US/UK extraditions and Nicaragua (E341) RT Sputnik Orbiting the World – RT

Its a good time to be a specialist in extradition law. In Britain, at the moment, there is a flurry of extradition cases. The United States wants Julian Assange, former MI6 agent Christopher Steele, and His Royal Highness Prince Andrew. Britain, on the other hand, is still demanding the extradition of Anne Sacoolas, the erstwhile British-based CIA operative who, it is believed, has been promoted in the agency since she ran down and killed teenager Harry Dunn. There seems to be an impasse except in the case of Julian Assange whose case is still before the courts; Prince Andrews case may never get there while Christopher Steeles case hangs like a hat on a shaky nail. Meanwhile, the parents of poor Harry Dunn who died when Anne Sacoolas drove on the wrong side of the road are still demanding closure. Luckily for them they have a spokesman of the first rank, Radd Seiger. He has been on the show before, but we welcomed him back on board to tell us where the family stands at the moment.

In 1979 an earthquake happened in Latin America. The Sandinista revolution in Nicaragua prevailed and Oxfam described what happened next as the threat of a good example. Nicaragua, under the Sandinistas set out on a path of independent development and the miracles they performed drew people from all over the world. Agrarian reform, literacy, public health programmes were brought to the campesinos who had never seen the like of it before. It was a glittering example and one which the United States government of Ronald Reagan didnt want to see replicated elsewhere so they set out to destroy it. The US-funded Contras went on a murderous rampage, killing the people who were carrying out the reforms. The Sandinistas were forced out of government then, however, they are back now.Dr. Paul Oquist was born and educated in the United States of America but 41 years ago he was a Sandinista militant, he is now a Sandinista minister and he joined Sputnik to tell us why Nicaragua is still under the US cosh.

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US/UK extraditions and Nicaragua (E341) RT Sputnik Orbiting the World - RT

Russian bears – The Indian Express

By: Editorial | Published: July 18, 2020 2:00:50 am Cozy Bear gained global fame in 2016, when it was found to have infested the servers of the US Democratic National Committee (DNC) for over a year, and had briefly shared the rack with late entrant Fancy Bear.

The UKs National Cyber Security Centre and the US National Security Agency have accused Cozy Bear, a hacker group identified with the Russian intelligence community, of running spear-phishing campaigns against vaccine research labs and health care organisations. The timing is significant, as the Oxford vaccine clears early human trials with positive results. The nation which takes first mover advantage in vaccine development can reap significant strategic and commercial gains. Hackers serving spooks would be excited.

Cozy Bear gained global fame in 2016, when it was found to have infested the servers of the US Democratic National Committee (DNC) for over a year, and had briefly shared the rack with late entrant Fancy Bear. Displaying Smiley-grade spookiness, the two hacker groups in the same machine did not seem to be aware of each others existence. And a colourful entity named Guccifer 2.0 was also in the fray, distracting forensic efforts to trace malware and phishing attacks.

Guccifer 2.0 was the public face of data theft operations in the US and interference with elections there and in the UK, apart from exploits in the Pentagon, the White House, and in South Korea, Germany, the Netherlands and Norway. While the operations appeared to have been run by the bears, Guccifer 2.0 allegedly dispensed the harvest to everyone from Gawker to Julian Assange. He was an affable man about town, always ready to help people out with a bit of stolen information especially if it had a political fallout. The fact that he is no longer in the fray, now that the bears are gambolling again after a period in hibernation, suggests that the current attacks have nothing to do with domestic politics. This is a quest for intelligence about national responses to the pandemic, and possibly vaccine data. It is geopolitics big game hunting.

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Russian bears - The Indian Express

Cozy Bear: The Russian hacking group trying to steal the UK’s coronavirus vaccine – The Independent

The hacking of British research into a coronavirus vaccine was allegedly carried out by a Russian cyber group which was also involved in stealing and disseminating information from Democratic Party computers in the run-up to the 2016 US election which put Donald Trump in the White House.

The group APT29, also known as Cozy Bears, was named by the UKs National Cyber Security Centre (NCSC) as being behind the targeting of British, American and Canadian organisations involved in missions to find a counter to the pandemic.

Scientists at Oxford University and Londons Imperial College are at present leading the research into finding a vaccine for Covid-19 and the UK has recently been earmarked, say security officials, for attacks by groups connected to the Kremlin.

Sharing the full story, not just the headlines

Cozy Bear, linked to the Russian intelligence service FSB as well as the military intelligence arm GRU, is said to have developed new types of malware packages for attacks codenamed Operation Ghost by western security officials. Their targets in the US have included the Pentagon and the State Department during the Obama administration, and Norwegian and Dutch ministries in 2017.

The groups activities in recent months have been devoted to research into coronavirus, according to security officials. The NCSC, which is part of GCHQ, the British governments communications headquarters, has previously warned of advanced persistent threat (APT) hackers carrying out attack related to coronavirus both in Britain and abroad.

The UK became linked to the hacking of the Democratic Party emails with claims that Julian Assange, then seeking refuge in the Ecuadorian embassy in London, worked with the Russians to make them public, an act which greatly damaged Hillary Clintons campaign and helped that of Mr Trump. Mr Assange has denied the accusations.

Roger Stone who it was said by special counsel Robert Muellers investigation into Russian interference into the US election had been in liaison with Mr Assange last week had his prison sentence commuted by Mr Trump. Mr Assange remains incarcerated at the maximum security Belmarsh prison, facing extradition to the US and a possible 150-year sentence on separate charges of hacking Pentagon computers.

Meanwhile, the threat of illicit attacks on Covid-19 related matters is likely to continue, says the NCSC. The Cyber Centre said that it was 95 per cent sure that APT29 is part of Russian intelligence services, an assessment supported by the Canadian Communication Security Establishment, the US Department for Homeland Security, the Cybersecurity Infrastructure Security Agency, and the National Security Agency (NSA).

