Chelsea Manning Is Freed From Jail, Faces New Subpoena In …

Chelsea Manning, a former military intelligence analyst, was freed after refusing to testify about WikiLeaks, but she now faces a new subpoena. Ford Fischer/News2Share/Reuters hide caption

Chelsea Manning, a former military intelligence analyst, was freed after refusing to testify about WikiLeaks, but she now faces a new subpoena.

Chelsea Manning has been freed from jail, more than a month after she was taken into custody for refusing to testify before a grand jury in a case involving WikiLeaks and Julian Assange.

Manning was released Thursday afternoon, after the grand jury's term expired but the U.S. Attorney's Office in the Eastern District of Virginia already has subpoenaed her to appear before a new grand jury panel, according to a tweet from Manning's account.

Manning, a former military intelligence analyst, has acknowledged leaking hundreds of thousands of military and State Department documents to WikiLeaks in 2010, from battlefield reports to U.S. embassy cables. Those revelations sparked court martial proceedings against her and, more recently, culminated in criminal charges against Julian Assange, WikiLeaks' controversial founder.

Manning is due to return to federal court on May 16. Despite an offer of immunity, she has refused to answer questions about WikiLeaks, saying she already has shared what she knows.

The U.S. case against Assange gained new momentum just days after Manning was taken into custody in early April, as Assange was ejected from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London and arrested. Within hours, the U.S. unsealed an indictment against him.

That indictment states: "in March 2010, Assange engaged in a conspiracy with Chelsea Manning, a former intelligence analyst in the U.S. Army, to assist Manning in cracking a password stored on U.S. Department of Defense computers connected to ... a U.S. government network used for classified documents and communications."

Last month, U.S. District Judge Claude Hilton ruled Manning should stay in jail until she either testifies or a grand jury no longer wants to hear from her.

In a statement issued the day before she was taken into custody by U.S. marshals, Manning described prosecutors' questions to her: "All of the substantive questions pertained to my disclosures of information to the public in 2010 answers I provided in extensive testimony, during my court-martial in 2013."

Instead of answering those questions, Manning said, she told the court that she objected to them and would not reply on the grounds that they violated her "First, Fourth, and Sixth Amendment, and other statutory rights."

Manning was freed from a military prison in 2017, after former President Barack Obama reduced what had been a 35-year prison term to a sentence of about seven years shortly before he left office.

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Chelsea Manning Is Freed From Jail, Faces New Subpoena In ...

Chelsea Manning has been released from jail – CBS News

Chelsea Manning was released from jail Thursday after spending 62 days at a Virginia detention center for refusing to comply with a grand jury subpoena. Manning was released after the grand jury term expired.

A post on Manning's Twitter account, which was being run by her supporters while she was in jail, said federal prosecutors had subpoenaed her for another grand jury on May 16.

Her lawyers told the Associated Press she will again refuse to answer questions and could again face another term of incarceration.

Manning, a former Army intelligence officer, was sent to the Alexandria, Virginia facility on March 8. Manning said then she objects to the secrecy of the grand jury process, and said she had already revealed everything she knows at her court martial.

Manning, who is transgender, gained attention after being convicted in 2013 for leaking classified government and military documents to WikiLeaks. She hadworked as an intelligence analyst in Iraqand was arrested in 2010. At the time of her arrest, her name was Bradley.

She served seven years of a 35-year military sentence for leaking the trove of documents to the anti-secrecy website before then-President Obamacommuted her sentencein 2017 -- one of his final acts as president. In May that year,she was releasedfrom a Kansas military prison.

Earlier this week, Manning's lawyers filed court papers arguing that she should not be jailed for civil contempt because she has proven that she will stick to her principles and won't testify no matter how long she's jailed.

Federal law only allows a recalcitrant witness to be jailed on civil contempt if there's a chance that the incarceration will coerce the witness into testifying. If a judge were to determine that incarcerating Manning were punitive rather than coercive, Manning would not be jailed.

"At this point, given the sacrifices she has already made, her strong principles, her strong and growing support community, and the disgrace attendant to her capitulation, it is inconceivable that Chelsea Manning will ever change her mind about her refusal to cooperate with the grand jury," her lawyers wrote.

Manning filed an eight-page statement with the court on Monday, outlining her resolve. She wrote that "cooperation with this grand jury is simply not an option. Doing so would mean throwing away all of my principles, accomplishments, sacrifices, and erase decades of my reputation - an obvious impossibility," she wrote.

