The person who claims to have hacked an AOL e-mail account belonging to John Brennan, the director of the Central Intelligence Agency, has now released a small spreadsheet with alleged personal information for a number of former and current government officials. The sample includes phone numbers, social security numbers, e-mail addresses, and level of security clearance and employment status in some cases.

Ars has contacted several of the people on the list by phone, text, and e-mail, including Brennan and the former deputy director of intelligence at the CIA, Jami Miscik. A male voice responded to the number listed for Miscik, and when Ars asked for her, the voice said it was the wrong number and hung up. No others immediately responded.

Update (10/19, 5:45p CT): Twitter has suspended the @_CWA_ account through which the information was released.

Earlier on Monday, the hacker told the New York Post that he took sensitive documents contained within the AOL account, including Brennan's 47-page application for top-secret security clearance. CNN has since reported that the FBI and the Secret Service are investigating. CWA, the hacker who told the Post he was a high school student, claimed that he social engineered a customer service agent into giving up access to Brennan's AOL account. (Ars could not independently verify the claims.)

The hacker spoke to Ars through an encrypted chat. He said his motivation for perpetrating the hack was, "FreeGaza FreePalestine. Fuckin government funding terrorism." CWA claimed he was not Palestinian but rather was an Italian activist living in New York.

His written English contained noticeable errors.

He said he had not been contacted by anyone from the police or government.

Ars reached out to the Department of Homeland Security for comment, but spokesperson Sy Lee declined to elaborate beyond acknowledging the news reports. “We are aware of the media report, however as a matter of policy, we do not comment on the Secretary’s personal security.”