US Wins Appeal Over Extradition Of Wikileaks Founder …

The ruling brings Julian Assange one step closer to being extradited but further hurdles remain.

The United States won an appeal in London's High Court to have Wikileaks founder Julian Assange extradited to face criminal charges, including breaking a spying law and conspiring to hack government computers.

"The court allows the appeal," Judge Timothy Holroyde said.

The judge said he was satisfied with a package of assurances given by the United States about the conditions of Assange's detention including a pledge not to hold him in a so-called "ADX" maximum security prison in Colorado and that he would be transferred to Australia to serve his sentence if convicted.

The ruling brings Assange one step closer to being extradited but further hurdles remain.

Judge Holroyde said the case must now be remitted to Westminster Magistrates' Court with the direction judges send it to the British government to decide whether or not Assange should be extradited to the United States.

USauthorities accuse Australian-born Assange, 50, of 18 counts relating to Wikileaks' release of vast troves of confidential U.S. military records and diplomatic cables which they said had put lives in danger.

The United States was appealing against a Jan. 4 ruling by a London District Judge that Assange should not be extradited because he would likely commit suicide in a U.S. prison.

WikiLeaks came to prominence when it published a U.S. military video in 2010 showing a 2007 attack by Apache helicopters in Baghdad that killed a dozen people, including two Reuters news staff. It then released thousands of secret classified files and diplomatic cables.

U.S. prosecutors and Western security officials regard Assange as a reckless and dangerous enemy of the state whose actions imperilled the lives of agents named in the leaked material.

But supporters cast Assange as an anti-establishment hero who has been victimised by the United States for exposing U.S. wrongdoing in Afghanistan and Iraq.

(Except for the headline, this story has not been edited by NDTV staff and is published from a syndicated feed.)

Waiting for response to load...

Continue reading here:
US Wins Appeal Over Extradition Of Wikileaks Founder ...

Private lives are exposed as WikiLeaks spills its secrets …

CAIRO (AP) WikiLeaks giant data dumps have rattled the National Security Agency, the U.S. Democratic Party, and the Saudi foreign ministry. But its spectacular mass-disclosures have also included the personal information of hundreds of people including sick children, rape victims and mental health patients, The Associated Press has found.

In the past year alone, the radical transparency group has published medical files belonging to scores of ordinary citizens while many hundreds more have had sensitive family, financial or identity records posted to the web. In two particularly egregious cases, WikiLeaks named teenage rape victims. In a third case, the site published the name of a Saudi citizen arrested for being gay, an extraordinary move given that homosexuality can lead to social ostracism, a prison sentence or even death in the ultraconservative Muslim kingdom.

They published everything: my phone, address, name, details, said a Saudi man who told AP he was bewildered that WikiLeaks had revealed the details of a paternity dispute with a former partner. If the family of my wife saw this ... Publishing personal stuff like that could destroy people.

WikiLeaks mass publication of personal data is at odds with the sites claim to have championed privacy even as it laid bare the workings of international statecraft, drawing criticism from longtime allies.

Attempts to reach WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange for an interview over the past month have been unsuccessful and the ex-hacker did not reply to written questions. In a series of tweets following the publication of the APs story, WikiLeaks dismissed the privacy concerns as recycled news and said they were not even worth a headline.

Assange has been holed up for the past four years in Ecuadors embassy in London, where he sought refuge when Swedish prosecutors sought to question him over sexual assault allegations. He gave no indication Tuesday that the offending material would be taken down.

WikiLeaks purported mission is to bring censored or restricted material involving war, spying and corruption into the public eye, describing the trove amassed thus far as a giant library of the worlds most persecuted documents.

The library is growing quickly, with half a million files from the U.S. Democratic National Committee, Turkeys governing party and the Saudi Foreign Ministry added in the last year or so. But the library is also filling with rogue data, including computer viruses, spam, and a compendium of personal records.

The Saudi diplomatic cables alone hold at least 124 medical files, according to a sample analyzed by AP. Some described patients with psychiatric conditions, seriously ill children or refugees.

This has nothing to do with politics or corruption, said Dr. Nayef al-Fayez, a consultant in the Jordanian capital of Amman who confirmed that a brain cancer patient of his was among those whose details were published to the web. Dr. Adnan Salhab, a retired practitioner in Jordan who also had a patient named in the files, expressed anger when shown the document.

