CIO

U.S. defense contractor arrested for giving U.S. secrets to Chinese operatives

During a routine secondary inspection by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP) personnel at Chicago's O'Hare Airport, Kevin Mallory was found to be carrying $16,500 after having declared he was not carrying over $10,000 on his customs forms. The Customs Officer allowed Mallory to amend his form, and Mallory went on his way.

This incident on April 21, 2017, was the beginning of the unraveling of Mallory's espionage relationship with the People's Republic of China's intelligence services (PRCIS). You see, when Mallory arrived in Chicago, he was arriving from Shanghai, China, where he had just completed a series of meetings with his PRCIS handlers. The U.S. Department of Justice announced Mallory's arrest on June 22, 2017, and made publicly available the criminal complaint against Mallory

Who is Kevin Mallory? According to the criminal complaint, Mallory is a 60-year-old, self-employed consultant working out of his home in Leesburg, Virginina. He is educated, a graduate of Bringham Young University, is fluent in Mandrin Chinese, and was active duty military from 1981-86. From 1987-90, Mallory worked within the U.S. Department of State, within the Diplomatic Security Service. He left the State Department in 1990 and went to work for a variety of U.S. defense contractors and on U.S. Army active duty deployments from 1990-2013. His foreign assignments included the PRC and Taiwan. His security clearance was terminated in 2012 when he left government service.

Mallory's clandestine relationship with the PRCIS

As the interview with Mallory continued, it was revealed that over several years, Mallory maintained a clandestine relationship with the PRCIS. The PRCIS used the Shanghai Academy of Social Science (SASS) as their operational cover mechanism for their engagement with Mallory. The SAAS cover arrangement served as appropriate rationale for Mallory's continued contact with PRC nationals and his periodic travel to China. 

Reading the criminal complaint and Mallory's description of his actions, there is no doubt Mallory was acting on behalf of the PRCIS as a fully witting and collaborative manner.

During his travels to China in March and April of 2017, Mallory was trained in the use of a clandestine piece of covert communications equipment. He was paid by the PRCIS $10,000 in March and $15,000 in April. The device was designed to capture messages and images and securely transmit the information from Mallory to his PRCIS contacts. During the short investigation, the FBI conducted multiple voluntary interviews with Mallory during which he described his clandestine relationship and how the covert communications device operated. 

When Mallory demonstrated the PRCIS device for the FBI, previously shared messages between Mallory and the PRCIS were exposed and viewed by the FBI special agents. These messages on the device contained U.S. government classified materials at the Secret and Top Secret level. Furthermore, it was clear Mallory was actively using the device during the month of May 2017 to communicate with the PRCIS. 

Those documents found on the device were later confirmed to have come from the government entity to which Mallory had been cajoling his former colleagues to make an introduction. The documents were fresh, not old documents, that he had secreted during his time within government. The governmental entity confirmed the classification of the documents at the Secret and Top Secret levels were still appropriate when the documents were transmitted to the Chinese in May 2017.

How much classified material did Mallory share?

What is not yet known is what or how much classified material Mallory provided to the PRCIS over the course of his three-year clandestine relationship. 

The obvious question: How did Mallory come to possess these documents? The answer, no doubt, is being investigated. There may be a trusted insider who has broken trust by providing to Mallory the classified documents, which Mallory shared onward with the PRCIS. 

This is yet another instance of an individual with clandestine ties to the PRCIS being arrested in 2017. In April, Candace Claiborne, a U.S. State Department employee was arrested and charged with espionage. She, too, had lived and worked within the PRC, had accepted and responded to direct tasking from her PRCIS contacts, and had been remunerated for her efforts. 

There is no doubt. The PRC intelligence activities in the U.S. and beyond have shown no signs of letting up. 

Originally Posted on CSO US