Brian Patrick Regan

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MSgt. Brian Patrick Regan

United States Air Force

October 23, 1962-
Place of birth Queens, New York
Allegiance Flag of the United States United States of America
Service/branch Flag of the United States Air Force United States Air Force
Years of service 1980–2000
Rank Master Sergeant
Unit Air Force Intelligence Support Group at the Pentagon

Brian Patrick Regan is a former Master Sergeant in the United States Air Force who was convicted of offering to sell secret information to foreign governments.

Regan worked at the National Reconnaissance Office in Chantilly, Virginia, and was a signals intelligence specialist. He is reported to have been heavily in debt, and sought to gain money by selling information to Iraq, Libya, and China. Regan is claimed to have written a letter to Saddam Hussein, in which he expresses the view that his services are not adequately appreciated ("I feel that I deserve more than the small pension I will receive for all the years of service at the CIA"), and offers to sell secret information for US$13 million in Swiss francs. Another letter is alleged to have been sent to Muammar al-Gaddafi of Libya.

In August 2001, Regan was arrested by the FBI at Dulles International Airport in Washington, preparing to board a flight to Zurich in Switzerland. He was carrying classified documents and contact information for Iraqi, Libyan, and Chinese embassies in Switzerland. His trial began in January 2003, and prosecutors sought the death penalty (the first time it would have been used for espionage since Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were executed by electric chair in 1953). The following month, he was found guilty on three counts of attempted espionage, but the jury declined to impose the death penalty. Instead, he was sentenced to life imprisonment without parole in March of that year.

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