Julian Assange after rape charges dropped: Prepare for ‘war …

Julian Assange warned Friday that even though Sweden planned to drop itsinvestigation into a rape claim against him after almost seven years, his legal ordeal was "not something that I can forgive."

Assange, 45, took refuge in Ecuador's Embassy in London in 2012 to escape extradition to Sweden to answer questions about sex-crime accusations from two women. He has been there ever since, claiming officials could ultimately extradite him to the United States.

Friday's announcement meant Assange no longer was under any investigation in Sweden. However, British police said Assange was still wanted in the U.K. for jumping bail in 2012 -- so he could still face arrest if he leaves the Ecuadorean Embassy.

Speaking from the building's balcony, Assange said, "The proper war is just commencing" over his legal troubles.He also said his lawyers would contact U.K. officials to seek a way forward in resolving his status.

"It is a scandal that a suspected rapist can avoid the judicial system and thus avoid a trial in court,"a lawyer for the woman who claimed Assange raped her responded. Elisabeth Massi Fritz said her client was shocked but "she can't change her view that Assange has exposed her to a rape."

TEXT OF SWEDISH PROSECUTOR'S DECISION

Moments after the announcement, Assange's Twitter account posted a photo of him smiling.

Per E. Samuelson, Assange's lawyer in Sweden, told The Associated Press it was a "day of victory." He added that Assange was "very unhappy" about the long investigation, which he said cost his client "five, six years of his life."

Assange also says he would be "happy" to discuss the case with the U.S. government even though Attorney General Jeff Sessions said that arresting Assange was a priority. President Donald Trump has said it is "OK" with him if Sessions does that.

CONTEXT: WHAT'S NEXT FOR ASSANGE?

Sweden's top prosecutor said "costs were not a reason for putting down the investigation." Marianne Ny told a news conference: "When we investigate serious crimes, we do not consider the costs."

Fox News' Mike Arroyo and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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Julian Assange cancels planned ‘special announcement’ – The Guardian

Supporters of Julian Assange had been preparing to hear from the WikiLeaks fugitive in central London on Monday. Photograph: Matt Dunham/AP

The WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange, has abruptly cancelled a press conference at which he had planned to make a special announcement.

Journalists and supporters had gathered under a balcony at the Ecuadorian embassy in central London, from where Assange usually conducts press conferences.

The latest was to have coincided with the fifth anniversary of his taking refuge in the embassy.

The Swedish authorities have dropped an investigation into sex-related allegations, but there is an arrest warrant out for him in the UK accusing him of jumping bail.

Assange expressed hope in an interview with the Press Association ahead of the planned press conference that a standoff with the UK authorities might be resolved.

He cited various reasons to be hopeful. We have support across many parts of the political spectrum in the United States, including most of the mainstream media.

Within Europe there is a growing recognition that extraditing me or any of our staff to Trumps America is not a way to win votes.

Assange has repeatedly expressed fears that arrest in the UK would lead to his extradition to the US, where he could be charged with espionage offences. Without the UK arrest warrant, Assange would be free to fly to Ecuador, which has offered him asylum.

Melinda Taylor, one of Assanges legal team who was outside the embassy on Monday, said: Julian was scheduled to make a special announcement today. I am not privy to that. His UK lawyers were told there is going to be a meeting with UK authorities.

Under advisement, he cancelled the announcement to assure negotiations proceeded in an open and constructive manner because it is essential there is a resolution as soon as possible to what the UN stated is illegal and arbitrary detention.

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Pamela Anderson Has A Plan To Free Boyfriend Julian Assange And It Involves Opening A Vegan Restaurant – UPROXX

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Pamela Anderson has always had a soft spot for animals, partnering with PETA for animal rights and the promoting of vegetarian values, and now she is putting the commitment to those causes behind a business decision. Together with Chef Christophe Leroy, Anderson will be opening a vegan restaurant in the South of France that is described in an announcement on her site as festive, glamorous and Vegan and a dream come true. La Table du Marche, as she is calling the spot, will open on July 4th in Moulins de Ramatuelle and will be open from 6pm onward for 50 days only offering a gourmet, chic and romantic alternative to French diners.

