The accused of leaking Pentagon information wanted to kill a lot of people”

A judge has postponed the decision whether members of the Massachusetts National Air Guard, accused of extracting highly classified military information, should be held in prison until his trial. Massachusetts National Air Guard member held an arsenal and spoke of <x0 violence and murder” on a platform [...]
A judge has postponed the decision whether members of the Massachusetts National Air Guard, accused of extracting highly classified military information, should be held in prison until his trial. The member of the Massachusetts National Air Guard, held an arsenal of weapons and spoke of “rape and murder” on a social media platform, and that he would like to kill “many people”, prosecutors said Thursday, arguing that 21-year-old Jack Teixeira should stay in jail until his trial.
But the judge at the custody session of accused Teixeira postponed an immediate decision whether he should be held in custody or released in house isolation or under other conditions. Teixeira left the court in handcuffs, waiting for the verdict.
Judicial documents raise new questions about why Teixeira had such a high security permit and access to some of the country's most classified secrets. They said he may still have materials that have not been published, which may be of exceptional value to hostile states that can offer him a safe place and try to facilitate his escape from the United States”.
At the Teixeira detention session, magistrate David Hennessey expressed scepticism about defence arguments that the government has never indicated that Teixeira intended for the resulting information to be widely distributed.
Someone under the age of 30 has no idea that when you put something on the Internet, it could end up anywhere in this world? “Seriosis?”
One possibility is that the judge can order Teixeira to close in his father's house while awaiting trial if he is not held in prison. In questioning the session, his father, Jack Michael Teixeira, said he was aware that if his son were to violate the terms of release or isolation at home, he would have to report it. Michael Teixeira said he owns firearms, but there is no one in his house anymore.
The court documents asking a federal judge to keep Teixeiras in custody detailed a disturbing story since high school, where he was suspended when a classmate heard him discussing a Molotovian cocktail and other weapons, as well as racial threats. Recently, prosecutors said, he used his government computer to investigate mass shooting and clashes with federal agents.
It remains a serious threat to national security and a flight risk, prosecutors wrote. Investigators are still trying to determine whether he has kept any physical or digital copies of classified information, including files that have not already appeared publicly.
The statement submitted to the court also alleges that Jack Teixeira was dictated on April 6th the day the New York Times published for the first time a writing about the flow of documents (6) looking for the word “flow” into a classified system. The FBI says it lets him understand that Teixeira was trying to find information on the investigation in finding responsibility for the leaks.