She also said she was suffering disproportionately in jail because of physical problems related with inadequate follow-up care to gender-reassignment surgery.

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Chelsea Manning has been released from jail - CBS News

Chelsea Manning released from jail after 62 days on …

Former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning was released from a northern Virginia jail Thursday after a two-month stay for refusing to testify to a grand jury.

Manning spent 62 days at the Alexandria Detention Center on civil contempt charges after she refused to answer questions to a federal grand jury investigating WikiLeaks.

Her lawyers fear her freedom may be short-lived, though. She was released only because the grand jury's term expired. Before she left the jail, she received another subpoena demanding her testimony on May 16 to a new grand jury.

Her lawyers say she will again refuse to answer questions and could again face another term of incarceration.

Manning served seven years in a military prison for leaking a trove of documents to WikiLeaks before then-President Barack Obama commuted the remainder of her 35-year sentence.

Earlier this week, Manning's lawyers filed court papers arguing that she should not be jailed for civil contempt because she has proven that she will stick to her principles and won't testify no matter how long she's jailed.

Federal law only allows a recalcitrant witness to be jailed on civil contempt if there's a chance that the incarceration will coerce the witness into testifying. If a judge were to determine that incarcerating Manning were punitive rather than coercive, Manning would not be jailed.

"At this point, given the sacrifices she has already made, her strong principles, her strong and growing support community, and the disgrace attendant to her capitulation, it is inconceivable that Chelsea Manning will ever change her mind about her refusal to cooperate with the grand jury," her lawyers wrote.

Manning filed an eight-page statement with the court on Monday, outlining her resolve. She wrote that "cooperation with this grand jury is simply not an option. Doing so would mean throwing away all of my principles, accomplishments, sacrifices, and erase decades of my reputation an obvious impossibility," she wrote.

She also said she was suffering disproportionately in jail because of physical problems related with inadequate follow-up care to gender-reassignment surgery.

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Chelsea Manning released from jail – usatoday.com

Manning, who divulged massive amounts of information to WikiLeaks, had her sentence commuted Tuesday by President Obama. USA TODAY NETWORK

Chelsea Manning, theformer U.S. Army intelligence analyst who provided information to WikiLeaks, was released from jail Thursday after the grand jury she refused to testify before expired, her lawyerssaid in a statement.

A federal judge ordered Manning into custody about two months ago after she refused to cooperate in the grandjury's investigation into the anti-secrecy group.

But her lawyers said shemay return to jail as soon as next weekand be held in contempt of court again. Manning was served with another subpoena while at a detention center in Alexandria,Virginia and is expected to appear in court on May 16.

Detention: Chelsea Manning jailed for contempt after refusing to testify in WikiLeaks grand jury investigation

Feature: Chelsea Manning talks prison, living as trans and dating in 'Vogue'

Chelsea will continue to refuse to answer questions, and will use every available legal defense to prove to District Judge Trenga that she has just cause for her refusal to give testimony," her legal team said in a statement.

Manning was sentenced to 35 years in prison in 2013 for her role in leaking a cache of classified government material to WikiLeaks. Her case attracted heightened attention because of her status as a transgender soldier.President Barack Obama commuted her sentence in 2017.

Chelsea Manning was jailed for contempt in Alexandria, Virginia after refusing to provide information about WikiLeaks to a grand jury.(Photo: Handout)

In refusing to testify in March, Manning claimed that she had already provided the government "extensive testimony" during her 2013 prosecution.

"In solidarity with many activists facing the odds, I will stand by my principles," Manning said in a statement before thehearing. "I will exhaust every legal remedy available."

Contributing: Kevin Johnson, USA TODAY

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Chelsea Manning Seeks Release, Says Shell Never Testify …

Chelsea Manning speaks in Berlinon May 2, 2018.

Photographer: Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Photographer: Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Alexandria, Va. (AP) -- Former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning said in a new legal motion that she will never testify to a grand jury in Virginia investigating the website Wikileaks, and it therefore makes no sense to continue to keep her in jail for refusing to do so.

Manning has been jailed in Alexandria for two months for refusing to testify to the sitting grand jury. She appealed her incarceration to the federal appeals court in Richmond, but a three-judge panel unanimously rejected her appeal last month.

Now, in a motion filed Monday in Alexandria, Manning argues she has proven she'll stick to her principles and should therefore be released.

