Leaker Chelsea Manning stuck in jail after Assange arrest

Washington (AFP) - Nine years ago, a 23-year-old US army specialist, deeply troubled by the US war in Iraq and by her own gender identity, rocked the US government by leaking disturbing classified military records to WikiLeaks.

Chelsea Manning spent years in prison for her crime before her sentence was commuted -- but on Friday was again sitting in jail for what her supporters say is an ongoing punitive political vendetta.

Last month, she refused to testify in a secret grand jury investigation of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who was arrested in London on Thursday on a US indictment linked to their cooperation in 2010 on the leak of secret US records of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

In fact, her lawyers point out, the grand jury secretly issued its Assange indictment over one year ago, making Manning's testimony superfluous.

But federal prosecutors have jailed her anyway, with little explanation of why.

The Assange indictment "is further evidence that the government's continued imprisonment of Chelsea for her principled stance against grand jury secrecy is punitive, cruel and unnecessary," her lawyers said.

- Deep divide over Manning -

Manning, now 31, had worked since her release from military prison in 2017 to start a new life, as a civilian and as a woman.

But the US is divided over whether what she did was heroic or traitorous.

She was Bradley Manning when, in 2009, she was sent to Iraq as an army intelligence officer with access to a massive database of US war records and classified diplomatic communications.

Manning was already struggling with gender dysphoria in a military officially closed to gay and transgender soldiers.

Meanwhile, she grew despondent about the ongoing wars, leading her to release the hundreds of thousands of files that made Assange and WikiLeaks famous worldwide.

"I began to become depressed with the situation that we found ourselves increasingly mired in year after year," she said in her 2013 trial.

"If the general public, especially the American public, had access to the information... this could spark a domestic debate on the role of the military and our foreign policy in general."

Manning was arrested within weeks after a confidant turned her in. She was thrown into a military prison and held for three years until her trial in 2013.

One day after she was sentenced to 35 years in prison, she announced she was a woman and would go by the name Chelsea.

But until her sentence was commuted in 2017 by president Barack Obama, she endured an ongoing crisis over her gender and attempted suicide twice in prison as she fought for gender reassignment surgery.

- Finding her footing -

After her release, Manning struggled to find her footing, lauded as a spokeswoman for whistleblowers and transgender people, but also spurned over her decision to leak US secrets.

Strong criticism from senior intelligence officials forced Harvard University to rescind a fellowship offer, with CIA chief Mike Pompeo branding her an "American traitor."

In 2018, a half-hearted attempt to run for political office in Maryland failed, but she continued to be celebrated as an important whistleblower.

While everything she did with WikiLeaks in 2010 came out in her trial, in March she was nevertheless ordered to testify again in front of a grand jury, now known to have been investigating Assange.

Manning, a strong critic of the secret panels often used by prosecutors in high-profile cases, said she objected "strenuously" to the subpoena.

"We've seen this power abused countless times to target political speech," she said, making clear that she would be willing to testify in public.

On March 8, the judge ordered her locked up in an Alexandria, Virginia detention center until she testifies or the grand jury is wound up.

The indictment of Assange -- issued secretly in March 2008 -- would appear to negate the need for her testimony.

But on Friday, she remained behind bars.

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Leaker Chelsea Manning stuck in jail after Assange arrest

Chelsea Manning Changed the Course of History. Now Shes Focusing on …

One hot, humid early-summer evening in New York, a hired car slows on Bleecker Street, and a young woman inside prepares for her first party out in years. She is wearing a midnight-colored semiformal dress by Altuzarra and Everlane ankle boots with heels. Her hair is trimmed into a pixie cut; her makeup softens, but wont hide, a dust of freckles. I dont know if Ill know anybody, she fretted earlier, but she seems to have quelled what nerves remain. She is accompanied by a couple of men who surround her like guards. For the first time in a long time, thats a welcome thing.

Chelsea Manninggraceful, blue-eyed, transsmiles and prepares herself. Since her release from the Fort Leavenworth prison, on May 17, Manning has been living in New York, with a low profile. Tonight she will make her social debut in her own skin. From February to April 2010, while living as Bradley, an Army intelligence analyst stationed in Iraq, Manning sent three-quarters of a million classified or sensitive documents to WikiLeaks. The breachs breadth was startling, as were its contents, ranging from the so-called Collateral Murder video, showing a U.S. helicopter killing a group of Baghdad pedestrians that included children and press, to hundreds of thousands of Cablegate documents, disclosing 44 years of State Department messaging. When Mannings role became clear, she turned into a polarizing figurecelebrated as a whistle-blower by some, condemned as a traitor by others. In August 2013, after pleading guilty to ten charges and being found guilty of 20, she was sentenced to 35 years in prison. The day after the sentencing, Manning came out publicly as trans.

Tonight, a summer Monday, is a different kind of coming-out. To honor the occasion, she has picked an event with a celebratory turn: the after-party for the Lambda Literary Awards, which each year honor books by members of the LGBTQ community. The evening is glamorous; the guest list is varied. Here Manning will reintroduce herself to a community in which she seeks acceptance for more than her heavy past.

