Vault 7 inquiry: CIA data leak suspect named by media

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Image copyrightAFP/GettyImage caption CIA cyber-warfare tools were leaked to Wikileaks in 2017 A former
CIA software engineer is the prime suspect in the leaking of a stolen archive of spy agency's secrets last year, US media have
revealed.However after searching his home, prosecutors charged Joshua Schulte, 29, with having 10,000 child abuse images.He denies the
charges and remains suspected of leaking extensive CIA data to anti-secrecy website Wikileaks.In March 2017, Wikileaks published thousands
of documents detailing the spy agency's cyber-warfare programme.Mr Schulte designed malware used to break into terrorism suspects' and other
targets' computers for the CIA for six years
He quit the spy agency in 2016 to work in the private sector.The 2017 breach, codenamed Vault 7, details how the CIA can take over iPhones
through malware and turn smart TVs into surveillance devices and is believed to be the agency's largest leak of classified documents.US
federal agencies launched a criminal investigation at the time and, according to US media, the software engineer's home in New York City was
searched within a week.Agents suspected Mr Schulte of distributing "national defence information" and told a court they had retrieved "NSA
and CIA paperwork", as well as electronic devices including a computer, tablet and phone, the New York Times reports.However six months
later in August, instead of charging him for the Vault 7 leak, US prosecutors indicted him on unrelated child pornography charges.They
allege messages sent by Mr Schulte suggest he was aware of illicit pictures being hosted on a server he created as a business while a
university student in 2009.The software engineer, who denies the charges, is currently being held in a Manhattan jail after violating his
bail terms
Mr Schulte's family lawyers have made repeated demands for prosecutors to either indict or clear their client of the Vault 7 allegations
A US prosecutor said in January the investigation was still continuing and that Mr Schulte remained "a target of that investigation", the
Washington Post reports, quoting court documents.Last week, prosecutors said in court they planned to file a new indictment in the next 45
days, while his lawyer asked the judge to impose a deadline on any espionage-related charges.Both the CIA and the US justice department are
yet to comment.