at 6:23 PM | Page modified July 31, 2010 at 8:52 PM
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WikiLeaks suspect had help, hacker says
An Army private charged with leaking classified material to the whistle-blower website WikiLeaks had civilian help, a key figure in the case said Saturday.
The Associated Press
HAGERSTOWN, Md. — An Army private charged with leaking classified material to the whistle-blower website WikiLeaks had civilian help, a key figure in the case said Saturday.
The development, first reported in The New York Times, suggests an expansion of the government's investigation into leaks including more than 76,900 secret Afghanistan war records posted on WikiLeaks in the past week.
Army and FBI officials didn't immediately return calls and e-mails asking if they are looking at possible civilian accomplices of Army Pfc. Bradley Manning, who's charged under military law with leaking classified material.
Adrian Lamo, the Sacramento, Calif.-based computer hacker who turned in Bradley to military authorities in May, claimed in a telephone interview Saturday he had firsthand knowledge that someone helped Manning set up encryption software to send classified information to WikiLeaks.
Lamo, who's cooperating with investigators, wouldn't name the person but said the man was among a group of people in the Boston area who work with WikiLeaks. He said the man told him "he actually helped Private Manning set up the encryption software he used."
Lamo said the software enabled Manning to send classified data in small bits so that it would seem innocuous.
"It wouldn't look too much different from your average guy doing his banking on line," Lamo said.
He said Manning sent the data to get the attention of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
Assange didn't immediately respond to an e-mailed query from AP about Lamo's claim.
Also Saturday, a New York Times reporter who has been the newspaper's liaison with Assange, dismissed Assange's claim that WikiLeaks had offered to let U.S. government officials go through leaked documents to ensure that no innocent people were identified.
Assange told the Australian Broadcasting Corp. in an interview that aired Thursday that The New York Times had acted as an intermediary and that the White House hadn't responded to the offer.
Times reporter Eric Schmitt said that on the night of July 23, at White House spokesman's Robert Gibbs' request, he relayed to Assange a White House request that WikiLeaks not publish information that could lead to people being physically harmed.
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The next evening, Schmitt said, Assange replied in an e-mail that WikiLeaks was withholding 15,000 documents for review.
Schmitt said Assange wrote that WikiLeaks would consider recommendations made by ISAF — apparently meaning the U.S.-led United Nations International Security Assistance Force in Afghanistan — "on the identification of innocents for this material if it is willing to provide reviewers."
Schmitt said he forwarded the e-mail to White House officials and New York Times editors.
"I certainly didn't consider this a serious and realistic offer to the White House to vet any of the documents before they were to be posted, and I think it's ridiculous that Assange is portraying it that way now," Schmitt wrote.
On Friday, White House spokesman Tommy Vietor said it was "absolutely, unequivocally not true" that WikiLeaks had offered to let U.S. government officials go through the documents to make sure no innocent people were identified.
Manning is being held at the Quantico Marine Corps Base in Northern Virginia, awaiting possible trial on 12 offenses.
He is accused of leaking a helicopter-cockpit video from Iraq that WikiLeaks posted in April, and a classified cable from the U.S. Embassy in Reykjavik, Iceland, dated Jan. 13, 2010, that also has appeared on WikiLeaks.
Manning is also charged with illegally obtaining more than 150,000 classified State Department cables and leaking more than 50 of them.
It's not clear from the charges, though, whether the allegedly diverted documents were those published on the WikiLeaks site.
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