"At this point, given the sacrifices she has already made, her strong principles, her strong and growing support community, and the disgrace attendant to her capitulation, it is inconceivable that Chelsea Manning will ever change her mind about her refusal to cooperate with the grand jury," her lawyers wrote.

Federal law only allows a recalcitrant witness to be jailed on civil contempt if there's a chance that the incarceration will coerce the witness into testifying. If a judge were to determine that incarcerating Manning were punitive rather than coercive, Manning would be set free.

Manning filed an eight-page statement with the legal motion, outlining her intransigence.

"I can without any hesitation state that nothing that will convince me to testify before this or any other grand jury for that matter. This experience so far only proves my long held belief that grand juries are simply outdated tools used by the federal government to harass and disrupt political opponents and activists in fishing expeditions," Manning wrote.

She also said she is suffering physical problems related with inadequate follow-up care to gender-reassignment surgery.

Manning served seven years in a military prison for leaking a trove of documents to Wikileaks before her 35-year sentence was commuted by then-President Barack Obama. Since Manning was jailed for contempt, prosecutors in Alexandria have unsealed criminal charges against Wikileaks founder Julian Assange and requested his extradition.

Prosecutors have not yet responded to Manning's most recent motion. They have previously stated that Manning's claims she is being persecuted by the Trump administration are speculative and that she has the same duty as any other citizen to provide truthful testimony when subpoenaed.

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Chelsea Manning Seeks Release, Says Shell Never Testify ...

After nearly two months in jail, Chelsea Manning submits …

Betraying my principles is a much worse prison than the government can construct By Niles Niemuth 7 May 2019

Whistleblower and political prisoner Chelsea Manning submitted an appeal Monday to the federal court in the Eastern District of Virginia asking for her release from jail.

Manning has been held in the Alexandria City Jail since March 8. She was detained for contempt of court after she refused to testify before a grand jury impaneled to bring frame-up charges against WikiLeaks publisher and journalist Julian Assange.

She is convinced that to cooperate with this grand jury would be a betrayal of her beliefs about the grand jury process, and this grand jury process in particular, Mannings attorneys told the court in a written statement on Monday. She is prepared to suffer the consequences for her beliefs, and it should surprise nobody to find that she has the courage of her convictions.

Mannings eight-page statement is a powerful declaration of political principles. She is being targeted by the Trump administration as part of a nearly decade-long vendetta against her and Assange for exposing the US governments war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan.

After two months of confinement, and using every legal mechanism available so far, I canwithout any hesitationstate that nothing will convince me to testify before this or any other grand jury for that matter, Manning declared. With each passing day my disappointment and frustration grow, but so too do my commitments to doing the right thing and continuing to refuse to submit.

The idea I hold the keys to my own cell is an absurd one, as I face the prospect of suffering either way due to this unnecessary and punitive subpoena: I can either go to jail or betray my principles, Manning stated. The latter exists as a much worse prison than the government can construct.

Manning served seven years of a 35-year sentence in a military prison after she was convicted of leaking classified and sensitive documents exposing US war crimes to WikiLeaks in 2010. Most notably, she released the Collateral Murder video, which shows the 2007 attack by US Apache helicopter gunships in Baghdad that killed two Reuters journalists and at least a dozen Iraqis.

While Manning has not been charged or convicted of any new crime, she has been treated as a convict, held in the solitary confinement for her first 28 days in jail. UN Special Rapporteur on torture, Juan E. Mndez, has declared that prolonged isolation amounts to torture when used as a punishment, in pre-trial detention, indefinitely or when the person already suffers from a mental disability.

As her attorneys have noted in a previous appeal for her release, Manning indicates that she has already given the government everything she knows about her interactions with WikiLeaks and Assange during trial in 2013 and that any testimony before the grand jury would be duplicative. The real purpose of the governments efforts to force her to testify before the grand jury is to undermine her testimony as a defense witness for Assange.

Mannings statement describes the terrible impact of the enforced isolation on her mental health, which has been compounded by the year of solitary confinement she suffered when she was imprisoned by the Obama administration.

I experienced difficulty keeping attention on anything, sometimes referred to as a dissociative stupor. Thinking and concentrating get harder. Anxiety, frustration with minor things, irritation, and a spiraling inability to tolerate each symptom take hold, she explains. At one point I started feeling ill during a short visit in a non-contact visit booth while struggling to have even a normal conversation. After weeks of under-stimulation, I became nauseated with vertigo and vomited on the floor, ending my visit prematurely.