This is illegal what has happened, he said in a telephone interview. It is illegal!

The AP, which is withholding identifying details of most of those affected, reached 23 people most in Saudi Arabia whose personal information was exposed. Some were unaware their data had been published; WikiLeaks is censored in the country. Others shrugged at the news. Several were horrified.

One, a partially disabled Saudi woman whod secretly gone into debt to support a sick relative, said she was devastated. Shed kept her plight from members of her own family.

This is a disaster, she said in a phone call. What if my brothers, neighbors, people I know or even dont know have seen it? What is the use of publishing my story?

Medical records are widely counted among a persons most private information. But the AP found that WikiLeaks also routinely publishes identity records, phone numbers and other information easily exploited by criminals.

The DNC files published last month carried more than two dozen Social Security and credit card numbers, according to an AP analysis assisted by New Hampshire-based compliance firm DataGravity. Two of the people named in the files told AP they were targeted by identity thieves following the leak, including a retired U.S. diplomat who said he had to change his number after being bombarded by threatening messages.

The number of people affected easily reaches into the hundreds. Paul Dietrich, a transparency activist, said a partial scan of the Saudi cables alone turned up more than 500 passport, identity, academic or employment files.

The AP independently found three dozen records pertaining to family issues in the cables including messages about marriages, divorces, missing children, elopements and custody battles. Many are very personal, like the marital certificates that reveal whether the bride was a virgin. Others deal with Saudis who are deeply in debt, including one man who says his wife stole his money. One divorce document details a male partners infertility. Others identify the partners of women suffering from sexually transmitted diseases including HIV and Hepatitis C.

Lisa Lynch, who teaches media and communications at Drew University and has followed WikiLeaks for years, said Assange may not have had the staff or the resources to properly vet what he published. Or maybe he felt that the urgency of his mission trumped privacy concerns.

For him the ends justify the means, she said.

___

Initially conceived as a Wikipedia-style platform for leakers, WikiLeaks initial plan was for a worldwide community of informed users to curate the material it released wholesale, according to the sites now defunct question-and-answer page. Prominent transparency advocate Steven Aftergood privately warned Assange a few days before the sites debut that the publish-everything approach was problematic.

Publication of information is not always an act of freedom, Aftergood said in an email sent in late 2006. It can also be an act of aggression or oppression.

Those concerns were heightened after WikiLeaks published a series of documents leaked by U.S. Army intelligence analyst Bradley Manning, now known as Chelsea, in 2010. The publication provided explosive evidence of human rights abuses in Iraq and Pakistani cooperation with the Taliban in Afghanistan among many other revelations but it also led to allegations that civilians in war zones had been endangered.

Assange insisted WikiLeaks had a system to keep ordinary peoples information safe.

We have a harm minimization policy, the Australian told an audience in Oxford, England in July of 2010. There are legitimate secrets. Your records with your doctor, thats a legitimate secret.

Assange initially leaned on cooperating journalists, who flagged sensitive material to WikiLeaks which then held them back for closer scrutiny. But Assange was impatient with the process, describing it as time-consuming and expensive.

We cant sit on material like this for three years with one person to go through the whole lot, line-by-line, to redact, he told Londons Frontline Club the month after his talk in Oxford. We have to take the best road that we can.

Assanges attitude has hardened since. A brief experiment with automatic redactions was aborted. The journalist-led redactions were abandoned too after Assanges relationship with the London press corps turned toxic. By 2013 WikiLeaks had written off the redaction efforts as a wrong move.

Withholding any data at all legitimizes the false propaganda of information is dangerous, the group argued on Twitter.

But some private information genuinely is dangerous, courting serious consequences for the people involved.

Three Saudi cables published by WikiLeaks identified domestic workers whod been tortured or sexually abused by their employers, giving the womens full names and passport numbers. One cable named a male teenager who was raped by a man while abroad; a second identified another male teenager who was so violently raped his legs were broken; a third outlined the details of a Saudi man detained for sexual deviation a derogatory term for homosexuality.

Scott Long, an LGBT rights activist who has worked in the Middle East, said the names of rape victims were off-limits. And he worried that releasing the names of people persecuted for their sexuality only risked magnifying the harm caused by oppressive officials.

Youre legitimizing their surveillance, not combating it, Long said.

