Now that 29-year-old Edward Snowden has revealed he is the person who leaked top secret documents about NSA surveillance, the question is—what will happen to him?
Snowden told The Guardian that his only motivation was to make the public aware of what was happening, there are hundreds of thousand of government contractors with similar access to classified information. A 2012 report on security clearance determinations showed 4.9 million people had security clearance and, of those, 483,263 contractors hold top secret clearances.
Republican Congressman Peter King of New York is calling on Snowden to be extradited to the United States and prosecuted if he leaked the documents.
“I’ve got a lot of questions, first of all what exactly is the clearance process that’s allowing this many people to have that, that type of clearance,” said Republican Rep. Bill Huizenga of Michigan on Jansing & Co. Monday.
Snowden worked out of the Hawaii office for the defense firm Booz Allen Hamilton at a $200,000 a year job contracting for the NSA. He sent documents copied from the firm and gave them to reporters, he’s now hiding out in Hong Kong.