The NCSC concluded in a report: APT29 is likely to continue to target organisations involved in Covid-19 vaccine research and development, as they seek to answer additional intelligence questions relating to the pandemic.

Paul Chichester, NCSC director of operations, said: We condemn these despicable attacks against those doing vital work to combat the coronavirus pandemic. Working with our allies, the NCSC is committed to protecting our most critical assets and our top priority at this time is to protect the health sector.

No hype, just the advice and analysis you need

Dominic Raab, the foreign secretary, declared that it was completely unacceptable for Russian intelligence services to target research on the Covid-19 pandemic.

He said: While others pursue their selfish interests with reckless behaviour, the UK and its allies are getting on with the hard work of finding a vaccine and protecting global health. The UK will continue to counter those conducting such cyber attacks, and work with our allies to hold perpetrators to account.

In the US, Anne Neurberger, the director of cyber security at the NSA said: We, along with our partners, remains steadfast in our commitment to protecting national security by collectively issuing this critical cyber security advisory as foreign actors continue to take advantage of the ongoing Covid-19 pandemic,

APT29 has a long history of targeting governmental, diplomatic, think-tank, healthcare and energy organisations for intelligence gain so we encourage everyone to take this threat seriously and apply the mitigations issued in the advisory.

In Moscow, Russian government spokesman Dmitry Peskov insisted: We do not have information about who may have hacked into pharmaceutical companies and research centres in Great Britain. We can say one thing Russia has nothing at all to do with these attempts. We do not accept such accusations.

Originally posted here:
Cozy Bear: The Russian hacking group trying to steal the UK's coronavirus vaccine - The Independent

Press freedom groups sign joint letter calling for immediate release of Julian Assange – Press Gazette

Press freedom groups and journalist organisations are among 40 groups to today call for the British Government to release Wikileaks founder Julian Assange on his 49th birthday.

The International Federation of Journalists, Reporters Without Borders, Pen International and the National Union of Journalists are among those to sign the letter.

Assange is currently in HMP Belmarsh facing extradition to the United States where he has been indicted under the Espionage Act for Wikileaks 2010-11 publications of the Iraq War Logs, the Afghan War Diaries, and State Department cables.

Supporters fear that if convicted, Assange could spend the rest of his life behind bars.

The co-signers write: This [indictment] is an unprecedented escalation of an already disturbing assault on journalism in the US, where President Donald Trump has referred to the news media as the enemy of the people.

Whereas previous presidents have prosecuted whistleblowers and other journalistic sources under the Espionage Act for leaking classified information, the Trump Administration has taken the further step of going after the publisher.

Assange has also been charged with conspiring to violate the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

The open letter was initiated by the Courage Foundation, a whistleblower support network.

Executive director of PEN International Carles Torner said: This indictment effectively opens the door to criminalising activities that are vital to many investigative journalists who write about national security matters.

Beyond the case itself, we are concerned that the mere fact that Assange now risks extradition and potentially decades behind bars if convicted in the USA has a chilling effect on critical journalism, which is essential for exposing the truth about crimes committed by governments.

Rebecca Vincent, director of international campaigns for Reporters Rebecca Vincent said: Mr Assange has clearly been targeted for his contributions to public interest reporting. All charges against him should be dropped and he should be released without further delay.

On 24 June, the US Department of Justice issued a second superseding indictment against Assange, expanding on the charge for conspiracy to commit computer intrusion.

Assanges lawyer Barry Pollack said: The governments relentless pursuit of Julian Assange poses a grave threat to journalists everywhere and to the publics right to know.

He said the latest indictment was yet another chapter in the US Governments effort to persuade the public that its pursuit of Julian Assange is based on something other than his publication of newsworthy truthful information.

The freedom of expression groups say that a US conviction for Assangean Australian citizen who operated in Europe and was granted asylum and citizenship by Ecuadorwould allow the United States to dictate what journalists can publish beyond its borders.

The letter concludes: We call on the UK government to release Mr Assange without further delay and block his extradition to the US a measure that could save Mr Assanges life and preserve the press freedom that the UK has committed to championing globally.

Assanges extradition proceedings, which commenced for one week in February 2020 in London, are scheduled to continue for three weeks beginning 7 September.

Nathan Fuller, Executive Director, Courage Foundation

Rebecca Vincent, Director of International Campaigns, Reporters Without Borders (RSF)Adil Soz, International Foundation for Protection of Freedom of SpeechAnthony Bellanger, General Secretary International Federation of Journalists (IFJ)Archie Law, Chair Sydney Peace FoundationCarles Torner, Executive Director, PEN InternationalChristine McKenzie, President, PEN MelbourneDaniel Gorman, Director, English PENKjersti Lken Stavrum, President, PEN NorwayLasantha De Silva, Freed Media MovementMarcus Strom, President, MEAA Media, AustraliaMark Isaacs, President of PEN International SydneyMichelle Stanistreet, general secretary, National Union of Journalists (NUJ)Mousa Rimawi, Director, MADA the Palestinian Center for Development and Media FreedomsNaomi Colvin, UK/Ireland Programme Director, Blueprint for Free SpeechNora Wehofsits, Advocacy Officer, European Centre for Press and Media Freedom (ECPMF)Peter Tatchell, Peter Tatchell FoundationRalf Nestmeyer, Vice President, German PENRev Tim Costello AO, Director of Ethical VoiceRobert Wood, Chair, PEN PerthRuth Smeeth, Chief Executive Officer, Index on CensorshipSarah Clarke, Head of Europe and Central Asia, ARTICLE 19Silkie Carlo, Director, Big Brother WatchWilliam Horsley, Media Freedom Representative, Association of European JournalistsFoundation for Press Freedom (Fundacin para la Libertad de Prensa)Americans for Democracy & Human Rights in Bahrain (ADHRB)Bytes for All (B4A)Center for Media Freedom & Responsibility (CMFR)The Center for Media Studies and Peacebuilding (CEMESP-Liberia)The Centre for Investigative Journalism (CIJ)Free Media Movement Sri LankaFreedom Forum NepalIFoX / Initiative for Freedom of Expression TurkeyInternational Association of Democratic LawyersInternational Press Centre (IPC)The International Press Institute (IPI)Media Foundation for West AfricaMediacentar SarajevoNational Lawyers Guild International CommitteePakistan Press Foundation (PPF)South East Europe Media Organisation (SEEMO)World Association of Community Radio Broadcasters (AMARC)

