The US Air National Guardsman accused of leaking a trove of classified US documents was hauled to court Friday April 14, on federal charges — and he even told his dad he loved him during the brief hearing.
Jack Teixeira appeared in a Boston court where he was
officially charged with unauthorized detention and transmission of
national defense information and unauthorized removal of classified
information and defense materials. The charges carry sentences of up to
10 and five years, respectively.

The 21-year-old who was shackled and wore prison khakis was ordered to be held until a detention hearing next Wednesday, April 19.
Teixeira
was arrested by heavily armed federal agents outside his North Dighton,
Massachusetts home on Thursday, April 13. following a weeklong probe
into the release of secret government records online.

He is alleged to have accessed the highly classified materials through his guardsman position and then shared it with members of the private Discord chat group that he was in charge of earlier this year.
The
classified materials, which included battlefield information related to
the war in Ukraine, South Korea and Israel, were eventually posted on
other social media channels before going viral.
Teixeira
didn’t enter a formal plea during Friday’s proceedings and only
responded quietly when the judge informed him of his rights.
During the hearing, his father shouted out “I love you, Jack.” Teixeira did not turn around but replied “I love you dad,” Fox News reported.
Teixeira’s access to government systems and security clearance has been revoked in the wake of his arrest.
According to an affidavit unsealed Friday, social media site, Discord’s billing records and interviews with another user helped the FBI identify Teixeira as the alleged leaker.
The user, who isn’t identified
in the affidavit, told the FBI that a Discord username linked to
Teixeira started posting what appeared to be classified information
around December.
Teixeira, who had allegedly initially typed
out the documents to share with his online pals, started taking them
home and photographing them because he was “concerned that he may be
discovered making the transcriptions of text in the workplace,” the
affidavit says.
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