___

WikiLeaks was criticized last month after it released what it described as AKP emails, a reference to Turkeys governing Justice and Development Party, known by its Turkish acronym AKP. But dissidents excitement turned to scorn when they realized the 300,000 documents were little more than a vast collection of junk mail and petitions.

Vural Eroz, 66, was one of many people whod written to the AKP, complaining in 2013 that his car had been towed from his lawn by authorities in Istanbul. He was startled to find that WikiLeaks had published the message along with his personal number.

I would like to know for what purpose they exposed me, he said in a phone interview.

Prominent anti-censorship campaigner Yaman Akdeniz, who reviewed hundreds of messages like Erozs, said there was nothing newsworthy in any of them.

Eroz said he admired WikiLeaks for exposing wrongdoing but said, they should try to protect innocent civilians. They should screen what they leak.

Experts say WikiLeaks apparent refusal to do the most minimal screening is putting even its own readers at risk.

Vesselin Bontchev, a researcher at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences National Laboratory of Computer Virology, said he was startled to find hundreds of pieces of malicious software in WikiLeaks dumps suggesting the site doesnt take basic steps to sanitize its publications.

Their understanding of journalism is finding an interesting document in a trash can and then dumping the can on your front door, he said.

Even Assanges biggest backers are getting uncomfortable. Journalist Glenn Greenwald, one of the sites leading allies in the media world, has distanced himself from WikiLeaks over its publication strategy. National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden, whose asylum in Russia WikiLeaks helped broker, recently suggested the site should take more care to curate its work.

Others are disillusioned.

Dietrich, the transparency activist, said he still supported WikiLeaks in principle but had been souring on Assange and his colleagues for a while.

One of the labels that they really dont like is being called anti-privacy activists, Dietrich said in a phone interview. But if you want to live down that label, dont do stuff like this!

___

Satter reported from Paris and London. Cinar Keper in Istanbul contributed to this report.

___

Online:

Raphael Satter can be reached at: http://raphaelsatter.com

Maggie Michael can be reached at: https://twitter.com/mokhbersahafi

See the rest here:
Private lives are exposed as WikiLeaks spills its secrets ...

Clinton Emails – WikiLeaks

../Clinton_Email_August_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Clinton_Email_December_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Clinton_Email_February_13_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Clinton_Email_February_19_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Clinton_Email_February_26_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Clinton_Email_February_29_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Clinton_Email_January_29_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Clinton_Email_January_7_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Clinton_Email_July_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Clinton_Email_June_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Clinton_Email_May_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Clinton_Email_November_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Clinton_Email_October_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Clinton_Email_September_Release/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_10/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_11/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_12/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_13/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_14/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_15/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_16/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_17/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_18/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_19/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_2/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_20/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_21/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_22/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_23/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_24/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_25/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_26/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_27/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_28/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_29/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_3/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_30/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_31/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_32/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_4/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_5/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_6/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_7/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_8/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Litigation_F-2016-07895_9/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Nov03_2016/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Nov04_2016/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -Powell_9-23-2016/ 01-Jan-1970 00:01 -readme.txt 08-Oct-2018 20:06 200

Read more here:
Clinton Emails - WikiLeaks

WikiLeaks And Bitcoin: A Crypto Love Story? – NewsBTC

The story of WikiLeaks and its move to Bitcoin is a popular one amongst crypto investors. When WikiLeaks had first come out, it quickly gained popularity for publicizing news leaks and classified information on its site. Founded in 2006, the not-for-profit organization has had an interesting history, one of those being its founder, Julian Assange, being sent to prison.

Even more interesting is the organizations history with leading cryptocurrency bitcoin. The anonymous whistleblower platform had gotten on the governments bad side over leaked documents that contained sensitive and classified military information. The organization which depended largely on donations had suffered greatly from this as payments processors like Visa and Mastercard had distanced themselves from the entity.

After being cut off from traditional methods of payment, WikiLeaks had turned to the next best thing. At this point, the organization needed something that could not be tracked or controlled by the government and it turned to bitcoin donations for this. Julian Assange had accused the U.S. government of endorsing what he referred to as an illegal banking blockade against WikiLeaks, forcing entities like AmEx, Visa, PayPal, etc, to stop supporting the organization.