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Press freedom groups sign joint letter calling for immediate release of Julian Assange - Press Gazette

40 rights groups call for Assange’s immediate release – Burnham and Highbridge Weekly News

Dozens of press freedom, human rights and privacy rights organisations across five continents have co-signed an open letter to the UK Government calling for the immediate release from prison of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

The Australian, who is 49 on Friday, is being held in Belmarsh Prison in London, facing extradition to the United States.

He has been indicted under the Espionage Act.

The co-signers write: This (indictment) is an unprecedented escalation of an already disturbing assault on journalism in the US, where President Donald Trump has referred to the news media as the enemy of the people.

Whereas previous presidents have prosecuted whistleblowers and other journalistic sources under the Espionage Act for leaking classified information, the Trump Administration has taken the further step of going after the publisher.

Reporters Without Borders, PEN International, the International Federation of Journalists, and the National Union of Journalists are among the 40 rights groups who have signed the letter, initiated by the Courage Foundation, a whistleblower support network which campaigns for Mr Assanges freedom.

Carles Torner, executive director of PEN International, said: This indictment effectively opens the door to criminalising activities that are vital to many investigative journalists who write about national security matters.

Beyond the case itself, we are concerned that the mere fact that Assange now risks extradition and potentially decades behind bars if convicted in the USA has a chilling effect on critical journalism, which is essential for exposing the truth about crimes committed by governments.

Rebecca Vincent, director of international campaigns for Reporters Without Borders, said: As Mr Assange spends his 49th birthday behind bars, it remains clear that the US government will continue to target him at all costs.

It is up to the UK Government to uphold its own obligations to protect freedom of information and not enable a politically motivated prosecution by another state.

Mr Assange has clearly been targeted for his contributions to public interest reporting.

All charges against him should be dropped and he should be released without further delay.

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40 rights groups call for Assange's immediate release - Burnham and Highbridge Weekly News

What’s New in the Unredacted Mueller Report? – Lawfare

If you strain your memory very hard, you might recall a man named Robert Mueller.

Only a short year ago, the special counsel was the man of the hour. Now, in the middle of a pandemic, a protest movement over police violence, and a presidential campaign, the urgency of Muellers findings hasunderstandablyfaded. Nevertheless, both Congress and news organizations are still pushing to squeeze more information out of the Mueller report. The Supreme Court will hear a dispute over whether the House of Representatives may access grand jury material redacted from the report, while litigation by various news organizations has resulted in the release of search warrants and affidavits related to the Roger Stone investigation and tranche after tranche of summaries of FBI interviews conducted by Muellers team.

And most recently, BuzzFeed News and the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC) successfully sued for the release of a version of the Mueller report with many fewer redactionsuncovering new text written by Muellers office that has been hidden for the past year.

So what fresh material is available in the new, improved, less-redacted Mueller report?

In one sense, not very much. The redactions lifted by BuzzFeed and EPICs litigation all pertain to the case of Roger Stone, which was pending when the report was first released but has now been completedhence the courts willingness to release this material. As a result, a fair amount of the newly unsealed material had already become public when the government presented it during Stones trial. Other pieces of the material were previously reported on by news organizations or, in one case, presented to Congress and the public by the witness who told Mueller about the incident in the first place.

But there are a few shreds of information that are really, genuinely new, and theyre damning of the president. Namely: Trump had direct knowledge of Roger Stones outreach to WikiLeaks, according to multiple witnesses interviewed by Mueller. He encouraged that outreach and asked his campaign chairman to pursue it further, those witnesses said. And Muellers office appears to have strongly suspected, without putting it in so many words, that Trump lied to the special counsel in his written answers to Muellers questions about the Stone affair.

The redacted report hinted at this. But its another thing to see it spelled out unmistakably by the special counsel.

Given that the full text of the original report is a hefty 448 pages, and the BuzzFeed/EPIC version clocks in at 394, its not that easy to find the fresh material at a glance. Below, Ive set out the redacted pages from the original report alongside their newly unredacted copies. You can scroll through the PDF documents (available directly here and here) and see what changed from copy to copy. If you click through to the PDFs themselves, the unredacted text is highlighted in yellow.

To keep things streamlined, Ive included only the pages where redactions were lifted. If you want to read the full report as it appears in the BuzzFeed/EPIC release, including the pages where nothing changed from the original, you can do so here. The report as first released to the public in April 2019, including all redactions, is available here.

Youll also find below a breakdown of what unsealed information is available, listed by page number and separated by volume. In each case, Ive put together short descriptions of the newly available facts, incorporating quotes from the relevant sections of the Mueller report along with my own summary text. Ive attempted to note instances where information was previously available and flagged where readers might find those earlier accounts. If a fact is stated on multiple pages, Ive included it only once.

