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Case File
d-19724House OversightOtherAlleged Snowden hack of NSA exam answers and career maneuvering
Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #020216
Pages
1
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0
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Summary
The passage repeats already‑public allegations about Edward Snowden stealing NSA exam answers and seeking a senior position, without new names, dates, or documents. It offers no actionable leads beyon Claims Snowden used Dell admin privileges to hack NSA exam files. Alleged that he stole the exam, aced it, and tried to leverage it for a Senior Executive Service rol Mentions a prior CIA incident in
This document is from the House Oversight Committee Releases.
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64
Two days after his 29" birthday dinner on June 21st, she described him playfully as a “goof.”
She wrote in her blog:”The universe is telling me something and I'm pretty sure it's saying get out,
Fuck you Hawaii.” In early July, she summed up her shaky situation with Snowden, in another
blog, writing: “I moved to Hawaii to continue my relationship with E. [but] it has been an
emotional roller coaster since I stepped off the plane.” She also found it odd that Snowden would
work on his computer at home hooded under a blanket, as she would later tell the FBI. She
diverted herself by organizing a pole dancing studio in the 400 foot garage of the house. She also
joined a New Age yoga studio called “Physical Phatness,” a local acrobatic performance group,
and, on Friday nights, pole-danced at the Mercury lounge in downtown Honolulu.
That same July, Snowden had other things on his mind, including an attempt to advance
himself. Although his position at Dell as a system administrator was a well-compensated one,
especially for a 29 year old with no formal education, it carried little prestige. He sat from 9 AM
to 5 PM in a windowless room watching a bank of monitors in the so-called “tunnel” at the NSA.
Many of those who worked him were, as he described them, “eighteen year old
soldiers. Presumably, they had little interest in discussing with him the weightier issues of the
world. Working as an outside contractor was also a dead-end job that hardly matched the vision
he had of himself in his Internet postings. In real life in a cubicle in the NSA, he decidedly was
not the “Wolfking Awesomefox” heroic image he had of himself in his dream vision.
Whatever his motive, he decided to apply for a position in the NSA itself. He apparently
believed that if he scored high enough in its entrance exam, the NSA would invite him to join it as
a Senior Executive Service officer, or SES, which was the civilian equivalent in rank and pay to a
flag officer in the US armed forces. To achieve this SES job, Snowden used his privileges as a
system administrator at Dell to hack into the NSA’s administrative files and steal the answers to
the NSA exam. As the NSA’s subsequent post mortem would find out, it was the first known
document that Snowden took at the NSA. But it was not the first time he had used his hacking
skills to attempt to advance himself. At the CIA in 2009, as he late said in Moscow, he had added
text to his annual evaluation in what he termed “a non-malicious way” to prove a point. His CIA
superior took a much darker view of that incident when the hack was detected, calling for an
investigation that, it will be recalled, ended Snowden’s CIA career. At the NSA his intrusion,
however, was not detected for almost a year. “He stole the [NSA] test with the answers, and he
took the test and he aced it,” former NSA Director Michael McConnell recounted in a 2013
interview, “He then walked into to the NSA and said you should hire me because I am this good
on the test.” The issue of why he attempted to gain entry into the upper ranks of the NSA in the
late summer of 2012 is less clear. If his Internet posting and Libertarian riffs are an indication of
his state of mind in 2012, he was hostile to the surveillance activities of the NSA. If so, it made
little sense he would seek a permanent career in the NSA. If this attempted career is considered in
light of the career move he made six months later in March 2013 which, as he himself admits, was
for the express purpose of getting at tightly-held documents stored on computers that were not
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