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Keyword: brianregan

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  • Jury to Decide Penalty in Regan Spy Case (Another Commie Spy Convicted!!!)

    02/21/2003 8:29:49 AM PST · by HighRoadToChina · 10 replies · 189+ views
    Associated Press ^ | February 21, 2003 | JONATHAN D. SALANT
    Feb 21, 5:19 AM EST Jury to Decide Penalty in Regan Spy Case By JONATHAN D. SALANT Associated Press Writer ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -- A federal jury convicted Brian Patrick Regan of attempted espionage, but could not decide whether the retired Air Force master sergeant should face the death penalty. The U.S. District Court jury adjourned Thursday without resolving the final issue of Regan's espionage trial: whether he offered secrets so crucial to national security that they warrant a death sentence. Deliberations were scheduled to resume Monday. Regan was convicted Thursday of offering to sell U.S. intelligence information to Iraq...
  • Regan Convicted of Attempted Espionage

    02/20/2003 2:11:36 PM PST · by Indy Pendance · 21 replies · 237+ views
    AP ^ | February 20, 2003 | JONATHAN D. SALANT
    ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) -- Former Air Force Master Sgt. Brian Patrick Regan was convicted Thursday of offering to sell U.S. intelligence information to Iraq and China. He was acquitted of attempted spying for Libya. The U.S. District Court jury deliberated 24 hours over five days before returning the verdict.The jury resumed deliberations on whether Regan offered Iraq documents concerning nuclear weaponry, military satellites, war plans or other major U.S. weapons systems.If the jury finds that he offered those secrets, he could be subject to the death penalty. Jurors would hear a second round of testimony to consider such a sentence.Regan,...
  • Jurors deliberate fate of spy suspect - Regan may be executed if found guilty

    02/11/2003 10:24:55 AM PST · by weegee · 3 replies · 259+ views
    AP via Houston Chronicle ^ | Feb. 10, 2003, 8:39PM | By JONATHAN D. SALANT
    ALEXANDRIA, Va. -- Jurors began weighing spy suspect Brian Patrick Regan's guilt or innocence Monday after prosecutors argued that, for $13 million, he would have sold Iraq or Libya "whatever they would have paid for." Defense attorneys said the information he carried when arrested would not have helped Iraq, Libya or China and could readily have been found in public sources. The jury deliberated about an hour, then broke for the night. Members were to take today off and resume deliberations on Wednesday. Regan, of Bowie, Md., has denied that he tried to sell classified information. The retired Air Force...
  • As spy trial nears end, U.S. argues retired Air Force master sergeant betrayed nation

    02/10/2003 10:30:27 AM PST · by hoosierskypilot · 2 replies · 132+ views
    Modesto Bee ^ | 2/10/03 | John Salant
    <p>ALEXANDRIA, Va. (AP) - Government prosecutors, summing up their case against a retired Air Force man suspected of spying, maintained Monday that Brian Patrick Regan "betrayed his country" with a willingness to sell classified information to Iraq, Libya and China. The 40-year-old Regan would have harmed his country for $13 million, the government contended, as Regan's espionage trial wound down in this suburb of the nation's capital.</p>
  • Government says it will seek death penalty in attempted espionage case

    04/19/2002 2:34:08 PM PDT · by Oldeconomybuyer · 29 replies · 165+ views
    Associated Press ^ | 4-19-02 | TED BRIDIS
    <p>WASHINGTON (AP) -- Government lawyers told a federal judge Friday they intend to seek the death penalty if they win a criminal conviction against a retired Air Force master sergeant on charges he tried to spy for Iraq, Libya and China.</p>
  • Jury Rules Out Death Penalty for Failed Spy

    02/25/2003 12:37:57 AM PST · by JohnHuang2 · 112+ views
    New York Times ^ | Tuesday, February 25, 2003 | By CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS
    February 25, 2003 Jury Rules Out Death Penalty for Failed SpyBy CHRISTOPHER MARQUIS ASHINGTON, Feb. 24 — A federal worker who was convicted last week of trying to sell secrets to Iraq and China will not face the death penalty, a jury decided today. The former Air Force master sergeant, Brian P. Regan, who worked for the intelligence agency that operates American spy satellites, was found guilty last week of attempted espionage and collecting secret information. Federal prosecutors had sought the death penalty. They said their posture reflected a determination by Attorney General John Ashcroft and other top officials to...
  • FBI Uncovers Thousands of Classified Documents Buried by Convicted Spy

    07/29/2003 6:26:04 AM PDT · by AmericanMade1776 · 2 replies · 152+ views
    FOX NEWS ^ | JULY 28,2003
    Monday, July 28, 2003 WASHINGTON — The FBI has dug up thousands of pages of classified documents authorities say were buried by Brian Regan (search), a former Air Force master sergeant serving a life sentence for attempting to sell U.S. secrets to Saddam Hussein (search) and others. The roughly 10,000 pages of documents, as well as videotapes and CD-ROMs, were taken by Regan while he worked at the National Reconnaissance Office (search), which operates the nation's spy satellites. They were buried at undisclosed locations in the Washington area, officials said. Three federal officials, speaking Monday on condition of anonymity, said...
  • FBI Finds Documents Buried by Spy - Post

    07/28/2003 11:58:25 PM PDT · by yonif · 11 replies · 111+ views
    Reuters ^ | Tue July 29, 2003 01:18 AM ET
    WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Federal investigators have dug up thousands of pages of classified documents at more than 10 locations in the Washington area buried by convicted spy Brian Regan, the Washington Post reported on Tuesday. "It's pretty explicit information" that could be "very damaging," one source was quoted as saying to the newspaper. The FBI found the items were buried in parks and other secluded areas throughout Virginia and Maryland just outside the nation's capital. Among the documents are a CD-ROM with a manual on U.S. spy satellites and their orbits, the paper said. The newspaper said that Regan, currently...
  • The Big Dig (FBI Searches for Buried Documents of Potentially Classified Information)

    07/28/2003 8:07:51 AM PDT · by Pan_Yans Wife · 28 replies · 508+ views
    ABC news ^ | July 28, 2003 | By Pierre Thomas and Risa Molitz
    Former Air Force intelligence officer Brian Regan, who was convicted of trying to spy for Saddam Hussein and China, buried thousands of pieces of potentially classified information at undisclosed locations in the Washington metropolitan region, sources told ABCNEWS. The information includes more than 10,000 pages of documents, slides and videos — some of which pertain to satellites and early warning systems, according to sources. This disclosure raises important questions about the security of supposedly secure U.S. institutions housing the nation's most sensitive secrets. Officials are scrambling to figure out how Regan got so much material out of government sites, the...
  • Former Analyst Spared Execution in Iraq Spy Case (Regan)

    02/24/2003 3:00:05 PM PST · by Jean S · 25 replies · 202+ views
    Reuters ^ | 2/24/03 | Deborah Charles
    ALEXANDRIA, Va. (Reuters) - A former Air Force intelligence analyst who has been found guilty of attempted spying for Iraq will not face the death penalty, a jury decided on Monday in a blow to the U.S. government. A 12-person federal jury, which last week found Brian Regan guilty of attempted espionage and of gathering national defense information, spared his life after five days of deliberation. The jury decided that Regan, 40, had not tried to provide certain specific military secrets to Iraq -- data deemed important enough to warrant a possible death sentence. Regan's lawyers praised jurors for making...