Anonymous ID: 9046a2 Sept. 6, 2020, 1:53 p.m. No.10549046   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9133 >>9144

WikiLeaks' Julian Assange back in court for showdown over extradition to U.S. to face spying charges

 

The extradition hearing of WikiLeaks founder and publisher Julian Assange resumes in London on Sept. 7 after being postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic. Washington wants British authorities to extradite Assange to the U.S. to face a court over charges of conspiracy to commit computer intrusion. The Department of Justice has indicted him on 18 counts, alleging 17 forms of espionage and 1 instance of computer misuse crimes connected to WikiLeaks' dissemination of secret U.S. military documents provided to him by former U.S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning. Assange, 49, denies the charges and claims the U.S. documents WikiLeaks published in 2010 exposed war crimes and human rights abuses by the U.S. military in Iraq. WikiLeaks says the U.S. is trying to criminalize journalistic activity and if Assange is extradited it could have serious implications for First Amendment protections. The hearing is expected to run until Oct. 2.

 

How did we get here? Here are highlights of Assange's case and related events that have kept the Australian national in the news for over a decade:

 

Assange has been locked up at London's Belmarsh Prison, a facility that houses some of Britain's most dangerous lawbreakers, since May 2019. His lawyers say he is unwell with various respiratory problems and that his mental health is suffering.

Nils Melzer, the United Nations' special rapporteur on torture, said in a recent USA TODAY interview that when he visited Assange in May last year he was displaying symptoms akin to "psychological torture" likely caused by prolonged exposure to extreme stress, chronic anxiety and isolation.

Assange is in jail because he was found guilty of skipping bail in 2012, when he fled to Ecuador's embassy in London for diplomatic refuge rather than turn himself in to British authorities for possible extradition to Sweden. At the time, investigators in the Scandinavian country wanted to question him over sexual assault allegations.

Swedish prosecutors in 2019 dropped the sexual assault allegations against Assange, which included a claim of rape. Assange consistently denied the allegations and the UN's Melzer said that the police reports that underpinned the allegations were riddled with contradictions and possibly even exculpatory evidence, such as text messages that indicate one of the claimants didn't want to accuse Assange of anything and that it was the police who "made up the charges."

 

Assange's seven-year residency at Ecuador's poky red-brick embassy building, just yards from the famous luxury Harrods department store, came to an end amid a string of alleged transgressions by both sides. Ecuador says it kicked him out partly because of his unsocial behavior and because he was a constant source of distraction for embassy staff. Assange denies this and claims the U.S. was put under pressure by the Trump administration to expel him in return for improved relations with Quito.

When Assange left Ecuador's embassy in 2019 he was dragged by British police officers to a waiting van. He was sentenced to 50 weeks in prison for breaching bail in 2012. While he has now served this period, he remains in detention for the extradition hearing because prosecutors argued that he is a flight risk.

Assange describes himself as a political refugee. He maintains that he is a journalist and should be immune from prosecution and that his work revealed embarrassing and highly damaging facts about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and the detainees held at the U.S. base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. Assange's detractors say he doesn't write stories or interview anyone or provide sufficient explanatory context to the material WikiLeaks releases and that the dissemination of raw, unfiltered documents and data – the publication of stolen classified materials – should not count as journalism.

The First Amendment typically restrains the government from jailing, fining or imposing liability for what the press publishes. It does not shield journalists from criminal liability. Seventeen of the U.S. indictments against Assange are under the Espionage Act of 1917 and one is under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. The Trump administration's use of the espionage act breaks new legal ground because it is the first time it has been used to target a media organization as opposed to a government whistleblower, according to U.S. Press Freedom Tracker, a press freedom advocacy organization.

https://www.usatoday.com/story/news/world/2020/09/06/wikileaks-julian-assange-court-showdown-over-extradition-us/5701935002/