it gets you an A - with a bonus for answer #3

from Elevation
It seems like some of the sensative material in Jones' book fall in line with this law.
Perhaps true as to some data (Jones denies anything he wrote was classified); but the devil is in proving what you quote:

"intent to interfere with the operation or success of the armed forces of the United States or to promote the success of its enemies"
So, a specific intent crime - and if Jones' bio is even half true that intent seems skinny to me. We need more facts.

Some comments - which illustrate why there are agency contracts, the PRB and other bothersome "stuff".

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Sharon Scranage (Operations Support Assistant) - Wiki Bio

.... Soussoudis [her Ghanian intel officer boyfriend] was later exchanged for a number of Ghanaian CIA agents who had been arrested following their exposure by Scranage. ....
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sharon_Scranage

One wonders if she wasn't "honey-trapped". In any event, one network down the tubes from pillow talk.

She was prosecuted under the "Agee Act" - brief ref. to Agee here - elsewhere, there is lots of stuff on that saatana.

What Can You Say About A Spy?
Monday, Jul. 25, 2005
....
What was the original impetus behind creation of the act?
In two words, Philip Agee. ... CIA officer who spent most of his 11-year career in Latin America ... resigned in 1969... Agee wrote a 1975 memoir, Inside the Company: CIA Diary, featuring a 24-page appendix made up of agents' names and operations. Later that year Richard Welch, a CIA station officer in Athens, was assassinated....
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/ar...id=chix-sphere

Welch's death was not caused by Agee's book; but his death illustrated one of the dangers of disclosing the identity of officers and agents - Welch's identity was well known to terrorists in Greece.

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And, leave it to the Telegraph to give us a catchy headline:

The spies who loved. . . and lost their jobs
Last Updated: 12:01am BST 07/06/2007
James Bond may always get his girl, but when the women who spy for the CIA get their man they get sacked. Now they are suing the Agency for discrimination, they tell Toby Harnden ...
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/portal/ma...t/ftcia107.xml

And a long article (7 pp.) in US News on the "pillow talk" class action filed with EEOC by attorney Janine Brookner representing the plaintiffs. Draw your own conclusions.

Foreign Affairs
Does the CIA have a double standard when its spies cozy up to foreigners? Veteran female officers speak out.
By David E. Kaplan
Posted 4/22/07
http://www.usnews.com/usnews/news/ar...0422/30cia.htm

Didn't find a url to the EEOC case file - it is getting too late.

Sex, Sin - and I Spy - an unbeatable combo.

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And, since you nailed Pollard and Kadish, I can't dock you points for not reading my mind - I was thinking of the "AIPAC Case" - US v. Rosen, which can be found here:

http://www.fas.org/sgp/jud/aipac/index.html

Many pleadings - showing you what happens step by weary step in a Federal espionage case - starting at bottom with Larry Franklin's plea bargain.

If you have some time, they all would be worth reading - original docs beat what people say original docs say.