The car stops in front of Le Poisson Rouge, a Washington Square art space. Im not sure how to do this, Chase Strangio, an ACLU lawyer, murmurs in the front seat. A gregarious young man with a trim Clark Gable mustache, Strangio has emerged as one of the nations leading trans-rights lawyers, helping represent Gavin Grimm, the trans student in Virginia who challenged his exclusion from the boys bathroom at his high school, and successfully advocating for Mannings hormone therapy in prison. With Manning now out in the world, however, he faces a new challenge: remaining alert to unwelcome attention.

I think that looks pretty discreet, Tim Travers Hawkins, a filmmaker whos making a documentary on Manning, says, judging the entry. When his project, executive-produced by Laura Poitras, started two years back, he intended to use Mannings prison diaries to shape a documentary with an invisible hero. Then, in the final days of his term, President Obama commuted Mannings sentence. It was kind of unbelievable, Poitras says. All the news had been so, so bad. For Hawkins, Mannings release introduced new imperatives. It was a radical shift in the way the film existed, Hawkins says. Tonight, hes brought a compact camera along.

Manning, Strangio, and Hawkins clamber rapidly inside. ALambda host guides Manning down a flight of steps. The party is just starting. At one end of the space, a platform, slightly raised above the dance floor, is marked off with velvet rope. A plate of crudits awaits; Manning orders a gimlet. Shes extroverted, she says: I love being around people. While living as a man, she often went to clubs and parties, even in stodgy Washington, D.C. People are a lot more open and outgoing in New York, Manning explains. In D.C., you really had to, like, know someone.

Music pounds through the room, which is dim and bathed in blue and fuchsia light. As the space fills, a few brave souls approach Manning, then a few more. Soon the platform is packed with people hoping to take a flash-bleached selfie.

I just wanted to say hello. Youre, like, a perfect hero.

Im going to give you this card. Wed love to throw a party for your return.

Manning seems startled by the attention. Thank you! she keeps saying. She is 29 now, with a confidence that, even in a novel city, hits like sunlight at high altitude. Though shes petitejust a few inches over five feetshe speaks with a clarion directness, as if constantly projecting toward an unseen back row. In prison, she read the fashion press (I missed seven years of fashion, but I went through every season in a magazine!), and while shes embraced her femininity, she eschews what she calls fertility stylebunnies and hearts and stufffor more current, gender-neutral garments. While serving out her sentence, she got her hands on photos from Barneys 2014 trans campaign, shot by Bruce Weber. That was a really important thing for me to see, she says.

From the stage, the DJ mixes sharpen: Uptown Funk, I Feel It Coming. But there isnt time to dance. Shes standing, greeting new faces from all sides, thanking, thanking some more. Her left arm is crossed over her belly, cradling her opposite elbow, which is straight. When Beyoncs Love on Top begins its climbing modulations, she uncrosses her arms and begins fidgetingmindlessly, flirtatiouslywith the charm on her gold necklace, drawing it back and forth between her thumb and forefinger. She sways. She lets herself lean forward, laughing at a joke. When her newest friend wanders away, she turns around and smiles.

Im starting to loosen up! she says.

When Manning was growing up in Crescent, a town of some 1,400 north of Oklahoma City, she struggled to pinpoint a reason she felt so awkward. I knew that I was different, she says. I gravitated more toward playing house, but the teachers were always pushing me toward playing the more competitive games with the boys. She recalls, I spent so much time wondering, Whats wrong with me? Why cant I fit in? Sometimes she felt left behind; at other times, she leaped out in front. Once, she and a group of other kids were allowed to take a field trip to Frontier City, an amusement park known for its loopy, soaring Silver Bullet roller coaster. Other students were petrified. Manning couldnt wait to get on and boarded the ride all alone: Im a bit of an adrenaline junkie, I think its safe to say.

Its a June afternoon, and we are sitting in a park along the Hudson River, a short walk from the sleek Tribeca building where Manning has been living since arriving in New York. Today she is dressed with a mixture of straightforward elegance and function: a casual black sleeveless Marc Jacobs dress with playful paisley lining, a small purse from The Row, Borderline boots by Vetements x Dr. Martens, andthe cinching toucha black utility belt from 5.11 Tactical, a gear company that supplies law enforcement and the military. Ive been a huge fan of Marc Jacobs for many, many years, even going back to when I was wearing mens clothing, she explains. He captures a kind of simplicity and a kind of beauty that I likeprojecting strength through femininity.

In Mannings telling, strength was a necessity before it was a choice. When she was eleven, her father, a computer engineer whod gotten his start in the Navy, announced that he was moving out, effectively ending his marriage. That night, her mother swallowed a bottle of pills, then told Chelseas older sister, Casey, what shed done. On the hurried drive to emergency room, the journalist Denver Nicks reports in Private, his book on Mannings early life, it was Chelseas job to sit with her mother in the backseat and make sure that she did not stop breathing.

