Indian-American Scholar Ashley Tellis Indicted on 11 Espionage Act Counts

A federal grand jury has indicted prominent scholar Ashley Tellis on 11 counts of willful retention of national defense information. Prosecutors allege he kept classified documents, including material on Chinese nuclear capabilities, at his residence without authorization. Tellis, a former State Department adviser and National Security Council staffer, held a Top Secret security clearance. The indictment focuses on unauthorized retention, not transmission of the documents.

Key Points: Ashley Tellis Indicted on 11 Espionage Counts

  • 11 counts of retaining defense info
  • Classified docs on Chinese nuclear capabilities
  • Top Secret clearance alleged misuse
  • Charges span 2018 to 2025
  • Not accused of transmitting documents
3 min read

Ashley Tellis indicted on 11 Espionage counts in US Court

Former US adviser Ashley Tellis charged with willful retention of classified documents on Chinese nukes, foreign militaries. Details on the federal indictment.

"willfully retained 11 classified documents at his residence without authorization - US Indictment"

Washington, Feb 14

A federal grand jury in Virginia has returned a superseding indictment against prominent Indian American scholar and former US government adviser Ashley J. Tellis, charging him with 11 counts of willful retention of national defense information under the Espionage Act.

Filed on February 12 in the US District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, the new indictment replaces the earlier criminal complaint that led to Tellis's arrest in October 2025.

Federal prosecutors allege that from 2001 till October 11, 2025, Tellis was employed by the US Department of State and, at various times since 2003, served as a contractor at the Department of Defense. In connection with his government work, he held a Top Secret security clearance with access to Sensitive Compartmented Information.

According to the superseding indictment, Tellis removed, without authorization, US government property, including documents relating to national defense and other classified materials. The indictment states that many of the documents bore markings indicating they were classified at the Secret and Top Secret levels, including SCI information.

The grand jury alleges that Tellis willfully retained 11 classified documents at his residence without authorization. These documents, dated between 2018 and 2025, include material related to Chinese nuclear capabilities, assessments of foreign military forces, vulnerabilities of a US military facility, and projections of future nuclear capabilities of foreign governments.

Each of the 11 counts corresponds to a specific classified document that prosecutors say he retained unlawfully.

The indictment notes that at no point during the charged period did Tellis deliver or attempt to deliver the classified documents to any officer or employee of the United States entitled to receive them. The charges center on alleged unauthorized retention, not on transmission.

Prosecutors are seeking forfeiture of property traceable to the alleged offenses, including materials seized from Tellis's residence in October 2025 and any digital media or devices used to store such information.

Court records indicate that Tellis remains out on bond and is represented by retained counsel. Assistant US Attorney Seth Schlessinger is leading the prosecution.

Tellis, 64, was born in Bombay, India, and later became a US citizen. Over the past two decades, he has been a senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace and a well-known expert on US-India strategic relations. He previously served as a senior adviser at the State Department and held a role on the National Security Council during the George W. Bush administration, where he was associated with shaping the US-India civil nuclear agreement.

An indictment is an allegation. Tellis is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Very surprising. He was a respected voice on strategic affairs. The charges are about retention, not passing info to another country. Could be a case of negligence or oversight? The legal process must be fair.
S
Sarah B
As someone who followed his work, this is shocking. The indictment is very specific about dates and document types. The US takes its classified information protocols extremely seriously. Innocent until proven guilty, but the details look bad.
A
Aditya G
The timing is interesting. He was a key architect of the nuclear deal that brought India and US closer. Now, with documents on Chinese capabilities? Makes you wonder about the geopolitics at play behind the scenes. Hope he gets a fair trial.
M
Meera T
Regardless of his background, if you have a security clearance, you know the rules. Keeping classified docs at home for years is not a small mistake. It undermines the system. The law should apply equally to everyone, scholar or not.
K
Karthik V
Feel bad for his family. From Bombay to such heights and now this. But we must separate the individual from the alleged crime. Let's not jump to conclusions. The media trial has already begun.

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