Former AFRL, NASIC contractor sentenced for taking 2,500 pages of classified information

A May 2019 Fairborn police search of Kemp’s 1231 Harmony Lane home — a search for a “marijuana growing facility” — led to Kemp’s admission that he had taken classified documents from work, FBI Special Agent Brandt Pangburn testified.

A May 2019 Fairborn police search of Kemp’s 1231 Harmony Lane home — a search for a “marijuana growing facility” — led to Kemp’s admission that he had taken classified documents from work, FBI Special Agent Brandt Pangburn testified.

A former Air Force contractor was sentenced to prison for reportedly taking about 2,500 pages of classified information.

Izaak Vincent Kemp, 35, of Fairborn, was sentenced to a year and one day, according to Acting U.S. Attorney Vipal J. Patel’s office.

Kemp pleaded guilty Feb. 25 in federal court.

Kemp was employed as a contractor at the Air Force Research Laboratory and U.S. Air Force National Air and Space Intelligence Center at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base.

“Despite having training on various occasions on how to safeguard classified material, Kemp took 112 classified documents and retained them at his home,” read a release from Patel’s Office.

The investigation began after Fairborn police searched Kemp’s Harmony Lane home on May 25, 2019, as part of a search for a marijuana growing facility.

Law enforcement officers found more than 100 documents containing about 2,500 pages of classified materials at the “secret” level, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

An FBI special agent said that Kemp admitted to printing the classified documents at work and bringing them home during a voluntary interview, documents stated.