TEXAS
Weldon Marshall, 43, of the Dallas, Texas area, plead guilty on Monday to one count of unlawfully retaining highly sensitive classified defense information, according to officials.
U.S. District Judge George Hanks set sentencing for May 21. Marshall is facing up to 10 years in prison and a maximum $250,000 fine, officials said.
From the early 2000s, Weldon Marshall unlawfully retained classified items while he served in the U.S. Navy and while working for a military contractor.
Marshall served in the U.S. Navy from approximately January 1999 to January 2004, during which time he had access to highly sensitive classified material, including documents describing U.S. nuclear command, control and communications.
Those classified documents, including other highly sensitive documents classified at the secret level, were downloaded onto a compact disc labeled “My Secret TACAMO Stuff.”
He later unlawfully stored the compact disc in a house he owned in Liverpool.
After he left the Navy, Marshall worked for various companies that had contracts with the U.S. Department of Defense. He worked for such a contractor until his arrest in January 2017.
While employed with these companies, Marshall provided information technology services on military bases in Afghanistan, where he also had access to classified material, officials said.
During his employment overseas, and particularly while he was located in Afghanistan, Marshall shipped hard drives to his Liverpool, Texas, home. The hard drives contained documents and writings classified at the secret level of ground operations in Afghanistan, according to authorities.
Marshall has held a top secret security clearance since approximately 2003 and a secret security clearance since approximately 2002.