But delicious vegan food and exclusivity isnt the only reason behind this venture. Apparently, Anderson hopes it may pave the way for the liberation of her boyfriend Julian Assange. The Wikileaks founder has been living in the Ecuadorian embassy in London for years now to avoid being arrested by any of a number of countries, and Anderson is hoping that newly appointed President of France Emmanuel Macron will join her at her new restaurant to talk over what can be done to loosen up Assanges current situation.

In a separate post on her website, Anderson extended an invitation to both Macron and his wife Brigitte.

I am reaching out to Emmanuel Macron, and to his wife Brigitte Trogneux. As a resident of France, my adopted home, I would like to meet with you and discuss Julians situation. I am opening a new vegan restaurant in France in July, and I would like to extend my invitation to the new President and his First Lady. Join me on the day I open the doors, and we will sit and eat good food and discuss what can be done for Julian. France could display its strength, and so could you, if you give Julian asylum.

Whether or not her master plan works to the ends she would like it to, Anderson is still providing hopefully delicious food to the people of Southern France.

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Julian Assange cancels embassy speech ahead of ‘imminent meeting with UK authorities’ – Daily Echo

A planned announcement by WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange from the balcony of the Ecuadorian Embassy has been deferred on the advice of his legal counsel, following the agreement of an imminent meeting with British authorities.

Mr Assange was due to make a speech at lunchtime, marking the fifth anniversary of his arrival at the embassy in London.

As scores of his supporters and media gathered outside the building, it emerged that he was not going ahead with the speech.

Mr Assanges legal team remain optimistic that a satisfactory outcome can be found which respects the British legal process and restores Mr Assanges freedom and dignity, a statement on his behalf said.

Melinda Taylor, of Mr Assanges legal team, told the Press Association: We have been given confirmation that there will be a meeting with the British authorities.

We hope that will be soon. We dont want to prejudice that meeting because we need this impasse to be resolved.

There is no legal reason to keep Julian here.

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Pamela Anderson writes love letter to Julian Assange – Page Six

Pamela Anderson has penned an online love letter to Julian Assange, branding Theresa May the worst prime minister in living memory and calling for the WikiLeaks founders release.

On June 19, Assange will reportedly mark his five years of unlawful detention in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London with a special announcement from the balcony.

In a post titled Why My Heart Stands With Julian, Anderson called on world leaders, and China, to intervene and help free the Australian.

The former Baywatch star said there was no longer any reason to keep Assange trapped in a small room now Sweden has dropped its case against him.

Anderson continued: But Theresa May who kept him imprisoned in the embassy for five years refuses to allow him to leave. Theresa May, who is on her last legs. Theresa May of the pyhrric victory (sic).

Theresa May, who wont shake the hand of the victims of the Grenfell fire. Who doesnt care about poor people. Who doesnt care about justice or peace. Who doesnt care about Julian. The worst prime minister in living memory.

Anderson also invited French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte to the July opening of her new restaurant in France, and asked him to grant Assange asylum.

She also used the letter to address Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn, highlighting their mutual compassion for animals, while stating that Assange should be given compensation.

In the letter posted on pamelaandersonfoundation.org, the ex-playboy model gushed over how his bravery and courage makes Assange sexy. She signed off: I love you, Pamela.

Assange has spent five years holed up in the Ecuadorean embassy in London.

He is set to make an announcement on June 19 to mark the five-year anniversary of his unlawful detention.

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Pamela Anderson writes love letter to Julian Assange - Page Six

What we know about Julian Assange’s cat – Irish Examiner

Julian Assanges cat has managed to win the internets hearts but how much do we actually know about the whistle blowers furry friend in the Ecuadorian embassy?

Heres a quick run-through.

Whats she called?

We still dont actually know. Not long after her arrival, a Twitter account was set up under the name Embassy Cat and it would seem that name has stuck, even with her owner.

When she made a cameo appearance during a live broadcast by Assange on the night of the EU referendum, he referred to his latest guest as Embassy Cat.

Where did she come from?

Embassy Cat, a descendent from the original European wildcat, was a gift from Assanges young children to keep their father company.

She was just a tiny 10-week-old kitten when she was given to him in May 2016, which would make her around a year and four months now.

What does she do?

She has apparently spent much of the last year sleeping in a top hat by day and prowling the embassy by night.