Related Reading | Could An Elon Musk Time Magazine Cover Predict The Crypto Cycle Peak?

According to Assange, this had spurred the entitys move into bitcoin. Bitcoin was still relatively new at this point. In 2010, when the blockade went into effect, BTC was only a year old and still trading relatively low. That same year, WikiLeaks had begun receiving cryptocurrency donations, which was just bitcoin at first but has since expanded to include other cryptocurrencies.

WikiLeaks has done well in terms of donations. Bitcoin was only trading at a low six cents when the organization began receiving it as donations in 2010. The digital asset has since grown over the following decade to a high of $69,000 in 2021.

In 2017, founder Julian Assange tweeted saying that WikiLeaks investments had grown over 50,000% from when they began accepting the digital asset. Assange went further to thank the U.S. government for being the push behind this move. Bitcoin has since grown a further $50,000 since the founder made this tweet.

Presently, WikiLeaks now accepts donations in six cryptocurrencies including Bitcoin, Ethereum, Bitcoin Cash, Monero, Litecoin, and ZCash. This report from CryptoPotato analyzed the history of the various wallets and concluded that WikiLeaks has received over $2.2 million in donations using cryptocurrencies.

Related Reading | Why The Dark Nets Most Active Market Ditched Bitcoin For Monero

However, this excluded Monero donations as the report stated that donations using the privacy coin could not be tracked. Additionally, WikiLeaks also received a donation of 1 CryptoKitties.

Julian Assange is currently being remanded in Belmarsh Prison in London after reportedly suffering a stroke due to stress. The transient ischemic stroke was said to have occurred after the High Court overruled a judgment that prevented the Australian national from being extradited to the U.S.

Go here to read the rest:

WikiLeaks And Bitcoin: A Crypto Love Story? - NewsBTC

The U.S. is set to appeal the U.K.’s refusal to extradite …

Julian Assange's partner, Stella Moris, addresses protestors outside the High Court in London, Wednesday. The U.S. government is scheduled to ask Britain's High Court to overturn a judge's decision that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange should not be sent to the United States to face espionage charges. A lower court judge refused extradition in January on health grounds. Frank Augstein/AP hide caption

Julian Assange's partner, Stella Moris, addresses protestors outside the High Court in London, Wednesday. The U.S. government is scheduled to ask Britain's High Court to overturn a judge's decision that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange should not be sent to the United States to face espionage charges. A lower court judge refused extradition in January on health grounds.

LONDON The U.S. government is scheduled to ask Britain's High Court on Wednesday to overturn a judge's decision that WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange should not be sent to the United States to face espionage charges.

In January, a lower court judge refused an American request to extradite Assange on spying charges over WikiLeaks' publication of secret military documents a decade ago.

District Judge Vanessa Baraitser denied extradition on health grounds, saying Assange was likely to kill himself if held under harsh U.S. prison conditions. But she rejected defense arguments that Assange faces a politically motivated American prosecution that would override free-speech protections, and she said the U.S. judicial system would give him a fair trial.

Lawyers for U.S. authorities have been granted permission to appeal. At an earlier hearing they questioned the psychiatric evidence in the case and argued that Assange does not meet the threshold of being "so ill" that he cannot resist harming himself.

Several dozen pro-Assange protesters rallied outside London's Royal Courts of Justice before the hearing, which is scheduled to last two days.

Assange, who is being held at London's high-security Belmarsh Prison, had been expected to attend by video link, but he was not present as the hearing began. His lawyer, Edward Fitzgerald, said Assange "doesn't feel able to attend the proceedings."

Assange's partner, Stella Moris, said outside court that she was "very concerned for Julian's health. I saw him on Saturday. He's very thin."

"It is completely unthinkable that the U.K. courts could agree to this," Moris said. "I hope the courts will end this nightmare, that Julian is able to come home soon and that wise heads prevail."

The two justices hearing the appeal who include England's most senior judge, Lord Chief Justice Ian Burnett are not expected to give their ruling for several weeks.

The High Court's ruling will likely not end the epic legal saga, however, since the losing side can seek to appeal to the U.K. Supreme Court.

U.S. prosecutors have indicted Assange on 17 espionage charges and one charge of computer misuse over WikiLeaks' publication of thousands of leaked military and diplomatic documents. The charges carry a maximum sentence of 175 years in prison.

