Additional Charges and Current Situation — Bradley …

Around the time of Crowleys resignation, the government doubled down on Manning's charges. Nearly a year after he'd been arrested and imprisoned, Bradley Manning was hit with 22 more offenses. This time, the charges were far more serious. Among these charges: "aiding the enemy," a capital offense, punishable by death.

The charges were also more specifically connected to the WikiLeaks documents. According to the charge under the section "Mutiny and Sedition," Manning allegedly did

"wrongfully and wantonly cause to be published on the internet intelligence belonging to the United States government, having knowledge that intelligence published on the internet is accessible to the enemy, such conduct being prejudicial to good order and discipline in the armed forces and being of a nature to bring discredit upon the armed forces."

The new, extended charges seem designed to make sure that Manning doesn't get off with a slap to the wrist. In the meantime, Manning now sits in a cell at Ft. Leavenworth, where he awaits court martial. His one-year anniversary in prison will be coming up at the end of May.

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Additional Charges and Current Situation — Bradley ...

Man at court in Wellington after a run in with police

Feb. 7, 2014, 4 a.m.

An 18 year old local man who allegedly tried to run an off-duty police officer off the road, faced Wellington local court yesterday charged with several offences.

An 18 year old local man who allegedly tried to run an off-duty police officer off the road, faced Wellington local court yesterday charged with several offences.

The officer had been driving home on the Mitchell Highway where he was allegedly confronted by the man.

Bradley Manning was already appearing on a number of charges before magistrate Terry Lucas who said police were on duty 24/7 and that it was a serious offence.

He then refused bail for Manning. It is the first time the Wellington man has been charged as an adult.

The man has been charged with: intimidating a police officer in execution of duty, harassing a police officer in execution of duty, behaving in an offensive manner in/near a public place/school, driving a motor vehicle to menace another with intent and knowingly driving a vehicle in a manner that menaces another.

Manning is due to reappear at Wellington Court House via audiovisual link on March 25.

The defence, John Styles of Aboriginal Legal Services said that Mr Manning, who has a partner and nine month-old child, would commit to living near Gulgong, but the prosecuting officer Sergeant Mereika Wilkins said that he should not be out in the community and there was a strong likelihood he would re-offered.

Magistrate Terry Lucas said the allegation was of a serious nature if proven.

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Man at court in Wellington after a run in with police

State Department system containing classified, personal information still riddled with security gaps

EXCLUSIVE: More than three years after U.S. Army Pvt. Bradley Manning handed over hundreds of thousands of sensitive State Department cables to WikiLeaks, the departments inspector general has warned in stark terms that State has done little since 2010 to fix an info-tech system that is riddled with security gaps, and has no plan yet for how to fix it.

At risk, the IG says, is not onlyclassified information vital to the preservation of national security in high-risk environments across the globe,but the personal information on file concerning about 192 million American passport-holders.

The public version of the inspector generals accusations -- contained in an unprecedented management alert to States top officials and in the managerial responses to the alert -- have been heavily redacted for security reasons.

The alert was circulated in the State Department bureaucracy in November. After a back-and-forth process between department managers and the IGs office, it became accessible to outsiders in mid-January.

CLICK HERE FOR THE ALERT

The problems it describes, however, have been festering far longer than that. Among other things, the alert says that:

-- between 2011 and 2013 alone, six lengthy and detailed reports on information security (five by States inspector generals office, and one by the Government Accountability Office) have found recurring weaknesses in a wide variety of cyber-security issues, including how State hands out and keeps track of passwords; certifies whether information systems are authorized to operate securely; protects its hardware, files and operating systems from hackers or other unauthorized users; and how it scans its systems to detect wayward patterns of behavior.

--In most cases, despite repeated warnings, State Department bureaucrats have not formally reported the shortcomings to other federal agencies, including Homeland Security, though the inspector generalargues it is obligated to do so.

--Nor, the watchdog says, has the department remediated the identified vulnerabilities and risks. Translation: it hasnt done anywhere near enough to fix things, and, in some cases, nothing at all.

