Wikileaks founder Julian Assange enters Ecuador's London embassy, asks for asylum, 2012

  • #41
Julian Assange’s Dad Says Son Faces ‘an Abuse Trial’ on Day One of Extradition Hearing

The hearing will last around four weeks and is expected to hear from academics who will give evidence on what they believe counts as journalism. The judge could then take months to consider her verdict, and the losing side is almost certain to appeal the decision.

If the courts do ultimately approve Assange’s extradition, the final decision will then rest with the British government. If convicted in the U.S., he faces a possible punishment of 175 years in prison.
 
  • #42
Rape case against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to be reopened, Swedish prosecutors say

Sweden is reopening my the rape case against Assange. The statue of limitations expire on this case in August 2020. A previous case was dropped because he could not be prosecuted as he was “hiding out” in the Embassy.
The Swedish prosecutors have closed the rape case because the evidence in the case were not strong enough for a successful prosecution. It's not that they don't believe in the women's accusations, but there are not enough independent evidence, as it's a case of "she says, he says", and it has gone ten years, and what people involved remember of what they knew then, has faded. There is a time limit for prosecution of rape/sexual assault of 10 years in Sweden.
Åklagaren lägger ner förundersökningen mot Julian Assange
 
  • #43
Assange may end up at Colorado Supermax jail, UK court told

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange would have to be “almost dying” to get out of arguably the most notorious prison in the United States if convicted of espionage charges and sent there, a court at London’s Old Bailey heard Tuesday.

Assange, who is fighting an extradition request from the U.S., would likely be sent to the federal Supermax prison in Florence, Colorado, if convicted.

Assange’s extradition hearing, which was delayed by the coronavirus pandemic, is due to end this week.
 
  • #44
Assange’s lawyer: He will not get a fair trial if extradited

Al Jazeera: The decision on extraditing Assange will be delivered by Judge Vanessa Baraitser on January 4. What do you expect will happen next? And what conditions will he face should he ultimately be extradited to the US?

Whichever way the judge decides, the decision on whether he should be extradited is almost certain to go appeal and can extend to a number of years. The judge stated that Assange will remain in custody until January 4. Assange is likely to remain in custody in a high-security prison. In these circumstances, an accused will usually be out on bail but the court has refused bail.

We heard from an expert witness during the trial that Assange will be held in a high-security prison if he gets extradited to the US. These maximum-security prisons have been described as the “darkest black hole of the US prison system”.

The US has not sought the death penalty for the offences for which he has been charged to date. But what they are seeking is effectively a life sentence. What the US is trying to do by bringing the superseding indictment is to bring new charges on new offences. It may be the case that these new offences would be offences for which the US could seek the death penalty.
 
  • #45
Julian Assange cannot be extradited to US, British judge rules
.......
Lawyers for US authorities are appealing against the ruling at the Old Bailey, which rejected arguments that the WikiLeaks co-founder would not get a fair trial in the US but blocked extradition on the basis that procedures in prisons there would not prevent him from potentially taking his own life.

Assange’s partner, Stella Moris, described the ruling as “the first step towards justice”, but told supporters gathered outside the court that it was not yet time to celebrate.
.......
There was also mixed reaction from bodies including Amnesty International, which welcomed the ruling, while accusing UK authorities of “having engaged in a “politically-motivated process at the behest of the USA and putting media freedom and freedom of expression on trial

In her ruling, which triggered elation among Assange’s supporters that he was not being extradited, but dismay that it was solely based on health grounds, the judge said she had no reason to doubt that “the usual constitutional and procedural protections” would be applied to a trial he might face in the US.

Sending Assange across the Atlantic would not breach a bar on extradition for “political offences” she said, and she had no reason to doubt that “the usual constitutional and procedural protections” would be applied to a trial he might face in the US.

