Anonymous ID: 3aaef4 Nov. 4, 2022, 6:22 a.m. No.17720848   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0850 >>0978 >>0994

>>17706150 (pb)

Ex-U.S. fighter pilot Daniel Edmund Duggan to "vigorously" fight extradition from Australia on sealed charges

 

AFP - NOVEMBER 4, 2022

 

Sydney — A former U.S. fighter pilot detained in Australia under a veil of secrecy will "vigorously" fight his extradition to the United States and is seeking the intervention of an intelligence watchdog, his lawyer said Friday. Ex-U.S. Marine Daniel Edmund Duggan was arrested in Australia on October 21, the same week the British government issued a rare warning about China's recruitment of retired military pilots.

 

The Australian government has confirmed Duggan, 54, was arrested at Washington's request, although U.S. authorities have refused to say more and the charges remain sealed.

 

Duggan was a "well-regarded" fighter jet pilot, a fellow ex-Marine has told AFP, and had recently worked in China training commercial flight crew.

 

Defense lawyer Dennis Miralis said he would file a complaint about the conduct of Australian intelligence officers during Duggan's arrest. Miralis said Duggan's extradition should be put on hold until that complaint was resolved by Australia's intelligence watchdog.

 

"We will be filing a complaint with the Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security, who deals with complaints against national security officials," Miralis told reporters. "Mr. Duggan is an Australian citizen. We ask the U.S. not to interfere."

 

Miralis, speaking outside Sydney Local Court after a brief administrative hearing, did not elaborate on what the complaint might cover.

 

He criticized the U.S. government's approach to Duggan's arrest, saying he still did not know much about the charges.

 

"There is no factual material that has been provided supporting the way he was indicted secretly in the U.S.," he said.

 

Duggan, a father of six, had recently returned from China when he was arrested in the rural town of Orange, about a four-hour drive west of Sydney.

 

Miralis said Duggan was a "proud Australian" and no longer held U.S. citizenship.

 

"He denies breaching any U.S. law, any Australian law, and any international law," Miralis said. "This is a position he will defend vigorously."

 

Duggan's company website says he spent more than a decade flying in the U.S. Marine Corps, reaching the rank of major and working as a tactical flight instructor.

 

He ran an adventure flight company in Australia after leaving the Marines, then moved to Beijing around 2014, company records show.

 

Miralis said he had also launched a separate complaint about Duggan's treatment in prison. He alleged a prison officer "directly intervened" during a legally protected conversation between Duggan and his lawyers.

 

Miralis also said Duggan would soon be moved to a maximum-security facility in New South Wales, Australia's most populous state.

 

"We are concerned by this dramatic and aggressive move," Miralis said. "He's holding up as well as you could expect in these extraordinary circumstances."

 

Both the British and Australian governments have recently highlighted fears that Beijing has been poaching retired pilots to train China's air force.

 

China's foreign ministry has denied any knowledge of the employment of British pilots after British media reported more than 30 pilots had accepted lucrative offers to train China's military.

 

Duggan's case will return to court in late November.

 

https://www.cbsnews.com/news/daniel-edmund-duggan-pilot-us-australia-china-sealed-charges-extradition/

Anonymous ID: 3aaef4 Nov. 4, 2022, 7:16 a.m. No.17720972   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0978 >>0994

Video shows Mike Pompeo being served with papers by Assange lawyers who say he violated their rights

 

Lawyers and journalists allege they had to hand over electronic devices before visiting Wikileaks founder

 

Gustaf Kilander - 4 November 2022

 

A video has allegedly shown former CIA Director and Secretary of State Mike Pompeo being served with a lawsuit brought by American lawyers and reporters who visited Julian Assange.

 

Footage tweeted by Wikileaks being handed the papers as he stands in front of a greenscreen.

 

“‘Michael Richard Pompeo: You’ve been served!’” Wikileaks tweeted on Wednesday morning. “Mike Pompeo has been served with a lawsuit brought by US lawyers and journalists who visited Assange. Spanish court documents show violations of their US constitutional rights. Plaintiffs are represented by NY attorney Richard Roth.”

 

Reuters reported in August that attorneys and reporters sued the CIA and Mr Pompeo, who left his job as a Kansas congressman to become the CIA director in January 2017, just days after Donald Trump was inaugurated.

 

Mr Pompeo left the agency in 2018 to become secretary of state, a role he held for the rest of the duration of the Trump administration.

 

The lawsuit concerns allegations that the CIA spied on the journalists and lawyers as they visited the founder of Wikileaks, Julian Assange, while the Australian was staying at the embassy of Ecuador in London.

 

The plaintiffs have been reported as reporters Charles Glass and John Goetz and lawyers Margaret Kunstler and Deborah Hrbek, who have legally represented Mr Assange.

 

“The United States Constitution shields American citizens from US government overreach even when the activities take place in a foreign embassy in a foreign country,” Mr Roth said in August, according to Reuters.

 

The news agency said the CIA declined to comment on the legal action and noted that it’s prohibited from gathering intelligence on citizens of the US.

 

Several lawmakers have said that the agency secretly stores information concerning US citizens.

 

Mr Assange has made an appeal to the High Court in London to stop his extradition to the US where he would face criminal charges in a legal fight that has lasted for more than 10 years.

 

The August lawsuit was filed in the US District Court for the Southern District of New York.

 

The legal filing stated that the journalists and attorneys had to give up their electronic devices to a private security company working at the embassy – Undercover Global SL – before they could meet with Mr Assange.

 

The lawsuit claims that the company made a copy of the information and gave it to the CIA, which was led by Mr Pompeo at the time.

 

Mr Assange lived at the embassy for seven years before he was arrested and sent to jail in 2019. He had entered the embassy in 2012 to escape extradition to Sweden where he was wanted on allegations of rape – claims Mr Assange has rejected.

 

US authorities want Mr Assange on 18 charges. One of them is a spying charge in connection to Wikileaks’ release of secret US military records and diplomatic cables, according to Reuters, which noted that supporters of Mr Assange argue that he has been made a victim because he revealed wrongdoing by the US in Iraq and Afghanistan.

 

ABC Spain reported this summer that Mr Pompeo had been summoned by a Spanish court to explain a plan to assassinate Mr Assange.

 

In September of last year, Yahoo News reported that in 2017, the CIA had planned to kidnap Mr Assange, and that “sketches” or “options” for a possible assassination had been requested.

 

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/us-politics/mike-pompeo-julian-assange-cia-b2216846.html

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-6k41N0zMTk

 

https://twitter.com/wikileaks/status/1587782283196612610