Woman Who Blew the Whistle on Delta Force Sexual Harassment Just Got Arrested Under the Espionage Act

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Courtney Williams, 40, of Wagram, North Carolina was arrested by the FBI yesterday and indicted today, charged with leaking classified national defense information under 18 U.S.C. § 793(d), a provision of the Espionage Act.
But here’s the backstory that makes this a lot more complicated than a simple leak case.

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Williams spent eight years inside Delta Force, one of America’s most secretive military units, where she held a Top Secret/SCI clearance and managed fake identities, cover passports, and front companies for covert operators. She talked to journalist Seth Harp, whose book “The Fort Bragg Cartel” was published in 2025 and included a detailed Politico feature about her experience inside the unit.

What she described in that book: She was one of a group of young, attractive women recruited to fill roles in Delta’s mission support troop, informally known throughout the unit as the “Cover Girls.” Supervisors made graphic sexual comments to her face and directed her to bend over so they could assess whether her underwear was visible through her pants. When she asked about deploying with the unit, her squadron commander told her she was hired for her “assets” and if operators wanted her overseas, it was to gang rape her. When she filed an EEOC complaint, they stripped her security clearance, moved her desk into a storage closet, and assigned her to proofread an 8-million-entry spreadsheet for over a year. She ultimately took a settlement and was medically retired.

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Now she is facing federal charges.

The journalist, Seth Harp, is not pulling punches. His statement: “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.”

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Williams apparently knew the risk. Court documents show she texted her mother after the book came out: “I might actually get arrested, and I don’t even get a free copy of the book.”

The DOJ says Williams had over 10 hours of phone calls and exchanged 180-plus text messages with Harp between 2022 and 2025, and that some of what ended up in print contained classified national defense information. Williams herself cited an Espionage Act provision in her messages and told someone she was “probably going to jail for life.”

The bigger question nobody wants to ask out loud: This case is dropping while Secretary of Defense Pete Hegseth, who has publicly argued women do not belong in special mission units, is overseeing the military. Williams’ story was directly cited in coverage questioning Hegseth’s fitness for office. The timing is not lost on observers.