She sided with the argument of lawyers for US authorities who had denied Assange was being prosecuted merely for publishing diplomatic cables and military files. Her ruling was that his actions, if proven, would “amount to offences in this jurisdiction that would not be protected by his right to freedom of speech”.
.......
Assange denies plotting with Manning to crack an encrypted password on US computers and says there is no evidence anyone’s safety was compromised. His lawyers argue the prosecution is politically motivated and that he is being pursued because WikiLeaks published US government documents that revealed evidence of war crimes and human rights abuses.
.......
 
  • #46
The Biden Administration’s Continued Push for Julian Assange’s Extradition Is Bad News for Journalism

During the course of his career as the founder of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange has managed to anger both of America’s major political parties.

When WikiLeaks first began publishing leaked documents from the U.S. military and the State Department during the Obama administration, both Republican and Democratic politicians denounced Assange. Obama’s Justice Department investigated him and very nearly indicted him under the Espionage Act. The Obama administration backed away from charging him only because they realized that doing so could lead to the prosecution of more conventional journalists and news organizations, including those, like the New York Times, that collaborated with Assange to publish stories based on the documents given to WikiLeaks.
........
The Biden Justice Department is expected to continue to try to extradite Assange from Britain so that he can face the charges brought by the Trump administration. In January, a British judge denied an extradition request from the United States, arguing that Assange’s mental condition is so bad that he might kill himself in the American prison system. The judge set Friday as the deadline for an appeal of her extradition ruling by the U.S. Justice Department. The Justice Department has now said that it plans to file an appeal.

Earlier this week, a group of press freedom organizations, including the Press Freedom Defense Fund......sent a letter to the Justice Department asking that the case against Assange be dropped.

But the Biden Justice Department’s decision to continue the Trump administration’s efforts to extradite Assange indicates that bipartisan fury at the WikiLeaks founder blinds leaders of both parties to what his prosecution could do to press freedom.

The fact that Assange is so widely despised by the American political leadership — and that so many U.S. officials from both parties would be happy to see him in an American prison — may lead to very bad law that could pose a serious threat to American journalism. If the Assange prosecution is successful, it will set a dangerous legal standard. It will open the door for the government to prosecute journalists for publishing classified information, even if doing so is in the public interest.

The case against Assange has nothing to do with his role in the 2016 hack of the Democratic Party. The indictment is about the leak of secret military and State Department documents to WikiLeaks more than a decade ago and focuses on Assange’s relationship with Chelsea Manning, the former Army intelligence analyst who was the source of the documents. The Trump Justice Department charged that Assange aided Manning in efforts to gain access to a U.S. military database; the charges against Assange were later broadened, and he was indicted under the Espionage Act.

The Assange case could allow prosecutors to build criminal cases against journalists who obtain government secrets based on their interactions with their sources. Prosecutors can look at the electronic footprints of reporters and their sources, and try to determine whether they can charge journalists under anti-hacking laws if they encourage their sources to give them secret information. Investigative reporters throughout the country could face criminal liability simply for meeting with sources and encouraging them to provide information.

That would make it nearly impossible for reporters to aggressively cover the Pentagon, the CIA, or the National Security Agency — and ultimately imperil the American republic.
 
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  • #47
The Biden Administration’s Continued Push for Julian Assange’s Extradition Is Bad News for Journalism

During the course of his career as the founder of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange has managed to anger both of America’s major political parties.

When WikiLeaks first began publishing leaked documents from the U.S. military and the State Department during the Obama administration, both Republican and Democratic politicians denounced Assange. Obama’s Justice Department investigated him and very nearly indicted him under the Espionage Act. The Obama administration backed away from charging him only because they realized that doing so could lead to the prosecution of more conventional journalists and news organizations, including those, like the New York Times, that collaborated with Assange to publish stories based on the documents given to WikiLeaks.
........
The Biden Justice Department is expected to continue to try to extradite Assange from Britain so that he can face the charges brought by the Trump administration. In January, a British judge denied an extradition request from the United States, arguing that Assange’s mental condition is so bad that he might kill himself in the American prison system. The judge set Friday as the deadline for an appeal of her extradition ruling by the U.S. Justice Department. The Justice Department has now said that it plans to file an appeal.