The prosecutors say Assange unlawfully helped U.S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning steal classified diplomatic cables and military files that WikiLeaks later published. Lawyers for Assange argue that he was acting as a journalist and is entitled to First Amendment freedom of speech protections for publishing documents that exposed U.S. military wrongdoing in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Assange, 50, has been in prison since he was arrested in April 2019 for skipping bail during a separate legal battle. Before that he spent seven years holed up inside Ecuador's London embassy, where he fled in 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden to face allegations of rape and sexual assault.

Sweden dropped the sex crimes investigations in November 2019 because so much time had elapsed, but Assange remains in prison. The judge who blocked extradition in January ordered that he must stay in custody during any U.S. appeal, ruling that the Australian citizen "has an incentive to abscond" if he is freed.

WikiLeaks supporters say testimony from witnesses during the extradition hearing that Assange was spied on while in the embassy by a Spanish security firm at the behest of the CIA and that there was even talk of abducting or killing him undermines U.S. claims he will be treated fairly.

Journalism organizations and human rights groups have urged President Joe Biden to drop the prosecution launched under his predecessor, Donald Trump.

Amnesty International Secretary-General Agnes Callamard said the charges were politically motivated and should be dropped.

"It is a damning indictment that nearly 20 years on, virtually no one responsible for alleged U.S. war crimes committed in the course of the Afghanistan and Iraq wars has been held accountable, let alone prosecuted, and yet a publisher who exposed such crimes is potentially facing a lifetime in jail," she said.

Read the original:

The U.S. is set to appeal the U.K.'s refusal to extradite ...

US says Assange could go to Australian prison if convicted …

LONDON -- U.S. authorities launched a new battle on Wednesday to make Julian Assange face American justice, telling British judges that if they agree to extradite the WikiLeaks founder on espionage charges, he could serve any U.S. prison sentence he receives in his native Australia.

In January, a lower U.K. court refused a U.S. request to extradite Assange over WikiLeaks publication of secret American military documents a decade ago. District Judge Vanessa Baraitser ruled that Assange, who has spent years in hiding and in British prisons as he fights extradition, was likely to kill himself if held under harsh U.S. prison conditions.

Appealing against that decision at the High Court in London, an attorney for the U.S. government on Wednesday denied that Assanges mental health was too fragile to withstand the U.S. judicial system. Lawyer James Lewis said Assange has no history of serious and enduring mental illness and does not meet the threshold of being so ill that he cannot resist harming himself.

U.S. prosecutors have indicted Assange on 17 espionage charges and one charge of computer misuse over WikiLeaks publication of thousands of leaked military and diplomatic documents. The charges carry a maximum sentence of 175 years in prison, although Lewis said the longest sentence ever imposed for this offense is 63 months.

Lewis said American authorities had promised that Assange would not be held before trial in a top-security Supermax prison or subjected to strict isolation conditions, and if convicted would be allowed to serve his sentence in Australia. Lewis said the assurances are binding on the United States."

Once there is an assurance of appropriate medical care, once it is clear he will be repatriated to Australia to serve any sentence, then we can safely say the district judge would not have decided the relevant question in the way that she did," he said.

The U.S. also says a key defense witness, neuropsychiatrist Michael Kopelman, misled the previous judge by omitting to mention that Stella Moris, a member of WikiLeaks legal team, was also Assanges partner and had two children with him. Lewis said that information was a highly relevant factor to the question of likelihood to suicide.

Assange's lawyer, Edward Fitzgerald, accused U.S. lawyers of seeking to minimize the severity of Mr Assanges mental disorder and suicide risk.

Fitzgerald said in a written submission that Australia has not yet agreed to take Assange if he is convicted. Even if Australia did agree, Fitzgerald said the U.S. legal process could take a decade, during which Mr. Assange will remain detained in extreme isolation in a U.S. prison.

Assange, who is being held at Londons high-security Belmarsh Prison, had been expected to attend the two-day hearing by video link, but Fitzgerald said Assange had been put on a high dose of medication and doesn't feel able to attend.

Assange later appeared on the video link at times, seated at a table in a prison room wearing a black face mask.

Since WikiLeaks began publishing classified documents more than a decade ago, Assange has become a flashpoint figure. Some see him as a dangerous secret-spiller who endangered the lives of informers and others who helped the U.S. in war zones. Others say WikiLeaks shone a light on official malfeasance that governments would like to keep secret.