Volume I

Volume II

Volume I

...Roger Stone made several attempts to contact WikiLeaks founder Assange, boasted of his access to Assange, and was in regular contact with Campaign officials about the releases that Assange made and was believed to be planning. (Vol. I, p. 51)

This is the overarching theme of the newly unsealed informationmuch of which became public in the indictment of Stone in January 2019 and over the course of Stones trial. Its the details that follow that are more noteworthy.

...beginning in June 2016 and continuing through October 2016, Stone spoke about WikiLeaks with senior Campaign officials, including candidate Trump. (Vol. I, p. 51)

While the redacted report hints at involvement by Trump, the hidden material makes this frustratingly unclear. The unredacted copy directly states that Trump spoke multiple times with Stone about WikiLeakss release of material damaging to Clinton. Specifically, according to the report, Stone told the Trump campaign as early as June 2016that is, at least a month before WikiLeaks began its releases on July 22that Assange would release damaging documents.

Much of this material became public during Stones trial thanks to Rick Gates, a campaign official indicted as part of the Mueller probe who testified against Stone. Gates testified then that he and campaign chairman Paul Manafort spoke with Stone about future WikiLeaks releases in June, and that the campaigns interest in what Stone had to offer peaked after July 22that is, after it turned out that Stones information might have been accurate. According to Gates, Manafort expressed interest in more information on WikiLeaks and asked Gates to keep in touch with Stone about possible future releases.

All this is now also documented in the unredacted reportmuch of it, footnotes show, derived from FBI interviews with Gates. But the report also documents matching testimony from Manafort himself, who told Muellers office that Stone told Manafort he was dealing with someone who was in contact with WikiLeaks and believed that there would be an imminent release of emails by WikiLeaks (Vol. I, p. 52).

According to Michael Cohen, Stone told Trump in a phone call before July 22 that he had just gotten off the phone with Julian Assange and in a couple of days WikiLeaks would release information. After the July release, Trump said to Cohen something to the effect of, I guess Roger was right. (Vol. I, p. 53)

Cohen informed Congress of this incident in his public testimony in February 2019which is cited in the report itself, along with an FBI interview of Cohen. During his testimony, as the report notes, he estimated that the Stone call took place on July 18 or 19. In Cohens account, he was in Trumps office in Trump Tower when Stone called and Trump put the call on speakerphone, allowing Cohen to hear.

The fact that Trump later commented I guess Roger was right (according to Cohen) is new, however.

After the first WikiLeaks dump, Manafort spoke with Trump about Stones apparent foreknowledge of the release. Trump responded that Manafort should stay in touch with Stone. Manafort relayed the message to Stone[.] (Vol. I, p. 53)

Gatess testimony in Stones trial gave part of this story: Gates told the jury that Manafort asked him to keep in touch with Stone about upcoming WikiLeaks releases and that Manafort said he personally would keep others on the campaign updated, including the candidate.

Now, though, the unsealed portions of the report give Manaforts side of the story as well, revealing that Manafort spoke directly with Trump and that the directive for campaign officials to keep up with Stone came from Trump himself. (The footnotes to portions of the text describing claims by Manafort are still redacted, and are labeled in the original report as redacted grand jury materialconsistent with court documents that show Manafort testified twice before the grand jury.)

Gates also stated that Stone called candidate Trump multiple times during the campaign. Gates recalled one lengthy telephone conversation between Stone and candidate Trump that took place while Trump and Gates were driving to LaGuardia Airport. Although Gates could not hear what Stone was saying on the telephone, shortly after the call candidate Trump told Gates that more releases of damaging information would be coming. (Vol. I, p. 54)

The original report included a tantalizing redactionthe only text available of the material quoted above described a car ride with Trump and Gates to the airport, and the fact that Trump told Gates to expect more damaging information. Now its clear that Trump got that information from Stone himself. But this material was revealed in the Stone trial, tooGatess testimony made headlines at the time.

Stone also had conversations about WikiLeaks with Steve Bannon, both before and after Bannon took over as chairman of the Trump campaign in August 2016telling Bannon after he became chairman that WikiLeaks would soon release material damaging to the Clinton campaign. (Vol. I, p. 54)

This, too, became public during the Stone trialin this case thanks to testimony by Bannon himself.

Page 47 of the unredacted report also includes more information about the back-and-forth between Bannon and Stone, some of which was previously available in the Stone indictment and all of which was subsequently published in the form of email exchanges released by the New York Times. On Oct. 3, 2016, Breitbart editor Matthew Boylenamed in the report only as a reporteremailed Stone to ask about Assanges plans. Stone responded, Id tell Bannon but he doesnt call me back. The next day, after a confusing press conference by Assange, Bannon wrote to Stone asking, What was that this morning??? and whether Stone had cut deal w/ clintons??? Stone responded that Assange was afraid he would be killed and that a load [of information would be released] every week going forward.

Following the initial July 22 release, Stone reached out to right-wing media personality Jerome Corsi instructing him to [g]et to Assange and get the pending [WikiLeaks] emails[.] Corsi began his own outreach to Assange through an associate, Theodore Malloch. On Aug. 2, Corsi wrote to Stone, Word is friend in embassy plans 2 more dumps. One shortly after Im back. 2nd in October. Impact planned to be very damaging. (Vol. I, p. 52)

Shortly after this exchange, Stone made the first of several public statements announcing he had been in touch with Assange, the report states, though he later said that the communication was via a mutual friendpresumably Corsi.

This information was previously available through the Stone indictment and the draft statement of offense in Corsis case. (Corsi entered plea negotiations with Muellers team, he says, but later called off the negotiations and provided the draft statement to the Washington Post. No charges have been brought against him.)