--One reason is that portions of the bureaucracy that are specifically tasked with handling information security issues have already been identified by the inspector generals office as part of the problem. Among other things, the alert references a previous IG report on the Bureau of Information Resource Management (IRM), a section of the State Department, where, the alert delicately says, it identified a number of conditions that required managements attention.

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State Department system containing classified, personal information still riddled with security gaps

Israeli who leaked army data is released from jail

JERUSALEM -- Anat Kamm, an Israeli woman convicted of stealing classified military documents during her army service last decade, was released from jail Sunday after being paroled for good behavior.

Kamm, now 26, stole more than 2,000 documents, hundreds of them classified and top-secret, while assigned to the office of a major general during her mandatory military service between 2005 and 2007 -- a case that in some way parallels that of Pfc. Bradley Manning, now known as Pvt. Chelsea Manning, who was convicted of illegally downloading classified documents from a U.S. Army computer.

Upon completing her army service, Kamm passed the documents to Haaretz newspaper reporter Uri Blau, who in 2008 based several reports on the documents, including one suggesting the Israeli army was circumventing Supreme Court orders in military operations against Palestinian targets.

Blaus story was cleared for publication by military censors but tipped off an investigation by the army and the Shin Bet security agency. That probe led back to Kamm, who was arrested in 2009 and held under house arrest for months before a court-imposed gag order was lifted in April 2010, allowing Israeli media to report the case.

Originally charged with espionage, Kamm reached a plea bargain and admitted to unlawfully possessing and passing on classified material. She denied she intended to harm state security. She was sentenced to a four-and-a-half-year jail term, later reduced to three and a half years on appeal.

After 26 months in prison, Kamm was released Sunday under certain restrictions, including a ban on leaving the country for the remainder of her sentence.

A handful of activists waited for her outside the prison, calling her a traitor.

Blau, the journalist, had fled the country and ultimately returned to face charges. After agreeing to a plea bargain, he was sentenced to four months of community service in 2012.

The case raised concerns in Israel about freedom of the press.

Meanwhile, Kamm filed a civil lawsuit against Blau and Haaretz, demanding compensation of more than $700,000 for being exposed.

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Israeli who leaked army data is released from jail

Pulitzer Prize winner to discuss Assange, Snowden, Manning in UM lecture

The second half of the University of Montanas 2013-14 Presidents Lecture Series will begin with a lecture from prolific author, social critic and Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist Chris Hedges.

He will analyze Americas national security state and the meaning of revelations by high-profile leakers such as Julian Assange, Edward Snowden and Chelsea Manning formerly Bradley Manning for the future of our democracy.

The lecture, titled Julian Assange, Bradley Manning, PRISM, Edward Snowden and National Security, will be held at 8 p.m. Monday, Feb. 3, in the University Center Ballroom.

Hedges will deliver a seminar earlier the same day titled The Death of the Liberal Class and the Crisis of the American Political System. It will be held from 3:10 to 4:30 p.m. in Gallagher Business Building, Room 123.

Both events are free and open to the public.

Hedges, a graduate of the Harvard Divinity School and a foreign correspondent for nearly two decades, has written extensively about Latin America, Africa, the Middle East and the Balkans. His articles have appeared in Foreign Affairs, Granta, the New Statesman, Harpers, Mother Jones, The Nation, Adbusters and the New York Review of Books.

In 2002, he shared a Pulitzer Prize as part of the team of reporters at the New York Times that covered global terrorism. He currently writes a weekly column for truthdig.com and is a senior fellow at the Nation Institute in New York.

Hedges most recent books include The Death of the Liberal Class, Days of Destruction, Days of Revolt and The World as It Is: Dispatches on the Myth of Human Progress, which is a collection of Truthdig columns about the most controversial issues of the day: Americas wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, the American empire, the Middle East and the crisis of the American political system.

The Presidents Lecture Series at UM consists of 10 talks on vital topics by distinguished guest speakers throughout the academic year. For more information, visit umt.edu/president/events/lectures/ or call UM history professor Richard Drake at 243-2981.

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Pulitzer Prize winner to discuss Assange, Snowden, Manning in UM lecture