Making matters worse, Manning also noted that she has been denied access to necessary medical attention for a recent gender reassignment surgery, putting her at risk for permanent injury or a potentially deadly infection. She has also been denied regular access to sunlight, must keep her mind busy with puzzles without access to good literature or friends, and has gained 20 pounds since March due to poor nutrition.

Manning is taking a courageous stand to defend Assange, who was snatched from the Ecuadorian embassy in London on April 11 by British police after his asylum was illegally cancelled by the government of Lenin Moreno.

Assange was sentenced to 50 weeks in prison for bail jumping over spurious sexual assault allegations and now faces rendition to the United State. He faces an initial charge of attempted computer hacking that carries five years. He is accused of seeking to assist Manning to crack a password so that she could conceal her identity while using military computer networks.

Once in the United States, it is certain that the Justice Department will unseal further charges against Assange, including under the Espionage Act, which opens him up to the possibility of the death penalty.

I believe this grand jury seeks to undermine the integrity of public discourse with the aim of punishing those who expose any serious, ongoing, and systemic abuses of power by this government, as well as the rest of the international community, Manning explained.

Therefore, participating in this fishing expeditionwhich potentially exposes other innocent people to the grand jury processwould constitute an unjustifiable and unethical action. Now, after sustaining serious psychological injury from my current confinement, I dont wish to expose any other person to the trauma and exhaustion of civil contempt or other forms of prison or coercion.

Manning noted her appreciation for the dozens to hundreds of daily letters of support, which provide her with warmth and strength from colleagues, educators, lawyers, diplomats, activists, factory workers, veterans, journalists, union leaders, store clerks, gardeners, chefs, airplane pilots, and politicians

While Manning and Assange are cruelly pursued by the US government for their efforts to expose the truth, they have won the support and admiration of millions of workers and others around the world who will fight for their freedom.

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Chelsea Manning asks court to release her from jail – cnn.com

She says that "nothing will convince me to testify," according to new documents filed in the Eastern District of Virginia court.

Manning's attorneys say that prosecutors have no good reason to seek her grand jury testimony, and her detention has become punitive.

"She is convinced that to cooperate with this grand jury would be a betrayal of her beliefs about the grand jury process, and this grand jury process in particular. She is prepared to suffer the consequences for her beliefs, and it should surprise nobody to find that she has the courage of her convictions," her attorneys wrote to the court on Monday.

Prosecutors refuse to say why they want Manning's testimony this year, though they've said they continue to conduct an ongoing investigation. Manning's imprisonment came one year after a federal grand jury in the same US district court indicted Assange for a computer hacking conspiracy charge that hinges on conversations Manning and Assange had and steps they took in 2010. The US is currently seeking Assange's extradition since his arrest last month, and he remains in jail in Britain. Manning is not charged in that case.

Manning currently is being held until she complies with the subpoena or the grand jury's term ends. She said in an affidavit to the federal court that she was held in isolation within the Alexandria, Virginia, detention center for almost a month and became nauseous and sick because of it. Manning, a transgender woman, also says the continued imprisonment puts her at risk of complications following her sex reassignment surgery in October.

In an affidavit filed with the court on Monday, Manning repeated, "I acted alone" in the 2010 leaks.

"The idea I hold the keys to my own cell is an absurd one, as I face the prospect of suffering either way due to this unnecessary and punitive subpoena: I can either go to jail or betray my principles. The latter exists as a much worse prison than the government can construct," Manning wrote to the court.

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Chelsea Mannings Lawyer Says Shes Very Concerned for Her at Tribeca …

At the Wednesday night premiere of XY Chelsea at the Tribeca Film Festival, director Tim Hawkins mourned the fact that the subject of the documentary, Chelsea Manning, couldnt be in attendance.

In 2013, Manning, a former U.S. Army intelligence analyst in Baghdad, received a 35-year sentence for leaking hundreds of thousands of classified documents. It was reportedly the longest ever sentence for a leak of U.S. government information. Four years later, after Manning had already survived two suicide attempts and extended periods of solitary confinement in prison, President Obama commuted her sentence. Now, two years after that life-changing commutation, Manning is currently incarcerated once againfor refusing to testify in a grand jury investigation into WikiLeaks.