Stone also reached out to Assange through New York radio host Randy Credico, beginning in August 2016. At one point Stone asked Credico to ask Assange for certain emails from Clinton or the State Department, which Credico did. Then, [i]n late September and early October 2016, Credico and Stone communicated about possible WikiLeaks releases. (Vol. I, pp. 56-57)

This back-and-forth between Credico and Stone is documented in the Stone indictment, though Credico is not named. The radio host shared his account of his interactions with Stone as a witness in Stones trial.

Stone emailed prominent campaign donor Erik Prince about Assange on Oct. 3 and wrote that the payload is still coming. Stone told Prince by phone that WikiLeaks would release more materials that would be damaging to the Clinton campaign and indicated to Prince that he had what Prince described as almost insider stock trading type information about Assange. (Vol. I, p. 57)

The Stone indictment includes information about Stones payload email and the phone call, though Prince is described only as a supporter involved with the Trump Campaign. Prosecutors revealed that the mysterious supporter was Prince during Stones trial.

Mueller investigated whether Stone was involved in WikiLeakss Oct. 7 release of emails belonging to Clinton aide John Podestaa release that took place only hours after the Washington Post published the Access Hollywood tape. But the special counsel found little evidence. (Vol. I, pp. 58-59)

The original text of the redacted report described conflicting evidence as to whether Corsi had reached out to Assange to encourage WikiLeaks to release the emails following the Access Hollywood story. (To some extent, that conflict seems to have stemmed from Corsis own unreliability: By Muellers account, Corsi contradicted himself multiple times over the course of his interviews with the special counsel.)

Now, the unredacted text shows that Stone was also a part of this drama. According to Corsi, Stone reached out to him before the Post published the story and seemed to know about the tape. Corsi told the special counsels office both that he told Stone to reach out to Assange and suggest WikiLeaks publish further emails, and that Stone told Corsi to do so. Corsi himself made some of this information public in his book about his experience of the Mueller investigation, published January 2019as Andrew Prokop exhaustively describes at Voxbut given Corsis slipperiness with the truth, its useful to have Muellers account of the matter.

If Stone and Corsi really had connected with Assange on Oct. 7, it could be significant: it would mean that figures connected with the Trump campaign pushed for a WikiLeaks release to distract attention from the Access Hollywood tape. But as Mueller wrote in the original, redacted report, his office found little corroboration for Corsis various accounts of the day. Phone records show a call between Stone and the Post on Oct. 7, and calls between Corsi and Stone, but thats it.

Stone lied to the House Intelligence Committee in May 2017, denying any efforts to reach out to Assange. He also threatened Credico to prevent Credico from testifying and contradicting Stones statements to the committee. These actions were the basis of the criminal charges against him. (Vol. I, pp. 196-197)

This material is available in the Stone indictment.

Volume II

When then-Senate Intelligence Committee Chairman Richard Burr briefed the White House about the Russia investigation in March 2017, he appears to have provided information about Stones case as well. Notes from Deputy White House Counsel Annie Donaldson include the line Stone (cant handicap). (Vol. II, p. 52)

The redacted report made clear that Donaldsons notes discussed former National Security Adviser Michael Flynn, Manafort, former campaign foreign policy adviser Carter Page and former foreign policy adviser George Papadopoulos (Greek Guy). The portion of the notes discussing Stone was previously redacted. Its not clear what Donaldson might have meant by cant handicap.

Muellers analysis of Trumps efforts to obstruct the investigation by dissuading witnesses from testifying included Trumps tweets about Stone, as well as his actions toward Paul Manafort and Michael Flynn. (Vol. II, pp. 128-133)

Among the instances of potential obstruction of justice analyzed in Volume II of the report, Mueller includes Trumps conduct toward Flynn, Manafort, and what until now was a redacted third individual (along with Michael Cohen). Context made fairly obvious that Stone was the third person. (An enterprising reader could, for example, Google the various quotes and news headlines included in this section from which the third persons name had been redacted, and see that these snippets referred to Stone.) But now its spelled out in black and white.

Much of this newly unredacted Stone section is more or less what one would expect. As with the sections on Manafort and Cohen, it describes the presidents public tweets and other statements discouraging cooperation with the government. At one point, for example, Mueller notes Trumps December 2018 tweet that Stone had guts in declining to make up lies and stories about President Trump. (In fact, Susan Hennessey and I analyzed this tweet as possible obstruction of justice at the time.)

The Manafort and Flynn sections of the report both included public statements by the president along with evidence of previously unknown, behind-the-scenes maneuvering by Trump and his team to keep witnesses from testifying. The new Stone section, on the other hand, includes only Trumps public tweets: Theres no hidden strong-arming here.

Mueller does, however, strongly imply in the unredacted text that Trump lied to the special counsels officeperhaps the biggest bombshell to come out of this new material.

The special counsel acknowledged during his congressional testimony that Trump had been less than entirely truthful in his written answers to questions posed by Muellers team. Until now, though, few specifics were available about the nature of those untruths. Readers were left to sift through Trumps answersappended to the report itselfand draw their own conclusions. The unredacted report, though, shows that Muellers office doubted the honesty of Trumps assertions that he did not remember any discussions about WikiLeaks with Stone. The relevant paragraph is worth reading in full:

With regard to the Presidents conduct towards Stone, there is evidence that the President intended to reinforce Stones public statements that he would not cooperate with the government when the President likely understood that Stone could potentially provide evidence that would be adverse to the President. By late November 2018, the President had provided written answers to the Special Counsels Office in which the President said he did not recall the specifics of any call [he] had with Stone during the campaign period and did not recall discussing WikiLeaks with Stone. Witnesses have stated, however, that candidate Trump discussed WikiLeaks with Stone, that Trump knew that Manafort and Gates had asked Stone to find out what other damaging information about Clinton WikiLeaks possessed, and that Stones claimed connection to WikiLeaks was common knowledge within the Campaign. It is possible that, by the time the President submitted his written answers two years after the relevant events had occurred, he no longer had clear recollections of his discussions with Stone or his knowledge of Stones asserted communications with WikiLeaks. But the Presidents conduct could also be viewed as reflecting his awareness that Stone could provide evidence that would run counter to the Presidents denials and would link the President to Stones efforts to reach out to WikiLeaks. On November 28, 2018, eight days after the President submitted his written answers to the Special Counsel, the President criticized flipping and said that Stone was very brave for not cooperating with prosecutors. Five days later, on December 3, 2018, the President applauded Stone for having the guts not to testify against him. These statements, as well as those complimenting Stone and Manafort while disparaging Michael Cohen once Cohen chose to cooperate, support the inference that the President intended to communicate a message that witnesses could be rewarded for refusing to provide testimony adverse to the President and disparaged if they chose to cooperate.

