
Her case began the CIA #MeToo movement. A jury found the man she accused of assault not guilty
CNN
It was the first case in the CIA’s #MeToo moment — when a line of women who came to Capitol Hill beginning in early 2023 to report to Congress that they had been the victims of sexual assault or harassment while working at the agency.
It was the first case in the CIA’s #MeToo moment — when a line of women who came to Capitol Hill beginning in early 2023 to report to Congress that they had been the victims of sexual assault or harassment while working at the agency. Rachel Cuda, a trainee, was the first. Dozens more would follow. Her story was harrowing: She claimed that a fellow trainee had “strangled” her in a stairwell at the agency. That summer, a judge in Fairfax County, Virginia, found her alleged attacker guilty of misdemeanor assault in a bench trial. In more than a year since, courts in Virginia and Washington, DC, have returned two more guilty verdicts in trials of CIA officers accused of sexual misconduct. Congress issued a series of damning reports — and passed legislation reforming the agency’s processes for handling allegations of assault and harassment. For the first time, what victims say is a culture that protects predators had leaked into the public eye. Cuda’s story had started a movement. “I’m that first guy through the door. I can take this impact for you. Somebody’s gotta do it. Somebody has to go outside of the institution to shine a line on this—because this didn’t just happen to me,” she said in an interview with Elle published earlier this week.

The two men killed as they floated holding onto their capsized boat in a secondary strike against a suspected drug vessel in early September did not appear to have radio or other communications devices, the top military official overseeing the strike told lawmakers on Thursday, according to two sources with direct knowledge of his congressional briefings.