When I first started making this film, Chelsea was still in prison in Kansas, Hawkins explained. And in one of the letters that she sent me, she made a kind of dark joke about how she thought shes going to miss the premiere. That was three years ago. A lot has happened since then, and just weeks ago we were making preparations for her to be here with us today.

In a conversation after the filmone that Manning would have participated in if she was not currently incarceratedlegal counsel Nancy Hollander told the crowd that shes very concerned for Chelsea. Shes not in solitary anymore, but Im very concerned about her being there and Im concerned about what this means for the rest of her life, that this is just another example. The government is going to continue to go after her. Theres really no reason for them to need Chelseas testimony at this point, as far as Im concerned.

Asked to clarify the stand that Manning is currently taking, Hollander continued, Its an objection to the process. The grand jury is a secret organization that we shouldnt have in our system to begin with. If she testifies, she runs into tremendous risk to herself, and she also doesnt believe that we should have grand juries. For her, its another step in the principled actions that she has taken. Theyre very courageous actions. This is something I would expect from her.

Hollanders statements line up with the portrait that XY Chelsea paints. Its an intimate study of a woman with no apparent sense of self-preservationsomeone who throws herself again and again into principled fights, at the cost of her emotional and mental well-being, and ultimately her freedom.

The documentary also helps to shed light on the personal toll of Mannings courageous choices. While Manning has proven herself willing to risk almost anything to take a stand, she has been severely traumatized by the repercussions of her actions. During one of the bleakest interviews that she gives throughout the film, Manning describes her experience in solitary confinement prior to her military hearing. At one point, in Kuwait, she was kept in a cage for 60 days, for up to 23-and-a-half hours per day. Manning struggles to articulate what she experienced there, before concluding, I was alive but also dead, and Ive been dead since. For Manning, even after her release, freedom feels like purgatory. She explains her inability to escape this sense of impending doomparanoia that has since proved prophetic.

Now that Chelsea Manning is back in hell, it feels more imperative than ever to understand how she ended up there in the first place.

I was alive but also dead, and Ive been dead since.

Chelsea Manning

The documentary begins with news of the commutation of Mannings sentence. It follows her from her release to a safe house, and then out into the world. At various points we return to the past, reconstructing Mannings whistleblowing, her trial, and her time in prison through messages, phone calls, and news footage, all framed through Mannings own recollections. In the present-day narrative, we see Manning physically adjusting to freedom. In her words, learning how to be again. Of course, Manning has to do more than just be; shes a public figure now, and we watch her navigate fameinterviews, photoshoots, her first viral tweet. Some people want to hear from Manning, learn more about why she did what she did. Others, like threatening trolls who call her a traitor, have already made up their minds.

XY Chelsea is in part an effort to refute the narratives that formed around Manning when she first entered the publics consciousness, like takes that attributed her decision to give classified documents to WikiLeaks to gender dysphoria-related distress. To hear Chelsea Manning tell it, she was disturbed by what was being done in the name of the American people in Iraq and Afghanistan, from civilian deaths to torture tactics. In her words, life was cheap in Iraq. While on leave, Manning recalled feeling as if everyday Americans had forgotten about the war, and were unaware of its atrocities. She had access to classified documents that would provide a window into these wartime realities; moreover, she felt guilt over her complicity. Manning attempted to contact multiple mainstream news outlets, but wasnt getting anywhere. Knowing that she needed to leak the documents before returning to Iraq, she turned to WikiLeaks.

During the films talkback, Hawkins emphasized, Really, if you honestly look at the interaction between [Assange and Manning] it wasnt the kind of thing thats been built up by the media. And I think, you know, we often make these sort of associations, that theyre kind of part of a cabal, that Snowden and Assange and Chelsea are all friends and talking on the phone and thats just not the caseI think what this film was really about is firstly the personal story, and re-centering the perspective.

An important part of that reclamation is hearing Manning talk about her transition, on her own terms. Manning says that she always intended to go public as a whistleblower, but was afraid that being trans would take over everything else. She served her sentence in an all-male prison, where she was able to successfully sue to begin hormone therapy. As a trans woman in prison, Manning remembers being ogled and judged by fellow prisoners and guards. She says that the guards would often walk in on her while changing; and then, she adds, there were the strip searches. In a recorded excerpt of a prison phone call, an emotional Manning can be heard pleading, I want to be treated like a human being, I want to be treated like a woman. Painful descriptions of an attempted suicide attempt underline the direness of the situation that Manning had found herself inbelieving, at that point, that she would spend the rest of her life behind bars.

