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A US intelligence contractor has pleaded not guilty to a charge of leaking a classified NSA report on Russian interference in the US elections to a media outlet, and a federal judge denied her request for bail.
Key points:
- She was denied bail after prosecutors cited the contents of a "disturbing" notebook
- Mr Trump says anyone found guilty of the charge should face the maximum sentence
- Ms Winner faces up to 10 years in prison
Reality Leigh Winner, 25, is accused of passing a top secret National Security Agency report to The Intercept while working as a contractor with the Pluribus International Corporation.
Winner was charged in a federal grand jury indictment on Wednesday with a single count of wilful retention and transmission of national defence information, a federal felony offence that carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison.
A federal judge ordered Winner remain held without bond after prosecutors argued during Thursday's three-hour hearing she posed a flight risk and danger to the public, citing what they called "disturbing" comments in a notebook of hers.
In one notation she wrote: "I want to burn the White House down", assistant US attorney Jennifer Solari told the judge.
The prosecutor said investigators also found the names of three Islamic extremists known to federal authorities listed in Winner's notebook.
According to a probable-cause affidavit filed in court by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), Winner admitted to intentionally printing a copy of the intelligence report in her office and mailing it to the news outlet.
The NSA document in question provided technical details on what it said were Russian attempts to hack US election officials and a voting-machine firm ahead of the presidential election in November, two officials with knowledge of the case confirmed.
'Not guilty, your honour'
The FBI affidavit said authorised disclosure of the document, "could reasonably result in exceptionally grave damage to the national security, and is marked as such".
Winner, shackled at the feet and wearing an orange jumpsuit in court, said little during the proceeding, except to reply, "Not guilty, your honour" when asked for her plea, and to answer "yes" and "no" to procedural questions put to her by the judge.
She became the first person charged with leaking classified information to the media under the administration of President Donald Trump.
Mr Trump, who has repeatedly vowed to crack down on leakers, believes anyone found guilty of unlawfully disclosing government secrets should be punished to the fullest extent of the law, White House spokeswoman Sarah Sanders said at a press briefing ahead of Winner's detention hearing.
First Amendment advocates have said they are concerned the Trump administration may use Winner's case to chill what they view as legitimate government whistleblowing.
They were also critical of the Obama administration's approach to leaks, including its pursuit of former NSA contractor Edward Snowden.
The case against Winner was announced less than an hour after The Intercept published the secret NSA document.
Reuters
Topics: world-politics, security-intelligence, courts-and-trials, donald-trump, united-states