Recently, Nozette, who had worked on the Clementine spacecraft in the 1990s, had been working on a NASA instrument that was on board India’s Chandrayaan-1 spacecraft, which recently found evidence of water on the Moon.The Washington Postreported on 26 October that Nozette had pleaded guilty in January to over-billing NASA and the Defense Department more than $265,000 for contracting work. The court documents were sealed because Nozette was cooperating with authorities in unrelated investigations into government corruption.
Nozette admitted that he used that money to help pay personal credit card bills, car loans and maintenance costs for his swimming pool. He faced at least two years in prison under federal sentencing guidelines, according to the plea papers.
The Justice Department in a statement announcing his arrest said that Nozette had worked at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory from approximately 1990 to 1999. Nozette held a special security clearance equivalent to the Defense Department Top Secret and Critical Nuclear Weapon Design Information clearances. Department of Energy clearances apply to access to information specifically relating to atomic or nuclear-related materials.