American prosecutors say Assange unlawfully helped U.S. Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning steal classified diplomatic cables and military files that WikiLeaks later published. Lawyers for Assange argue that he was acting as a journalist and is entitled to First Amendment freedom of speech protections for publishing documents that exposed U.S. military wrongdoing in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Several dozen pro-Assange protesters held a boisterous rally outside Londons neo-Gothic Royal Courts of Justice on Wednesday, calling the prosecution politically motivated. They urged U.S. President Joe Biden to drop the legal proceedings, which were begun under his predecessor, Donald Trump.

The demonstrators included Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei, who said Assange's case relates to our society, it relates to our freedom of expression, it relates to our individual human rights, and we have to watch the government."

WikiLeaks supporters say testimony from witnesses during the extradition hearing that Assange was spied on while in Ecuador's embassy in London by a Spanish security firm at the behest of the CIA and that there was even talk of abducting or killing him undermines U.S. claims he will be treated fairly.

The two justices hearing the appeal one is Englands most senior judge, Lord Chief Justice Ian Burnett are not expected to give their ruling for several weeks. The losing side could seek to appeal to the U.K. Supreme Court.

Assange, 50, has been in prison since he was arrested in April 2019 for skipping bail during a separate legal battle. Before that he spent seven years holed up inside Ecuadors London embassy, where he fled in 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden to face allegations of rape and sexual assault.

Sweden dropped the sex crimes investigations in November 2019 because so much time had elapsed. The judge who blocked extradition in January ordered that he must stay in custody during any U.S. appeal, ruling that the Australian citizen has an incentive to abscond if he is freed.

Outside court, Moris said it was completely unthinkable that the U.K. courts could agree to extradition.

I hope the courts will end this nightmare, that Julian is able to come home soon and that wise heads prevail," she said.

Associated Press writer David Keyton contributed.

Read the rest here:

US says Assange could go to Australian prison if convicted ...

US asks UK court to permit extradition of WikiLeaks’ Assange

The United States asked Britain's High Court on Wednesday to overturn a judge's decision that Julian Assange should not be sent to the United States to face espionage charges, promising that the WikiLeaks founder would be able to serve any prison sentence he receives in his native Australia.In January, a lower court judge refused an American request to extradite Assange on spying charges over WikiLeaks' publication of secret military documents a decade ago.

District Judge Vanessa Baraitser denied extradition on health grounds, saying Assange was likely to kill himself if held under harsh US prison conditions. But Baraitser rejected defence arguments that Assange faces a politically motivated American prosecution that would override free-speech protections, and she said the US judicial system would give him a fair trial.

An attorney for the US government, James Lewis, argued Wednesday that the judge erred when she ruled Assange would be at risk of suicide if he were sent to the United States. He said American authorities had promised that Assange would not be held before trial in a top-security "Supermax" prison or subjected to strict isolation conditions, and would be allowed in the event of a conviction to serve any sentence in Australia.

Lewis said the assurances "are binding on the United States".

US authorities also argue that Assange does not meet the threshold of being so ill that he cannot resist harming himself.

"Once there is an assurance of appropriate medical care, once it is clear he will be repatriated to Australia to serve any sentence, then we can safely say the district judge would not have decided the relevant question in the way that she did," Lewis said.

Several dozen pro-Assange protesters rallied outside London's Royal Courts of Justice before the hearing, which is scheduled to last two days.

Assange, who is being held at London's high-security Belmarsh Prison, had been expected to attend by video link, but his lawyer, Edward Fitzgerald, said Assange had been put on a high dose of medication and "doesn't feel able to attend the proceedings."

A video link later showed Assange appearing to listen to the hearing. During previous court sessions, his lawyers said he experienced physical and mental health problems.

Assange's partner, Stella Moris, said outside court that she was "very concerned for Julian's health. I saw him on Saturday. He's very thin."

"It is completely unthinkable that the UK courts could agree to this," Moris said. "I hope the courts will end this nightmare, that Julian is able to come home soon and that wise heads prevail."

The two justices hearing the appeal who include England's most senior judge, Lord Chief Justice Ian Burnett are not expected to give their ruling for several weeks. That will likely not end the epic legal saga, however, since the losing side can seek to appeal to the UK Supreme Court.