Her Twitter account also specifies her interest in counter-purrveillance so whatever activity that involves, theres that too.

She also appears to like to get dressed up for special occasions, rocking a shirt and tie (and gender fluidity) when the media turned up to the embassy en mass after Sweden decided to drop the investigation against Assange.

What can we tell from her Twitter?

The cat appears to be hot on puns, politics and praising my human. And her 31,000 followers lap it up.

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Julian Assange – Journalist, Computer Programmer, Activist …

Journalist, Computer Programmer, Activist(1971)

Julian Assange came to international attention as the founder of the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks.

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If journalism is good, it is controversial, by its nature.

It is the role of good journalism to take on powerful abusers, and when powerful abusers are taken on, there's always a bad reaction. So we see that controversy, and we believe that is a good thing to engage in.

Julian Assange

Born on July 3, 1971, in Townsville, Australia, Julian Assange used his genius IQ to hack into the databases of many high profile organizations. In 2006, Assange began work on WikiLeaks, a website intended to collect and share confidential information on an international scale. For his efforts, the internet activist earned the Time magazine "Person of the Year" title in 2010. Seeking to avoid extradition to Sweden over sexual assault allegations, Assange has remained at the Ecuadorian embassy in London since 2012. In 2016, his work again drew international attention when WikiLeaks published thousands of emails from U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and the Democratic National Committee, an effort believed to have impacted that year's presidential election.

Journalist, computer programmer and activist Julian Assange was born on July 3, 1971, in Townsville, Queensland, Australia. Assange had an unusual childhood, as he spent some of his early years traveling around with his mother, Christine, and his stepfather, Brett Assange. The couple worked together to put on theatrical productions. Brett Assange later described Julian as a "sharp kid who always fought for the underdog."

The relationship between Brett and Christine later soured, but Assange and his mother continued to live a transient lifestyle. With all of the moving around, Assange ended up attending roughly 37 different schools growing up, and was frequently homeschooled.

Assange discovered his passion for computers as a teenager. At the age of 16, he got his first computer as a gift from his mother. Before long, he developed a talent for hacking into computer systems. His 1991 break-in to the master terminal for Nortel, a telecommunications company, got him in trouble. Assange was charged with more than 30 counts of hacking in Australia, but he got off the hook with only a fine for damages.

Assange continued to pursue a career as a computer programmer and software developer. An intelligent mind, he studied mathematics at the University of Melbourne. He dropped out without finishing his degree, later claiming that he left the university for moral reasons; Assange objected to other students working on computer projects for the military.

In 2006, Assange began work on WikiLeaks, a website intended to collect and share confidential information on an international scale. The site officially launched in 2007 and it was run out of Sweden at the time because of the country's strong laws protecting a person's anonymity. Later that year, WikiLeaks released a U.S. military manual that provided detailed information on the Guantanamo detention center. WikiLeaks also shared emails from then-vice presidential candidate Sarah Palin that it received from an anonymous source in September 2008.

In early December 2010, Assange discovered that he had other legal problems to worry about. Since early August, he had been under investigation by the Swedish police for allegations that included two counts of sexual molestation, one count of illegal coercion, and one count of rape. After a European Arrest Warrant was issued by Swedish authorities on December 6, Assange turned himself in to the London police.

Following a series of extradition hearings in early 2011 to appeal the warrant, Assange learned on November 2, 2011, that the High Court dismissed his appeal. Still on conditional bail, Assange made plans to appeal to the U.K. Supreme Court.

According to a New York Times article, Assange came to the Ecuadorean Embassy in London in June 2012, seeking to avoid extradition to Sweden. Nearly two months later, in August 2012, Assange was granted political asylum by the Ecuadorean government, which, according to the Times, "protects Mr. Assange from British arrest, but only on Ecuadorean territory, leaving him vulnerable if he tries to leave the embassy to head to an airport or train station." The article went on to say that the decision "cited the possibility that Mr. Assange could face 'political persecution' or be sent to the United States to face the death penalty," putting further strain on the relationship between Ecuador and Britain, and instigating a rebuttal from the Swedish government.

In August 2015 the lesser sexual assault allegations from 2010 with the exceptionof rape were dropped due to statute of limitation violations by Swedish prosecutors. The statue of limitations on the rape allegations will expire in 2020.