Earlier this week, a group of press freedom organizations, including the Press Freedom Defense Fund......sent a letter to the Justice Department asking that the case against Assange be dropped.

But the Biden Justice Department’s decision to continue the Trump administration’s efforts to extradite Assange indicates that bipartisan fury at the WikiLeaks founder blinds leaders of both parties to what his prosecution could do to press freedom.

The fact that Assange is so widely despised by the American political leadership — and that so many U.S. officials from both parties would be happy to see him in an American prison — may lead to very bad law that could pose a serious threat to American journalism. If the Assange prosecution is successful, it will set a dangerous legal standard. It will open the door for the government to prosecute journalists for publishing classified information, even if doing so is in the public interest.

The case against Assange has nothing to do with his role in the 2016 hack of the Democratic Party. The indictment is about the leak of secret military and State Department documents to WikiLeaks more than a decade ago and focuses on Assange’s relationship with Chelsea Manning, the former Army intelligence analyst who was the source of the documents. The Trump Justice Department charged that Assange aided Manning in efforts to gain access to a U.S. military database; the charges against Assange were later broadened, and he was indicted under the Espionage Act.

The Assange case could allow prosecutors to build criminal cases against journalists who obtain government secrets based on their interactions with their sources. Prosecutors can look at the electronic footprints of reporters and their sources, and try to determine whether they can charge journalists under anti-hacking laws if they encourage their sources to give them secret information. Investigative reporters throughout the country could face criminal liability simply for meeting with sources and encouraging them to provide information.

That would make it nearly impossible for reporters to aggressively cover the Pentagon, the CIA, or the National Security Agency — and ultimately imperil the American republic.

Reporters and whistle blowers who reveal government corruption need and deserve protection.
 
  • #48
US renews efforts to put Wikileaks’ Julian Assange on trial

U.S. authorities launched a new battle on Wednesday to make Julian Assange face American justice, telling British judges that if they agree to extradite the WikiLeaks founder on espionage charges, he could serve any U.S. prison sentence he receives in his native Australia.
 
  • #49
  • #50
Hello - I'm trying to find the contact details of a man who was present (and filming) the arrest of Julian Assange. The crimes against Assange are of pretty epic proportions when you look into it, and I'm hoping to get all the information I can.

Here is a link to the footage. The man is in a WHITE LINEN SUIT and I have attached screenshots. Any help would be much appreciated.
 

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  • #51
What are you wanting the information for?
 
  • #52
I'm hoping to get in touch with him to see if he has any extra information about the day of the shoot, and even if his footage is for sale. I'm a filmmaker and we're trying to make a film about Assange
 
  • #53
Right. :cool:

Maybe you need a more prominent platform. Have you put out on social media?
 
  • #54
Where would you recommend? It's not something that my usual network would be able to help with, but I'd be really keen to amplify the question.

Do you have any advice?
 
  • #55
Apologies for being a bit of an amateur on this forum, but yes if any of you can help me find information about the man in the white suit from this video I'd be really grateful
 
  • #56

The British government on Friday ordered the extradition of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to the United States to face spying charges, a milestone – but not the end – of a decade-long legal saga sparked by his website’s publication of classified U.S. documents.
 
  • #57
  • #58
Finally, it looks like this man's long ordeal will be over. He will plead guilty in exchange for assurance that the case will be dropped.

 
  • #59
  • #60
Good news. I hope they keep their word. I hope he gets to now live a productive life.

It's too bad that he was forced to stop his work. He exposed evidence of US war crimes in Iraq, especially the crime of turning over captives to torture squads. I'm not sure how much news of that ever reached the American public. I recall that there was much news censuring in the US during that war.
 
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