US prosecutors have indicted Assange on 17 espionage charges and one charge of computer misuse over WikiLeaks' publication of thousands of leaked military and diplomatic documents. The charges carry a maximum sentence of 175 years in prison.

The prosecutors say Assange unlawfully helped US Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning steal classified diplomatic cables and military files that WikiLeaks later published. Lawyers for Assange argue that he was acting as a journalist and is entitled to First Amendment freedom of speech protections for publishing documents that exposed US military wrongdoing in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Assange, 50, has been in prison since he was arrested in April 2019 for skipping bail during a separate legal battle. Before that he spent seven years holed up inside Ecuador's London embassy, where he fled in 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden to face allegations of rape and sexual assault.

Sweden dropped the sex crimes investigations in November 2019 because so much time had elapsed, but Assange remains in prison. The judge who blocked extradition in January ordered that he must stay in custody during any US appeal, ruling that the Australian citizen "has an incentive to abscond" if he is freed.

WikiLeaks supporters say testimony from witnesses during the extradition hearing that Assange was spied on while in the embassy by a Spanish security firm at the behest of the CIA and that there was even talk of abducting or killing him undermines US claims he will be treated fairly.

Journalism organisations and human rights groups have urged President Joe Biden to drop the prosecution launched under his predecessor, Donald Trump.

Amnesty International Secretary-General Agnes Callamard said the charges were politically motivated and should be dropped.

"It is a damning indictment that nearly 20 years on, virtually no one responsible for alleged US war crimes committed in the course of the Afghanistan and Iraq wars has been held accountable, let alone prosecuted, and yet a publisher who exposed such crimes is potentially facing a lifetime in jail," she said.

Read more:

US asks UK court to permit extradition of WikiLeaks' Assange

WikiLeaks founder faces extradition to U.S. | One America …

LONDON, ENGLAND APRIL 11: Julian Assange gestures to the media from a police vehicle on his arrival at Westminster Magistrates court on April 11, 2019 in London, England. (Photo by Jack Taylor/Getty Images)

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange faces extradition to the U.S. in an upcoming trial.

Assanges partner, Stella Morris, held a press conference ahead of the hearing in London Monday. She began by remarking on the abhorrent condition she found him in a Belmarsh prison, where he has been incarcerated for the past 2.5 years.

I was quite taken aback by how this he was, said Morris. He was wearing a t-shirt so I hadnt seen his arms for a long time. So, I could see how thin he got.

Morris went on to express her fears of what could happen if Assange should be moved to the U.S. She likened his possible fate to that of Saudi journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

It is now known that the CIA was plotting to murder Julian and kidnap him, and carry out completely illegal acts just like the Saudi government did to Jamal Khashoggi and actually carried out the murder, said Morris. The CIA was planning to do the same against Julian.

Icelandic journalist Kristinn Hrafnsson, Editor-in-Chief of Wikileaks (L) and Julian Assanges partner Stella Moris attend a briefing with members of the media in London on October 25, 2021, ahead of the appeal of the extradition of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to the US. (Photo by DANIEL LEAL-OLIVAS/AFP via Getty Images)

WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Kristinn Hrafnsson claimed the theory of an Assange murder plot by the CIA is not far-fetched. He went on to cite a Yahoo News report affirming the possibility of the claim.

It is the CIA who can dictate and demand that a prisoner of the U.S. system is put into isolation by whatever they deem as national security grounds. So, the scenario is this: Julian, if extradited, his fate will be in the hand of the agency who was drawing up plans to kill or kidnap him, said Hrafnsson.

Assanges U.K. high court hearing is set for Wednesday. Should he be tried in the U.S., he will be prosecuted under the Espionage Act and face up to 175 years in prison for leaking classified Army Intelligence documents.

The WikiLeaks founder spent seven years living inside the Ecuadorian Embassy in London before being apprehended by authorities.

Visit link:

WikiLeaks founder faces extradition to U.S. | One America ...

Julian Assange: WikiLeaks founder gets permission to marry …

WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange, has been granted permission to marry his partner in prison.

The 50-year-old has been held in the UK's Belmarsh maximum-security prison, in London, since 2019 after the US took legal action to extradite him.

