FORT MEADE, Md. — Tuesday's verdict means Pfc. Bradley Manning could face up to 136 years in prison for the largest leak of classified documents in U.S. history. Here is some other fallout from the case:
OTHERS WHO WERE DISCIPLINED
Other military careers were ruined besides Manning's. Fifteen people were disciplined as the result of an Army investigation into the whole affair. Officials decline to name them, tell what their misconduct was or how they were punished because of a long-standing policy of protecting the privacy of personnel, said Lt. Col. Stephen J. Platt, an Army spokesman.
But court documents and testimony revealed Manning's superiors ignored or mishandled his mental health and behavior problems — including numerous outbursts and an email he sent a superior with a photo of himself dressed as a woman. His problems should have disqualified him from going to Iraq and should have prompted the immediate suspension of his security clearance after he got there, the defense said. Witnesses also depicted an intelligence unit slightly out of control, with poor leadership and analysts playing music, movies and video games on their work computers in the war zone.
TIGHTENED COMPUTER SECURITY
The Defense Department is still working on tightening security. It has made it harder for one person acting alone to download material from a classified network and place it on an unclassified one. That is, the use of thumb drives, CDs and other removable media is now limited and must be approved by supervisors. Manning brought a rewritable CD labeled "Lady Gaga" to work, erased the music and downloaded government documents onto it.
The department is still implementing other steps such as a system to make it easier to trace action back to the user, a smart card system to limit access to government websites containing sensitive information, and a program to identify insider threats, said Lt. Col. Damien Pickart, a Pentagon spokesman.
DAMAGE TO NATIONAL SECURITY