An Army veteran was charged with sharing classified information about a special military unit at Fort Bragg with a journalist, according to court records unsealed Wednesday.
Courtney Williams, 40, of Wagram, North Carolina, was accused of violating a provision of the Espionage Act and multiple nondisclosure agreements. She appeared in federal court in Raleigh and was ordered held by the U.S. Marshals Service pending hearings early next week.
According to an FBI affidavit, Williams was cleared as a defense contractor in April 2010 and became a Department of Defense employee in November 2010. The affidavit said she worked as an operational support technician for a “special military unit,” handling tactics, techniques, and procedures used for sensitive missions.
The affidavit said her access to classified information was suspended after an internal investigation, and that she was debriefed in September 2015 and signed a nondisclosure agreement.
Federal authorities alleged Williams was in contact with an unnamed journalist from 2022 to 2025. The Justice Department said the two had more than 10 hours of calls and exchanged more than 180 messages.
Although the journalist and unit were not named in court filings, dates and details matched reporting and a book by Seth Harp about Delta Force. Williams was the subject of a 2025 Politico article by Harp, published alongside his book “The Fort Bragg Cartel,” which alleged sexual harassment and discrimination.
In a statement published by WRAL-TV, Harp called Williams “a brave whistleblower and truth-teller.” He said: “Former Delta Force operators disclose `national defense information’ on podcasts and YouTube shows every day, but the government is going after Courtney for the sole reason that she exposed sexual harassment and gender discrimination in the unit. This is a vindictive act of retaliation, plain and simple.”
The FBI affidavit quoted a text attributed to Williams sent around the time the article and book were published: “Other than a few factual errors, I would definitely have been concerned with the amount of classified information being disclosed. I thought things I was telling you so you could have a better general understanding of how the (SMU) was set up or operated would not be published and it feels like an entire TTP (Tactics, Techniques and Procedures) was sent out in my name giving them a chance to legally persecute me.”
The FBI said investigators had identified at least 10 batches of documents that Williams intended to provide to the journalist.