In other words, Mueller suspected that Trump may have lied in his answers to the special counsels office. Then, he suspected, the president may have pushed Stone not to testify in order to prevent Mueller from discovering that deception.

Read more:
What's New in the Unredacted Mueller Report? - Lawfare

US issues new ‘highly unusual’ indictment against Assange RSF – The Shift News

Reporters Without Borders has criticised the latest move by the US Department of Justice against Julian Assange after it issued a new indictment against the Wikileaks founder that broadens the scope of the hacking allegations he is facing.

Describing it as highly unusual, the press freedom NGO pointed out that the new indictment, which supersedes the others, widened the scope of the conspiracy claimed in the hacking allegations filed against him.

Assange is facing extradition proceedings in the UK after the US Department of Justice filed 17 counts under the Espionage Act and one charge under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA).

The new indictment did not add new charges but expanded the scope of the CFAA charge and changed the evidential basis of some of the other charges against him, RSF said in a statement.

The NGO, which has been closely monitoring Assanges case since the very start, pointed out that it was highly unusual at this late stage in the extradition case.

The superseding indictment is the latest in a long series of moves by the US government to manipulate legal loopholes in their targeting of Julian Assange, to undermine his defence, and to divert public attention from the extremely serious press freedom implications of his case, RSF Director of International Campaigns Rebecca Vincent said.

The timing was also questioned by Assanges lawyer Mark Summers in an administrative hearing in the UK on 29 June and he expressed surprise that the defence team had learned about the indictment through the press. The new indictment had not yet been sent to Assanges lawyers or the court or been formally filed in the UK proceedings, the NGO said.

Meanwhile, Assange continues to be held at the high-security Belmarsh prison with an ailing health condition which has even led him to miss a hearing earlier in June, raising further concerns about the state of his health and strengthening calls for him to be released, especially in light of the potential exposure to COVID-19.

Last month, a group of 11 current and former statesmen from Europe and the US wrote an open letter to the Lord Chancellor and Secretary of State for Justice Robert Buckland and UK Commons Justice Committee Chair Bob Neill, asking for Assange to be released into home detention with a 24-hour monitoring ankle bracelet.

The politicians supported an urgent appeal by Australian MPs Andrew Wilkie and George Christensen who asked the British authorities to urgently reconsider granting Assange monitored home detention.

The Wikileaks founder has been charged for publishing the Afghanistan and Iraq war diaries and US embassy cables important documents that many journalists around the world used. The War Diaries provided evidence that the US Government misled the public about activities in Afghanistan and Iraq and committed war crimes.

RSF had previously expressed concern regarding the US governments lack of evidence for its charges against Assange and believed Assange had been targeted for his contributions to public interest reporting.

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US issues new 'highly unusual' indictment against Assange RSF - The Shift News

Julian Assange and the new McCarthyism – Morning Star Online

IF WARS can be started by lies, they can be stopped by truth: Julian Assange, publisher.

Nearly 70 years ago, in 1951, the founder and director of International Publishers Ltd, Alexander Trachtenberg, was one of a group of communists arrested and indicted under the 1940 Alien Registration Act, known as the Smith Act.

Indictments under this Act formed part of the general process known as McCarthyism which effectively succeeded in its aim of disarming and immobilising the CPUSA.

Trachtenberg received a three-month sentence, which ended when the key witness retracted. He was convicted again in 1956 but the conviction was later overturned.

Many Star readers may find books published by International Publishers on their shelves: works by Marx, Engels and Lenin (including the Little Lenin Library) and works developing their ideas; analyses of modern-day imperialism, of Soviet economic development, of US industry and labour conditions and the history of negro slavery; works of new US proletarian writers.

In 1952 a public meeting was held in defence of Trachtenberg, and the speechesat the meeting were brought together in a pamphlet, Publisher on Trial: the case of Alexander Trachtenberg.

Speakers included William Patterson, executive secretary of the Civil Rights Congress, Howard Fast and the historians Philip S Foner and Herbert Aptheker, as well contributions sent from Britain by DN Pritt and Rajani Palme Dutt.

Speakers focused on two elements. First, the charges against Trachtenberg as a publisher represented an attack on the right to hold alternative views or to read alternative literature, as Howard Fast noted: The indictment has a singularity as exercised toward him. Both the man and the books he has published are on trial.

Second, the speeches linked the indictments to mounting militarisation and preparation for war.

There are striking parallels between the words used in this pamphlet to defend Trachtenberg, and the words used currently by defenders of Julian Assange.

The wider intention of the prosecutions against both men was and is to stifle all dissent and especially to silence the voices raised against mongering cold and hot, old and new wars.

Both cases have dire implications for other publishers.

In 1950 Albert Maltz wrote: If Alexander Trachtenberg is locked behind bars then the shadow of those bars will fall upon the desk of every publisher in the United States.

Imprison the publisher of Marxist works today and then let us see what other publishers will dare print tomorrow.