He met his wife-to-be, Stella Moris, in 2011, while living in the Ecuadorean embassy in London and the pair have been engaged since 2017.

They have two children together, named Max, two, and Gabriel, four.

The Australian was arrested by police after spending five years in the embassy, where he had sought political asylum as he fought to avoid extradition to Sweden, fearing he would be taken to the US for questioning over the activities of WikiLeaks.

He was jailed for 12 months for skipping bail but was kept in Belmarsh while a lengthy legal case was mounted by the US.

In January, a judge refused a request from the US to extradite Mr Assange, but an appeal was lodged and the outcome is still pending.

No date has yet been set for the wedding.

A Prison Service spokesperson said: "Mr Assange's application was received, considered, and processed in the usual way by the prison governor, as for any other prisoner."

Subscribe to the Daily podcast on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Spreaker

The couple was taking legal action against the prison governor and Justice Secretary Dominic Raab, accusing them of preventing a wedding from being held.

In 2015, Britain's first gay prison marriage was approved for two convicted murderers, Mikhail Gallatinov and Marc Goodwin.

The pair were wed at the maximum-security Full Sutton prison, near York.

Original post:

Julian Assange: WikiLeaks founder gets permission to marry ...

Out of Sight, Out of Mind: Why All People Who Wish to Live Free Should Care About Julian Assange’s Plight – River Cities Reader

In 1963, November 22 was a traumatic day and ominous harbinger for Americans.

The so-called leader of the free world had his head blown apart during broad daylight while sitting next to his wife in a downtown Dallas automobile parade.

Many cite the JFK assassination as ending from then on any United States president being autonomous and not compromised and controlled by clandestine organizations and corrupt power alliances.

The current selected U.S. commander in chief's basic human functioning capabilities allowed to be publicly broadcast is the most prima facia evidence we've had to date that the body occupying the U.S. presidency office is not the body controlling the office.

It's well-documented that two years before his public execution, President Kennedy exposed that secret societies influence and control news organizations in order to conceal their corrupt actions and expand their authoritarian rule. In his April 1961 speech before the American Newspaper Publisher Association's meeting at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel John F. Kennedy stated, Its preparations are concealed, not published. Its mistakes are buried, not headlined. Its dissenters are silenced, not praised. Without debate, without criticism, no Administration and no country can succeed and no republic can survive.

Measured by mass media's abdication of its fourth-estate bona fides, and the progressive destruction of a free society's self-governance Kennedy's prognosis has been presciently and tragically accurate.

That was until Julian Assange founded Wikileaks in 2006.

With the whistleblower Web site, mistakes were no longer buried. Preparations were published. Dissenters were provided a global distribution platform for disclosing to the public the facts they deserve to know, as Kennedy stated.

And for a brief period, the establishment press devoured and leveraged the troves of data Wikileaks provided. Along the way they lauded themselves for their temporary virtue of speaking truth to power with industry awards and accolades. A decade later, these same organizations are no where to be found in coming to Assange's rescue. They've been absorbed like the Borg by a predator class of technocratic billionaire oligarchs. If the U.S. Government succeeds at extraditing Assange (who is not even a U.S. citizen) under the guise of the Espionage Act of 1917, then the censorship and suppression of the free press worldwide will be a permanent fixture in our lifetime.

The River Cities' Reader has been publishing stories about Wikileaks and Julian Assange's subsequent persecution for more than ten years. These include debunking Assange smears, summaries of the Afghanistan and Iraq War Logs and coverage proving no Wikileaks disclosures have ever put any U.S. government or personnel in harm's way. See all the articles at RCReader.com/tags/assange.

Yet as long as Assange remains imprisoned inside the maximum-security Belmarsh prison in London, his and the free press' plight continues to be out of sight, out of mind for most Americans.

It is a thankless task to remind people of how important Julian Assange's work products and personal mission remain our lifetime's single most important measure of press freedom and the precarious ledge the First Amendment teeters on. Nonetheless, as long as Assange can endure imprisonment for publishing the truth, we can endure being reminded why his savage persecution is so critical to a free and open society's future.

Read Caitlin Johnston's "From Press Freedom To Prison Systems, Everything Assange Touches Gets Illuminated."

Follow this link:
Out of Sight, Out of Mind: Why All People Who Wish to Live Free Should Care About Julian Assange's Plight - River Cities Reader