19
Total Mentions
15
Documents
1,062
Connected Entities
Surname reference in documents
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ay of the 9/11 attack, “Terrorist organizations around the world were already start- ing to modify their actions in light of what Snowden disclosed,” Morell wrote in 2015. “Within weeks of the [Snowden] leaks, com- @ munications sources dried up, tactics were changed.” Even more @ disturbing, suspects on
w with author. 134 The NSA had also notified: Former NSA executive who requested anonymity, interview with author. 136 NSA did not immediately share: Morell, Great War of Our Time, 283-88. 136 briefed by the NSA: See “Unclassified Declaration of David G. Leatherwood,” US. District Court for the District o
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ity, wrote that Snowden’s action went beyond taking the handful of documents, such as the FISA order, “that addressed the privacy issue.” Instead, as Morell put it, “he backed up a virtual tractor trailer and emptied a warehouse full of documents—the vast majority of which he could not possibly have read
of which he would likely understand—T[and] and he delivered the documents to a variety of news organizations and God knows who else.” _—_As a result, Morell concluded “Snowden’s disclosures will go down in history as the greatest compromise of classified information ever.” General Keith Alexander, the he
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War. But the Snowden breach exposing military sources was an order of magnitude greater than any past breach. The CIA’s assessment was no less grim. Morell, the deputy director of the CIA in 2013, wrote that Snowden’s action went beyond taking the handful of documents, such as the FISA order, “that addre
A briefer that it was urgent for the CIA to be brought in on the case. After all, the CIA had employed Snowden only four years earlier. Specifically, Morell said, the CIA needed to find out three things: Had CIA docu- ments been part of Snowden’s haul? How long had Snowden been stealing documents? Had Sno
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arrant to investigate U.S. citi- @ zens who use Tor. The NSA is hardly immune from an attack on its own computers. As the former CIA deputy director Morell wrote in his 2015 book, The Great War of Our Time, many financial institutions have “better cyber security than the NSA.” The Internet certainly help
her actors. “For our enemies, having it [the black budget] is like having the playbook of the opposing NFL team,” said the former CIA deputy director Morell in 2015. “I guarantee you that the SVR, the Russian foreign intelligence service, would have paid millions of dollars for such a document.” If unlike
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three decades at the agency." Petersen "recounts the agency's early assessments of unrest that led to the 1989 Tiananmen Square protests in China." Morell and Petersen "discuss the training CIA analysts receive and Petersen shares the remarks he would make to all entering analyst classes." EFTA0015011
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ted there 'were several incorrect factual statements in a government affidavit but not enough to negate probable cause." Former Deputy CIA Director Morell Says US Partners Or Allies Could Interfere In Our Elections. The Washington Examiner (10/31, Yilek, 448K) reports Michael Morell 'speculated that Am
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uire has sent a message to the IC workforce on the whistleblower, but I sure hope so because the whistleblower deserves his full-throated support." Morell added, '1 wanted to write my own note to the IC workforce and, indeed, to the American people. On Monday, a former US Attorney equated the whistle
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a former acting CIA director, casts light on the sourcing of the =irt in the Steele dossier. "I had two questions when I first =ead [the dossier]," Morell said in an NBC interview. "One=was, how did Chris [Steele] talk to these sources? I have subsequently =earned that he used intermediaries. I asked m
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e also continued to invite activists to his CryptoParties, and he openly advertised them on the Internet until 2013. The CIA’s former deputy director Morell, who reviewed the security situation at the NSA in 2014 as a mem- ber of President Obama’s NSA Review Committee, found that the NSA in the post-Cold
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lations.” (He was correct that Snowden had stolen a larger number of CIA documents that he had not turned over to journalists, as CIA deputy director Morell confirmed.) Whatever this material might reveal, the FSB was presumably aware of its existence. After all, Kucherena was on the FSB’s public oversig
COLLINS,J BARCLAY BOYD,RAYMOND M MONELL,EDMUND C MADDOCK,ESTATE PAUL L WERN
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s around the world were already starting to modify their actions in light of what Snowden disclosed. Communication sources dried up.” What heightened Morell’s concern about this loss of intelligence sources was the discovery a 26-page document on an ISIS computer in Syria indicating that the terrorist gro
, a former acting CIA director, casts light on the sourcing of the dirt in the Steele dossier. “I had two questions when I first read [the dossier],” Morell said in an NBC interview. “One was, how did Chris [Steele] talk to these sources? I have subsequently learned that he used intermediaries. I asked my
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oward Moscow have done little to quell concerns that Trump may be advancing Russian interests and is consistently shying away from rebuking Putin." Morell, Vickers Examine How "Normal" Administration Would Have Responded To Russian Bounty Intelligence. In a Washington Post (7/3, 14.2M) op-ed, former CI
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st to confirm." Sen Ron Wyden (D-OR) said, "No torture apologist can be confirmed as CIA director. ... It's a non-starter." The Daily Beast reports Morell's selection "would risk inflaming the Democratic Party's progressive wing." Morell "played a significant role in the hunt for Osama bin Laden - and

Barack Obama
PersonPresident of the United States from 2009 to 2017

Jeffrey Epstein
PersonAmerican sex offender and financier (1953–2019)

Donald Trump
PersonPresident of the United States (2017–2021, 2025–present)

Department of Justice
OrganizationUnited States Department of Justice, federal executive department responsible for law enforcement

Oliver Stone
PersonAmerican film director, screenwriter, and producer (born 1946)

Mitch McConnell
PersonAmerican politician and lawyer (born 1942)

Vladimir Putin
Person2nd and 4th President of Russia (2000-2008, 2012-present), 7th and 11th Prime Minister of Russia (1999-2000, 2008-2012), Director of the Federal Security Service (1998-1999) and Deputy Mayor of Saint Petersburg (1994-1996)

George Mitchell
PersonFormer U.S. Senator from Maine and special envoy, connected to Epstein through flight logs and social events

Bill Clinton
PersonPresident of the United States from 1993 to 2001 (born 1946)

George W. Bush
PersonPresident of the United States from 2001 to 2009

Virginia Giuffre
PersonAdvocate for sex trafficking victims (1983–2025)

Edward Snowden
PersonAmerican whistleblower and former NSA contractor (born 1983)

John Brennan
PersonDirector of the Central Intelligence Agency from 2013 to 2017

United States
LocationCountry located primarily in North America

Joe Biden
Person46th President of the United States (2021–2025)

Marc Rich
PersonAmerican commodities trader (1934–2013)

Woody Allen
PersonAmerican filmmaker, actor and comedian (born 1935)

Michael Flynn
PersonU.S. Army general and former U.S. National Security Advisor (born 1958)

Jesus Christ
PersonCentral figure of Christianity (6 or 4 BC – AD 30 or 33)

Hong Kong
LocationCity and special administrative region of China