In 2020 the charges against Assange, as his lawyer Jen Robinson has stated, relate to activity that journalists engage in all the time and any prosecution and extradition of Mr Assange for having done so or [being] alleged to have done so will place a massive chill on investigative journalism the world over.

In both cases, the charges brought under the Smith Act in 1950 or at Assanges extradition hearings in 2020 under the US Espionage Act are prima facie violations of the First Amendment of the US constitution.

Following the collapse of the appeal to the Supreme Court that the Smith Act violated the First Amendment, Justice William O Douglas issued a dissenting opinion, arguing that the judgement is to make freedom of speech turn not on what is said but on the intent with which it is said.

Once we start on that road we enter territory dangerous to the liberties of every citizen we then start probing mens minds for motive and purpose; they become entangled in the law not for what they did but for what they thought.

The Washington Post in 1950 saw the aim of the legal attack on the CPUSA as not so much the protection and security of the state as the exploitation of justice for the purpose of propaganda.

With regard to the indictment against Assange, the New York Times stated on May 23 2019: The new charges focus on receiving and publishing classified material from a government source.

That is something journalists do all the time. They did it with the Pentagon Papers and in countless other cases where the public benefited from learning what was going on behind closed doors, even though the sources may have acted illegally.

This is what the First Amendment is designed to protect: the ability of publishers to provide the public with the truth.

Supposed guardians of a free press and many left radicals and liberals deserted Trachtenberg just as Julian has experienced today.

In the case of Trachtenberg, condemnation was made automatic through the intense red-baiting of the day.

As a result, the people whose professional duty is to be the guardian of the free press the publishers, professors, teachers in the schools, librarians, booksellers kept silent, saving their reputations, wrote Maltz.

Assange was systematically and interminably defamed by reference to allegations of rape, now dropped: the result is that Assange has become a pariah.

Lost is the fact that he and Wikileaks did what all journalists should do, which is to make important information available to the public, enabling people to make evidence-based judgments about the world around them and, in particular, about the actions of their governments.

The speech by Angus Cameron, himself a radical publisher and later blacklisted, explained what was at stake: Americans must come to realise before it is too late that the freedom of speech and the freedom of the press which they take for granted are the right to express heresy to the current view whether that current view be the precepts of a tyrannical 17th-century theocracy in Massachusetts or against the precepts of a 20th-century financial-military oligarchy in Washington DC and New York City.

The same applies today in the defence of Julian Assange.

Continued here:

Julian Assange and the new McCarthyism - Morning Star Online

Wikileaks-Hosted "Most Wanted Leaks" Reflects the Transparency Priorities of Public Contributors – EFF

The government recently released a superseding indictment[1] against Wikileaks editor in chief Julian Assange, currently imprisoned and awaiting extradition in the United Kingdom. As weve written before, this prosecution poses a clear threat to journalism, and, whether or not Assange considers himself a journalist, the indictment targets routine journalistic practices such as working with and encouraging sources during an investigation.

While considering the superseding indictment, its useful to look at some of the features carrying over from the previous version. Through much of the indictment, the government describes and refers back to a page on the Wikileaks website describing the Most Wanted Leaks of 2009.[2] The implication in the indictment is that Wikileaks was actively soliciting leaks with this Most Wanted Leaks list, but the government is leaving out a crucial piece of nuance about the Most Wanted Leaks page: Unlike much of Wikileaks.org, the Most Wanted Leaks was actually a publicly-editable wiki.

Rather than viewing this document as a wishlist generated by Wikileaks staff or a reflection of Assanges personal priorities, we must understand that this was a publicly-generated list developed by contributors who felt each wanted document offered information that would be valuable to the public.

Archives of the page show evidence of the editable nature of the document:

The Most Wanted Leaks page shows that it has visible edit links, similar to what one might find on any wiki page.

Language on the page says that one can "securely andanonymously" add your nomination by directly editing the page:

And goes on to encourage contributors to "simply click "edit" on the country below" to make changes to the page:

While we dont know how many people contributed to the page at the time, the different formatting and writing styles across the page support the idea that this page was edited by many different people. But the governments indictment, which names this document no less than 14 times and dedicates multiple pages to describing it, never explains the crowd-sourced nature of the Most Wanted Leaks document.

Its easy to understand why. The government prosecutors are trying to paint a picture of Assange as a mastermind soliciting leaks, and is charging him with violating computer crime law and the Espionage Act. It doesnt suit their narrative to show Wikileaks as a host for a crowdsourced page where activists, scholars, and government accountability experts from across the globe could safely and anonymously offer their feedback on the transparency failures of their own governments. But as we analyze the indictment, its important that we keep this context in mind. Its overly simplistic to describe the Most Wanted Leaks list, as the government does in its indictment, as ASSANGEs solicitation of classified information made through the Wikileaks website" or a way "to recruit individuals to hack into computers and/or illegally obtain and disclose classified information Wikileaks." This framing excises the role of the untold number of contributors to this page, and lacks an understanding of how modern wikis and distributed projects work.

Weve long argued that working with sources to obtain classified documents of public importance is a well-established and integral part of investigative journalism and protected by the First Amendment. Even if Assange had himself written and posted everything on the Most Wanted Leaks page, then the First Amendment would protect his right to do so. There is no law in the United States that would prevent a publisher from publicly listing the types of stories or leaks they would like to be made publicly. But thats not what happened herein this case, Wikileaks was providing a forum where contributors from around the world could identify documents and data they felt were important to be made public. And the First Amendment clearly protects the rights of websites to host a public forum of that nature.

