Navy spy blames marriage heartbreak for betrayal
Sub-Lt. Jeffrey Delisle says he 'committed professional suicide'
CBC News
Posted: Oct 23, 2012 5:43 PM AT
Last Updated: Oct 23, 2012 7:54 PM AT
Court documents about the man at the centre of an international espionage embarrassment show that Sub-Lt. Jeffery Paul Delisle attributes his actions, in part, to the breakdown of his marriage.
Delisle, a naval officer stationed in Halifax, pleaded guilty in Nova Scotia provincial court earlier this month to selling military secrets to Russia.
Court documents obtained by CBC News paint a picture of heartbroken man struggling with a failed marriage.
"The love of my life since high school stuck it in my heart. It was, it was really, really, really, really hard," Delisle told an RCMP interrogator.
"I needed to be spontaneous. Raising kids for 20 years and going through what I went through with my wife, I was, I went through a period where I just decided I want to do it," he said.
'Professional suicide'
In total, the interrogation lasted close to four hours. After hours of talk, RCMP Sgt. Jim Moffat told the spy the police had copies of his emails to Russia.
"There is no doubt, no doubt on my mind Jeff, that you did transmit classified documents illegally to Russia," said Moffat.
"I am so dead. I, everyone, my wife that I loved for so long, killed me. Killed me," said Delisle. "So I committed professional suicide."
Sub-Lt. Jeffrey Paul Delisle covers his face leaving a Halifax court earlier this moneth where he pleaded guilty to breach of trust and two counts of passing information (Steven Puddicombe/CBC)Delisle told Moffat he didn't do it for the $3,000 a month.
The exhibits show he had access not only to military secrets, but also files ranging from the Canadian Security Intelligence Service and RCMP to the Privy Council Office.
CSIS said it doesn't know what data on international operations Delisle smuggled out on a thumb drive.
The intelligence agency said the leaks have caused severe and irreparable damage to Canadian interests.
Walked into Russian Embassy with offer
Delisle's career as a spy started in 2007 when he walked into the Russian Embassy in Ottawa, the day he said his wife cheated, and offered to sell secrets to that country's military intelligence agency, known as GRU.
He was then posted to the security unit HMCS Trinity, an intelligence facility at the naval dockyard in Halifax. While there he worked on a system called the Stone Ghost linking the "Five Eyes" allies: the United States, Britain, Australia, New Zealand and Canada.
Information presented at Delisle's bail hearing detailed how he would browse for material on the secure computer at Trinity, save it in the notepad feature, then transfer it to a floppy disc and thumb drive.
Delisle pleaded guilty, but he has not yet been sentenced. His sentencing hearing is set for two days in early January.
Share Tools
Latest Nova Scotia News Headlines
- Speaker of the House speaks about Zinck's resignation
- Speaker of the House Gordie Gosse talks to CBC News about former MLA Trevor Zinck's resignation. more »
- Missing woman's relationship was ending, say friends
- Friends of a woman who disappeared three months ago say Reita Jordan's relationship with her live-in partner, the man charged with second-degree murder in her disappearance, was coming to an end. more »
- Rash of Dartmouth break-ins terrifies neighbourhood
- A young Dartmouth mother had a terrifying encounter Tuesday night in her home after surprising a brazen thief in her kitchen. more »
- Trevor Zinck held on to MLA seat until bitter end
- Trevor Zinck, the embattled MLA who pleaded guilty to fraud and breach of trust earlier this month, told CBC News he won't resign from the legislature. more »
Must Watch
Top News Headlines
- Obesity now recognized as a disease
- The American Medical Association has voted to recognize obesity as a disease, while doctors in Canada say they also treat it as such. more »
- B.C. First Nation sets fires to save bison
- A First Nation band is reviving the age-old practice of controlled burning in order to improve the health of forests and restore the population of the wood bison in a corner of northeastern B.C. more »
- 1 in 8 bird species threatened with extinction
- One in eight bird species worldwide faces the threat of extinction, according to a report released by Birdlife International. more »
- Canada buys rare War of 1812 collection for $573K
- The government of Canada was the winning bidder for a large collection of letters, maps and other papers that once belonged to Sir John Sherbrooke, the lieutenant-governor of Nova Scotia who conquered Maine for the British during the War of 1812. The collection sold for $573,000 at auction in London. more »
- Imperial Oil refinery in Dartmouth to close
- Trevor Zinck held on to MLA seat until bitter end
- Trevor Zinck resigns
- Digby man blames race for police assault
- Strangers rally to buy quadriplegic man a wheelchair van
- Man charged with 2nd-degree murder in Reita Jordan case
- Co-workers fundraise for crash victim's family
- Man, 21, dies in northern Cape Breton crash
- Rash of Dartmouth break-ins terrifies neighbourhood

