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US charges naval officer over nuclear sub photos
by Staff Writers
New York (AFP) July 24, 2015


A 28-year-old US Navy serviceman has been charged with allegedly taking unlawful photographs of a nuclear submarine and trying to cover up evidence, prosecutors said Friday.

Kristian Saucier was arrested in May and released on a $100,000 bond, charged with unlawfully retaining photographs of the USS Alexandria and obstructing investigators.

In 2009, as a then machinist's mate, Saucier allegedly took photos on his cellphone of classified areas and equipment on board the vessel at a naval base in Groton, Connecticut.

In March 2012, his phone was found at a waste transfer station in Hampton, Connecticut, said Deirdre Daly, US attorney for the district of Connecticut.

After Saucier was questioned by the FBI and Navy investigators that July, Saucier destroyed a laptop, a personal camera and the camera's memory card, prosecutors said.

Pieces of a laptop were found in the woods on a property owned by a member of his family, they added.

Saucier is currently a Petty Officer First Class assigned to a naval base in Saratoga Springs, New York.

The charge of unauthorized retention of defense information carries a maximum sentence of 10 years and obstruction of justice 20 years.


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FLOATING STEEL
More acoustic sensor systems for U.S. submarines
Melbourne, Fla. (UPI) Jul 23, 2015
A follow-on contract to produce acoustic sensors used on 10 U.S. Navy Virginia-class submarines has been given to Harris Corporation. The value of the contract is $15 million. Deliveries will begin in September to Northrop Grumman, prime contractor for the submarines' Light Weight Wide Aperture Array system, or LWWAA. Harris' acoustic module assemblies help the LWWAA system provi ... read more


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