Many of the documents on the Most Wanted Leaks page are of clear public interest. Some of the documents requested by editors of the page include:

While today its in the governments interest to paint Wikileaks as a rogue band of hackers directed by Assange, the Most Wanted Leaks page epitomizes one of the most important features of Wikileaks: that as a publisher, it served the public interest. Wikileaks served activists, human rights defenders, scholars, reformers, journalists and other members of the public. With the Most Wanted Leaks page, it gave members of the public a platform to speak anonymously about documents they believed would further public understanding. Its an astonishingly thoughtful and democratic way for the public to educate and communicate their priorities to potential whistleblowers, those in power, and other members of the public.

The ways Wikileaks served and furthered the public interest doesnt fit the prosecutions litigation strategy. If Assange goes to court to combat the Espionage charges he is facing, he may well be prevented from discussing the public interest and impact of Wikileaks publication history. Thats because the Espionage Act, passed in 1917, pre-dated modern communications technology and was never designed as a tool to crack down on investigative journalists and their publishers. Theres no public interest defense to the Espionage Act, and those charged under the Espionage Act may have no chance to even explain their motivation or the impactgood or badof their actions.

Assanges arrest in April 2019 was based on a single charge, under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA), arising froma single, unsuccessful attempt to crack a password. At the time, it was clear to usthat the governments CFAA charge was being used as a thin cover for attacking the journalism. The original May 2019Superseding Indictment added 17 additional charges to the CFAA charge, and clarifying it was charging both conspiracy and a direct violation. In the Second Superseding Indictment, however, thedirect CFAA charge is gone, leaving the charge of Conspiracy to Commit Computer Intrusion. The government removed the paragraphs specifying the password cracking as the particular factual grounds, now basing this Count vaguely on the acts described in the [27 page] General Allegations Section of this Indictment.

Removing the direct CFAA charge does not make this indictment any less dangerous as an attack on journalism. These General Allegations include many normal journalistic practices, all essential to modern reporting: communications oversecure chat service, transferring files withcloud services, removing usernames and logs to protect the sources identity, and, now in the Second Superseding Indictment, having a crowd-sourced list of documents that the contributors believed would further public understanding. By removing the factual specificity, the Second Superseding Indictment only deepensthe chilling effect on journalists who use modern tools to report on matters of public interest.

Regardless of how you feel about Assange as a person, we should all be concerned about his prosecution. If found guilty, the harm wont be just to Assange himselfit will be to every journalist and news outlet that will face legal uncertainty for working with sources to publish leaked information. And a weakened press ultimately hurts the publics ability to access truthful and relevant information about those in power. And that is directly against the public interest.

Read the new charges against Assange.

[1] A superseding indictment means that the government is replacing its original charges with new, amended charges.

[2] The Most Wanted Leaks document was also submitted in Chelsea Mannings trial. https://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/sdut-wikileaks-most-wanted-list-admitted-in-trial-2013jul01-story.html

Excerpt from:

Wikileaks-Hosted "Most Wanted Leaks" Reflects the Transparency Priorities of Public Contributors - EFF

RSF Reiterates Call For Charges Against Julian Assange To Be Dropped As US Issues New Indictment – Scoop.co.nz

Thursday, 2 July 2020, 7:25 amPress Release: Reporters Without Borders

vvvReporters Without Borders (RSF) condemns the USDepartment of Justices issuing of a new supersedingindictment against Wikileaks founder Julian Assange - thelatest in a long series of US government attempts tomanipulate legal loopholes and undermine Assangesdefense. RSF calls again for all charges against Assange tobe dropped and for him to be immediately released.

On24 June, the US Department of Justice filed a new supersedingindictment against Assange, broadening the scope ofthe conspiracy claimed in the hacking allegations againsthim. Assange had previously been indicted on 17counts under the Espionage Act and one charge under theComputer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA); the new supersedingindictment did not add new charges, but expands the scope ofthe CFAA charge and changes the evidential basis of some ofthe other charges against him.

Such a move is highlyunusual at this late stage in an extradition case, which hadproceeded on the basis of the 18-count indictmentissued by the US Department of Justice in May 2019.Assanges US extradition hearing began in February 2020 atthe Woolwich Crown Court in London; RSF monitored the firstweek of proceedings and expressedconcern regarding the US governments lack of evidencefor its charges against Assange. RSF believes Assange hasbeen targeted for his contributions to public interestreporting and that his prosecution has serious implicationsfor journalism and press freedominternationally.

The supersedingindictment is the latest in a long series of moves by the USgovernment to manipulate legal loopholes in their targetingof Julian Assange, to undermine his defense, and to divertpublic attention from the extremely serious press freedomimplications of his case. This never-ending persecutionsimply has to stop. We call again for all charges against MrAssange to be dropped and for him to be immediatelyreleased, said RSF Director of International CampaignsRebecca Vincent.

In an administrativehearing at the Westminster Magistrates Court on 29 June,Assanges lawyer Mark Summers expressed surprise over thetiming of the superseding indictment, as well as the factthat the defense team had learned about it through thepress. The indictment had not yet been sent to Assangeslawyers or the court, and had not been formally entered intothe UK proceedings.

The defense stated that theywanted the US extradition hearing to continue as planned;the full hearing is scheduled to resume from 7 September,when three weeks of evidence are expected to be heard.Assanges next callover hearing is scheduled for 27July.

Assange continues to be held at the highsecurity Belmarsh prison, where he remains at risk ofexposure to Covid-19 - a risk exacerbated by his underlyinghealth concerns, adding urgency to the need for hisimmediate release. He has been unableto participate remotely in administrative courtproceedings for several months, reportedly feeling unwelland having been advised by his doctors that it was unsafefor him to access the prisons video conferencingfacilities.

The UK and US are respectively ranked 33rdand 45th out of 180 countries in RSFs 2020World Press FreedomIndex.

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RSF Reiterates Call For Charges Against Julian Assange To Be Dropped As US Issues New Indictment - Scoop.co.nz