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retired1212
10-31-05, 01:12 PM
HONOLULU - An engineer who calls himself the father of the technology that protects the B-2 stealth bomber from heat-seeking missiles has been arrested and accused of selling U.S. military secrets involving the aircraft to a foreign country, the FBI said. Noshir S. Gowadia, 61, of Haiku was arrested Wednesday.

According to the FBI, Gowadia in 2002 faxed a document detailing infrared technology classified top secret by the Air Force to a foreign official. He also provided classified information to two other countries, the FBI said.

The government would not identify the countries or disclose how much he allegedly received.

Gowadia was an engineer with Northrop Grumman Corp. from 1968 to 1986 and had helped design parts of the B-2's propulsion system that make the bomber difficult to be seen by enemy missiles. The technology remains highly classified.

He was jailed without bail on a charge of willfully communicating national defense information to a person not entitled to receive it, an offense punishable by up to 10 years in prison.

It was not immediately known whether he had a lawyer.

According to state records, Gowadia and his wife own an engineering and consulting company.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20051027/ap_on_re_us/military_secrets

Konovalov
10-31-05, 01:22 PM
I wonder to which country he sold secrets? :hmm:

Kapitan
10-31-05, 04:02 PM
$50 its to russia they been wanting that tech for years and willing to pay millions

darksythe
11-01-05, 02:21 AM
he should be be put to death for treason. Unfortunatly this is not a time of war so that wont happen.

Kapitan
11-01-05, 10:13 AM
in the UK

Treason

conspiring to over throw the government

and desertion in a millatery engaugement

still carry death sentances

Gizzmoe
11-01-05, 10:43 AM
in the UK

Treason

conspiring to over throw the government

and desertion in a millatery engaugement

still carry death sentances

That´s not correct.

"27th January 1999. The Home Secretary (Jack Straw) formally signed the 6th protocol of the European Convention of Human Rights in Strasbourg, on behalf of the British government formally abolishing the death penalty in the UK. It had been still theoretically available for treason and piracy up to 1998 but it was extremely unlikely that even if anyone had been convicted of these crimes over the preceding 30 years that they would have actually been executed."