In February 2016, a United Nations panel determined that Assange had been arbitrarily detained, and recommended his release and compensation for deprivation of liberty. However, both the Swedish and British governments rejected those findings as non-binding, and reiterated that Assange would be arrested if he left the Ecuadorian embassy.

On May 19, 2017, Sweden said it would drop its rape investigation of Julian Assange. While today was an important victory and important vindication, the road is far from over, he told reporters from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London. The war, the proper war, is just commencing.

Assange still faces a warrant in Britain for failing to appear in court, and the U.S. Justice Department said it was reconsidering whether to charge him for revealing classified information.

Assange and WikiLeaks returned to the headlines during the summer of 2016 as the U.S. presidential race was narrowing to two main candidates, Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump. In early July, WikiLeaks released more than 1,200 emails from Clinton's private server during her tenure as secretary of state. Later in the month, WikiLeaks released an additional round of emails from the Democratic National Committee that indicated an effort to undermine Clinton's primary opponent, Bernie Sanders, leading to the resignation ofDNC chairperson Debbie Wasserman Schultz.

In October, WikiLeaks unveiled more than 2,000 emails from Clinton campaign chair John Podesta, which included excerpts from speeches to Wall Street banks. By this point, U.S. government officials had gone public with the belief that Russian agents had hacked into DNC servers and supplied the emails to WikiLeaks, though Assange repeatedly insisted that was not the case.

On the eve of the election, Assange released a statement in which he declared no "personal desire to influence the outcome," noting that he never received documents from the Trump campaign to publish. "Irrespective of the outcome of the 2016 U.S. Presidential election," he wrote, "the real victor is the U.S. public which is better informed as a result of our work." Shortly afterward, Trump was declared the winner of the election.

Rumors of a relationship between Assange and actress Pamela Anderson surfaced after the former Baywatch star was spotted visiting the Ecuadorian embassy in late 2016. "Julian is trying to free the world by educating it," she later told People. "It is a romantic struggle I love him for this."

In April 2017, Showtime announced that it would air theAssange documentary Risk, which hadpremiered at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival but updated with events related to the U.S. presidential election.

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Pamela Anderson pens love letter to Julian Assange – Fox News

Pamela Anderson has penned an online love letter to Julian Assange calling on world leaders to intervene to set the WikiLeaks founder free.

The former Baywatch star said there was no longer any need to keep him "trapped in a small room" now that Sweden has dropped its case against him.

Assange has been holed up in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London for almost five years after seeking asylum as he feared he would be extradited to Sweden to answer allegations of sexual assault which he denied.

He was also concerned that if he was taken to the Scandinavian country then he could be sent to the U.S. to face trial over WikiLeaks' release of classified American government documents.

In the letter, Anderson said Theresa May was the "worst prime minister in living memory" but praised Labor leader Jeremy Corbyn.

The 49-year-old actress continued: "But Theresa May -- who kept him imprisoned in the embassy for five years -- refuses to allow him to leave.

"Theresa May, who is on her last legs. Theresa May of the pyhrric victory (sic).

"Theresa May, who won't shake the hand of the victims of the Grenfell fire. Who doesn't care about poor people. Who doesn't care about justice or peace. Who doesn't care about Julian.

"The worst prime minister in living memory."

Anderson also invited French President Emmanuel Macron and his wife Brigitte to the opening of her new restaurant in France in July, and asked him to grant Assange asylum.

She wrote that she and Corbyn have a mutual compassion for animals, while saying Assange, 45, should be given compensation.

'I love you, Pamela'

To Corbyn, she said: "I have watched the recent UK election with great interest. I have cheered the turn in your party's fortunes! You are clearly a decent and fair man."

Anderson describes the U.S. government as the "ultimate bully, a superpower, with 1,200 military bases all around the world."

In the letter posted on pamelaandersonfoundation.org, the ex-Playboy model gushed over how his "bravery and courage" make Assange sexy.

She signed it: "I love you, Pamela."

This story originally appeared on Sky News.

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What we know about Julian Assange’s cat – the Irish News


the Irish News
What we know about Julian Assange's cat
the Irish News
Embassy Cat, a descendent from the original European wildcat, was a gift from Assange's young children to keep their father company. She was just a tiny 10-week-old kitten when she was given to him in May 2016, which would make her around a year and ...

