Longtime FBI agent charged with disclosing classified records


A longtime FBI agent has been charged with unlawfully taking and disclosing classified FBI files, according to court records reviewed by CBS News. Johnathan Buma, who specialized in national security and terror cases, has been released on $100,000 bond, with orders to appear in court in Los Angeles.

Buma was arrested as he boarded an international flight at JFK airport in New York, according to charging documents. The Justice Department’s filings allege Buma printed of caches of FBI records from an internal agency network. Nearly 130 files might have been compromised, according to an FBI investigators. The government argues the records were clearly marked as confidential or secure and were copied by Buma in the hours before he left his job in the bureau in October 2023.

Read more…
Source: CBS News


Sign up for our Newsletter


Related:

  • FBI: Criminal Actors Use Business Email Compromise to Steal Large Shipments of Food Products and Ingredients

    December 15, 2022

    The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the Food and Drug Administration Office of Criminal Investigations (FDA OCI), and the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) are releasing this joint Cybersecurity Advisory (CSA) to advise the Food & Agriculture sector about recently observed incidents of criminal actors using business email compromise (BEC) to steal shipments of food ...

  • ‘Why wasn’t there a back-up plan?’: After One Brooklyn Health cyber attack, community leaders demand answers

    December 15, 2022

    Nearly a month after a cyber attack left the One Brooklyn Health system compromised, elected officials and medical professionals gathered outside of Brookdale Hospital Medical Center to call for additional resources — and to get the healthcare system’s three hospitals back online. “I am asking for resources and answers into this cyber attack that has crippled ...

  • Sting op takes down 50 DDoS-for-hire domains

    December 15, 2022

    Police around the globe have seized as many as 50 internet domains said to be involved in tens of millions of distributed-denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks worldwide. Seven people were collared during the swoop. The so-called “booter” websites sold “some of the world’s leading DDoS-for-hire services,” allowing paying customers to launch these networking-flooding cyberattacks against chosen victims, according ...

  • California Department of Finance dealing with cybersecurity incident; no state funds compromised

    December 12, 2022

    An investigation is underway after a cybersecurity incident involving the California Department of Finance. The California Cyber Security Integration Center (Cal-CSIC) confirmed the incident on Monday but offered few specifics. Officials did note, however, that no state funds had been compromised. Read more… Source: MSN News  

  • UK arrests five for selling ‘dodgy’ point of sale software

    December 12, 2022

    Tax authorities from Australia, Canada, France, the UK and the USA have conducted a joint probe into “electronic sales suppression software” – applications that falsify point of sale data to help merchants avoid paying tax on their true revenue. A Friday announcement from the Joint Chiefs of Global Tax Enforcement (known as the J5), states that ...

  • US Health Dept warns of Royal Ransomware targeting healthcare

    December 8, 2022

    The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) issued a new warning today for the country’s healthcare organizations regarding ongoing attacks from a relatively new operation, the Royal ransomware gang. The Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center (HC3) —HHS’ security team— revealed in a new analyst note published Wednesday that the ransomware group has been behind ...