An Australian judge yesterday sentenced a former army lawyer to more than five years in jail for stealing secret defense files on the Afghanistan war and leaking them to the media.
David McBride, who pleaded guilty in November last year to three charges of stealing and sharing military information, was given five years and eight months in prison, Australian media reports said.
McBride must serve a minimum of two years and three months before being eligible for parole, they said, after the ruling by Justice David Mossop at the Supreme Court of the Australian Capital Territory in Canberra.
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Australian Broadcasting Corp (ABC) said it used the leaked material for the Afghan Files, a 2017 series alleging that Australian soldiers were involved in the illegal killings of unarmed men and children in Afghanistan.
McBride’s lawyer, Mark Davis, said outside the court he would be launching an appeal, a decision greeted by applause from a gathering of supporters.
The appeal would be based on the question of what “duty” means, he said.
McBride had pleaded guilty in November last year to three charges of stealing and leaking military information to journalists at the ABC.
He made the plea after his lawyers reportedly failed to convince the judge that his oath of military service gave him a duty to reveal information if it was in the public interest.
After the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks, more than 26,000 Australian uniformed personnel were sent to Afghanistan to fight alongside US and allied forces against the Taliban, al-Qaeda and other armed Islamist groups. Australian combat troops left the country in 2013, but since then, a series of often-brutal accounts have emerged about the conduct of Australia’s elite special forces units. They range from reports of troops killing a six-year-old child in a house raid, to a dead foe’s hand being severed, to a prisoner being shot dead to save space in a helicopter.
The Afghan Files revelations led police to investigate its reporter, Daniel Oakes, and his producer, Sam Clark, for obtaining classified information — even raiding the broadcaster’s Sydney headquarters, before dropping the case.
In November 2020, a years-long public inquiry reported that Australia’s elite special forces “unlawfully killed” 39 civilians and prisoners in Afghanistan, including by summary execution as part of initiation rituals.
It recommended that 19 individuals be referred to Australian Federal Police, compensation be paid to the families of victims and that the military carry out a slew of reforms.
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