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What we know about Julian Assange's cat - the Irish News

Risk review: Wikileaks documentary offers unparalleled access to Julian Assange – The Sydney Morning Herald

Julian Assange in Risk: Sympathetic or not, he is a fascinatingly weird screen presence.Photo: Supplied

(M) 91 minutes

In 2011, Julian Assange and a handful of his supporters are gathered in Ellingham Hall, the Norfolk manor where he's taken refuge while battling extradition to Sweden over claims of sexual assault.

One of Wikileaks' encrypted files has been hacked, meaning that tens of thousands of "unredacted" diplomatic cables are about to be released online. As Assange rubs his eyes with the look of a man fighting chronic fatigue, one of his allies, Wikileaks editor Sarah Harrison, tries to get Hillary Clinton on the phone.

When Harrison is given the runaround from the State Department, Assange takes over the conversation, growing testy as he tries to convey the emergency to some guy named Chad on the other end of the line. "To make it clear, we don't have a problem. You have a problem."

This tense, character-driven scene could be inserted, beat for beat, into a dramatisation of the Wikileaks story. In a observational documentary like Laura Poitras' Risk, it's almost too effective to seem real as if the atmosphere of pulp suspense surrounding media coverage of Wikileaks had engulfed both filmmaker and subject, leaving no difference between fictionalised history and the real thing.

Poitras has played these kinds of tricks before famously in Citizenfour, her 2014 documentary about Edward Snowden, which mimicked the style of a conspiracy thriller. A major success in its own right, Citizenfour originated as a spinoff of Risk, which has been a work-in-progress since 2010.

Over the years, Poitras has been given unparalleled access to Assange and the Wikileaks team but other filmmakers have managed to beat her to the punch with this subject matter, notably Alex Gibney in his 2013 documentary We Steal Secrets.

Perhaps as a result, Risk is briefer and more impressionistic than might be expected from its long genesis, assuming a baseline level of familiarity with the Wikileaks saga. Titlecards with facts and figures seem meant to jog our memory rather than tell us anything fresh.

Poitras shows little interest in passing judgement on Wikileaks as an organisation, much less in exploring the substance of what they've revealed about for example, the American military or the CIA.

Rather, she aims to convey the texture of unfolding events from an insider's point of view. Her spacey voiceover suggests she imagines herself as a character in a science-fiction or spy story, even including accounts of her Assange-related dreams.

Reports indicate Assange was enraged by the film's original cut, and since its premiere at the 2016 Cannes Film Festival it has been re-edited by Poitras to reflect their falling out.

While there's no smoking gun here that will radically change anyone's viewpoint, judging by the current version, Assange's fury is understandable. Many scenes reveal him as both predictably high-handed and surprisingly naive, particularly in his private responses to the sexual misconduct claims.

Sympathetic or not, he remains a fascinatingly weird screen presence, with mannerisms as distinctive as those of any cult performer: the darting eyes and superior smirk, the hand gestures that turn every exchange into an impromptu lecture.

Poitras and her editors use these physical details for their own sly purposes, assembling the portrait of an Assange who's both a sophisticated player and a creature of appetite and instinct (one early shot shows him pulling the cap off a bottle with his teeth).

Some moments are bizarre enough to rival the new Twin Peaks: Assange taking a meeting in a leafy grove and reacting suspiciously to birds, or adopting a preposterous disguise to fool the British media. Then there's the scene where he's visited in the Ecuadorian embassy by celebrity fan-girl Lady Gaga, a 21st-century equivalent to Andy Warhol hanging out with one of his "superstars".

Too bad Poitras didn't take a hint from Lynch or Warhol regarding duration. If Risk were 10 or 20 hours long, it might not be any more "balanced" but it would have the potential of being a essential work, a close-up view of one of the great stories of our time.

As it stands, it provides a few extra pieces of a fascinating puzzle while testifying to the wholesale blurring of distinctions between journalism, art and entertainment, a process far advanced in Warhol's day and virtually complete in ours.

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Risk review: Wikileaks documentary offers unparalleled access to Julian Assange - The Sydney Morning Herald