Once she was released Manning wasted little time putting her platform to use, throwing herself into activist work before she had begun to adjust to life outside. She even launched a Senate campaign, in part galvanized by the rise of the alt-right. At one point in the documentary, explaining why she felt the need to speak out against fascism, Manning asks, What are they going to do, throw me in prison? Or kill me? Theyre going to do that anyway.

This anti-fascist fight quickly led to a huge controversy: Manning, in what she describes as an effort to learn more about her enemy, attended an alt-right event. While Manning was transparent about her efforts and her motives, many accused her of hanging out with neo-Nazis and bombarded her with criticism on social media. Documentary footage taken in the midst of the backlash shows Manning extremely upset, mainly with herself. A subsequent tweet sent from the roof of a building sparked fears that Manning might attempt suicide. While she was ultimately fine, she took a step back from her campaign in an effort to focus on her health.

At one point in the film, Manning insists, Im not a hero; she is, however, someone who firmly believes that no one should sit around waiting for a saviorthat its not going to stop until we stop them. This core belief illuminates Mannings actions. She is someone who stands up for what she believes in, often past her human limits.

Speaking on Mannings current incarceration, Janus Rose, a friend and member of Chelseas jail support committee, said, She really is concerned about using this as an opportunity to engage in another protest against a system that she finds unjust. Later on, Rose added, She didnt want to just kind of fall into obscurity when she was released. She wanted to seize this moment and use it to produce some kind of good, because shes always kind of been the kind of person that cant really just like sit by when she knows she can do something. I always tell people thats the most consistent thing about her personality, is that in every phase of her life that I know about, she seems to, when given an opportunity to do something, she has this bias toward action. And you know, sometimes its good, sometimes it backfires. But I think its great and its good that we have people like that.

Another Manning lawyer, Vince Ward, agreed, saying that Chelseas not a typical person. He continued, Theres something about being around people who are sacrificial to an extent, and I didnt really think that existed until I was around Chelseathat there were people who were literally willing to do something that was so contrary to their self-interest because they felt that strongly about something."

I know that she says shes not special, but I think theres something special about that rebellious spirit, Hawkins chimed in. But at the same time, if you act alone against a huge institution like the U.S. government, its going to crush you. Its going to swallow you up, and so whilst we kind of venerate and can sometimes martyrize figures like Chelsea, whistleblowers who stand up, actually what we really need to do is be getting behind them collectively, because its only going to be through collective action that we actually do make any sort of real changes... You need the rebels and people like Chelsea, but you also need all of us to really rally around. And I think now is a great moment for us to help her.

At the beginning of the film, Manning confesses that she loves a good coming-of-age story. Its a sentiment made all the more poignant as we see how Manning used the army to escape a largely unhappy adolescence, before moving from the military to prison, and essentially losing a decade in the process. As Rose put it, She didnt really get to have a young adulthood and all of a sudden she comes out and shes, you know, 29 approaching 30 years old and the world has changed.

Now, Mannings life has once again been put on hold, as her friends and supporters eagerly wait for the day that she can start learning how to be all over again.

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Chelsea Mannings Lawyer Says Shes Very Concerned for Her at Tribeca ...

XY Chelsea Film Review: Doc Tackles Chelsea Mannings Very In …

Im not a hero, says Chelsea Manning toward the end of Tim Travers Hawkinss XY Chelsea, a riveting but often frustrating documentary that focuses mainly on Mannings 2017 release from jail, where she spent seven years for sharing classified military documents. During her time in prison, Manning came out as a trans woman, and on her release, she takes delight in putting on ultra-red lipstick and growing her hair long, which was not allowed in the all-male facility where she was detained.

Manning is currently back in prison for refusing to testify to a grand jury against Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks leader who released Mannings documents and videos online after The New York Times and the Washington Post expressed no interest in this information in 2010. It is not made entirely clear in XY Chelsea just what Manning feels about Assange, but she is likely martyring herself again purely on principle over a man to whom she has no loyalty. Assange might be unsavory, but from Mannings perspective, the U.S. government is worse.

In a public interview with a New Yorker reporter that is shown here, Manning is asked tough, but fair questions about what she did and why she chose WikiLeaks, and she responds very defensively and inconclusively. There is so much of this story that needs further explanation, information, and context, that judgment regarding much of what we are being presented has to be suspended for now.

Also Read: Wu-Tang Clan, Chelsea Manning Docs Set Showtime Premiere Dates

There is always a sense here of Mannings emotional and physical fragility, and this is the aspect of XY Chelsea that is particularly difficult to parse. We are shown various people who have been drawn into trying to help and protect Manning both legally and emotionally, and once she is freed from prison they coalesce into a team that includes publicists. Manning poses for photos that present her visually as a kind of Edie Sedgwick of whistleblowing, and the effect is uneasy because it is clear that Manning does not quite know how to position herself for the public. The tragic aspect of this is that Manning is often so bright and appealing on camera that she might have made an impact in so many other ways if the pressures of her early life hadnt led her into joining the military.

Manning was born in Oklahoma in 1987, and both of her parents were alcoholics. From what we hear, Manning led a very insecure life as a child and adolescent, and she was pressured to conform, which is what led her to sign up for the military in 2007. At five-foot-two, the rebellious Manning did not fit into this new environment in any sense, yet the army was so in need of recruits that she was eventually entrusted with classified information.

See Photo: Chelsea Manning Poses for Vogue: 'Guess This Is What Freedom Looks Like'

Manning says here that, the Iraq War had left the consciousness of America by 2010, and she was horrified by how life was cheap in Iraq. The videos that Manning released via WikiLeaks exposed civilian deaths that were covered up as the deaths of enemy combatants, and Manning stresses several times in XY Chelsea that she knew exactly what was in all the documents and that no harm could have come to military sources by releasing this information this is a point that is surely up for some debate. There are no easy answers here and many vexing questions.

Hawkins does not interview Mannings father, who seems to be at the root of so many of Mannings problems, but he does talk to her mother Susan, who suffered a stroke a few years ago. Susan looks very much like Chelsea, and in the fragments of speech we hear from her she expresses love for her daughter and remembers how Chelsea used to command three computer stations at home.

Also Read: Chelsea Manning Blasts Trump's Transgender Military Ban: 'Sounds Like Cowardice'

Manning is articulate and clearly intelligent, and she was self-aware enough to call herself nave in a computer message we see on screen in the lead-up to her releasing the classified documents. That navet gets her into trouble when she attempts to engage with people on Twitter and eventually runs for office. Manning makes the mistake of attending an alt-right function in order to infiltrate the enemy, but this military tactic earns her scorn from her Twitter followers, and this leads to a message from her on Twitter that reads Im sorry underneath a photo of a womans feet on the ledge of a building. (Manning attempted suicide twice while in prison.)

The story of Chelsea Manning is still very much in process, and we are not going to understand some of its ramifications for years to come. This is a very difficult personal narrative to try to digest and make sense of, but at least XY Chelsea makes for a start on this, even if it cannot approach anything definitive on her singular story.

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Supporters Say Chelsea Manning Has Been in Solitary …

Chelsea Manning has allegedly been in solitary confinement since she was sent back to prison on March 8, and her supporters are calling for her to be moved.

We condemn the solitary confinement that Chelsea Manning has been subjected to during her incarceration at William G Truesdale adult detention center, the group Chelsea Resists! wrote in a statement.

Manning has reportedly been held in what is known as administrative segregation, or adseg; a banal term that apparently translates to spending up to 22 hours each day in isolation. According to the group,

Chelsea cant be out of her cell while any other prisoners are out, so she cannot talk to other people, or visit the law library, and has no access to books or reading material. She has not been outside for 16 days. She is permitted to make phone calls and move about outside her cell between 1 and 3 a.m.

The jail says keeping high-profile prisoners in adseg is policy for the protection of all prisoners, but there is no reason to believe jail officials view Chelsea as either a target or a risk. If Truesdale wants to prioritize Chelseas health and welfare, as they consistently claim, then they should make sure she is able to have contact with other people in the jail.

Manning was found in contempt after refusing to testify about the classified U.S. documents she sent to WikiLeaks in 2010 when she was a Army intelligence analyst. She said she objected to the secret nature of the grand jury process, and that she had already revealed everything she knew.

Dana Lawhorne, sheriff of the city of Alexandria, said that the accusations that Manning was being held in solitary were not accurate or fair.

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Supporters Say Chelsea Manning Has Been in Solitary ...