Over the months that followed, Casey and Chelsea, then still known as Bradley, struggled to manage their mothers alcoholism while also learning to navigate basic domestic chores. Nicks reports that their mother, whod grown up in Wales and married early, didnt know how to write a check, let alone pay bills or seek alimony. I had to learn how to do all of this stuff with my mother and also deal with the friction between my parents, says Manning. I loved them both, but they were angry at each other. I always felt like I was doing something wrong and I had caused it. (Mannings family members have declined interviews since her release.)

From twelve to thirteen, Manning grew up quickly. She realized that she was attracted to boys, and considered herself gay. Her father had introduced Manning to computers and programming at a young age, and Manning began to see the Internetvast, anonymous, and full of answersas an escape. I learned that I wasnt alone. I learned about all these different life possibilities and options, she explains. She began to find her first natural identity. Because I would actually be anonymous online, I could be more myself.

The Web also held constant through a series of displacements. In November 2001, when Manning was just shy of fourteen, her mother decided to return to Wales and took Manning with her. (Casey had moved away; their father had remarried.) Her responsibilities increased as her mothers health declined. In 2005, after a fluky brush with the July 7 London bombingsManning says she was near Kings Cross station at the moment of the Tube explosionsshe moved in with her father, his wife, and his stepson. That arrangement didnt end well: Mounting tension ended with Manning allegedly brandishing a knife and her stepmother calling 911. Manning lived for a spell with a friend in Tulsa, then drifted to Chicago. In increasingly dire straits, she was taken in by her aunt Debbie, in suburban Maryland. She worked at Starbucks and Abercrombie & Fitch; she explored the LGBTQ scene of greater D.C.; she enrolled, briefly, in community college. At nineteen, she started seeing a psychologist for the first time.

Thats the part of my life I replay the most: whether or not, living in Maryland and seeing a therapist, I could have finally been able to say, This is who I am; this is what I want to do. It was the first time in my life when I really considered transitioning. But I got scared, she tells me. I really regret the fact that I didnt know or realize I already had the love I needed, especially from my aunt and sisterjust to seek support.

Rather, she made a defiantly different choice. It was the moment of the so-called surge in Iraq. The news on TV was grim. I dont know who I am, she recalls in the park. Maybe the military will allow me to figure that out. She looks out toward the river. It was a naive thought, but it was very real to me in 2007.

On the grass behind us, teenage girls are putting together a dance routine: Five, six, seven, eight! Not far away, upriver, are the piers where, for years, LGBTQ teens have congregated at the witching hour to vogue under the stars. If Manning had remained in Maryland and been a little braver, she now believes, her 20s could have been quite different.

Instead, she traveled as a new Army enlistee to Fort Leonard Wood, in Missouri; trained as an intelligence analyst at Fort Huachuca, in Arizona; and worked for about a year at Fort Drum, in New York, as an analyst with a top-secret clearance. In October 2009, she was shipped to a base outside Baghdad, where she became Specialist Manning: an anguished 22-year-old in a harsh environment, with access to some of the militarys darkest secrets.

The clock has barely struck midnight at Le Poisson Rouge when Mannings first night at the ball seems to end. The music stops; fluorescent lights flicker on overhead. There will be a small after-after-partya loose, laid-back affairat Julius, a tavern in the Village that is sometimes called the oldest extant gay bar in New York. Strangio has peeled offhe has a family to return tobut Manning decides to continue: The world is new again, and shes not ready to go home.

About a dozen people walk the half-mile to the tavern. It is 12:45 a.m. and quiet on the streets; sprinklers stutter softly over the Minetta Green. Manning has no I.D. yet, for arcane reasonsshe lost her old one with her old lifebut the doorman at Julius is expecting her. For weeks after coming to New York, she wandered all around the city, unrecognized. Its not like Im living in fear or anything, she tells me. Im so glad to be out and about and walking around.

Juliuss interior creaks with landmark artifacts: black-and-white photos checkering the walls, posters commemorating the gay-rights Mattachine Societys 1966 sip-in at the bar. Manning alights on a bench underneath an American flag whose stripes are replaced with the bars of the pride banner. Conversation foams around her while the jukebox plays. They are deep into drinks; people are sitting on laps. Manning falls into conversation with January Hunt, a writer, musician, and artist who is also a young trans woman. Manning is describing her trip into Brooklyn for a tech meet-up in a derelict building; it struck her, she explains, as very New York.

Manning publicly came out in a written statement, sent to and read aloud on the Today show, in which she asked to be called by female pronouns and expressed interest in hormone therapy. She had thought of making an announcement earlier, she saysshe had taken her first outing in womens dress in February 2010 and had told guards at the detention center where she was first imprisoned that she was a womanbut had been advised that it would complicate the trial. The opportunity to do it on the Today show popped up, so it happened a little bit sooner and a little faster than I hoped it would, she told me. Still, she says, she was taken aback by the response. I was honestly a bit surprised by the outpouring of love and support that I got, she says. If there was backlash, too (and there was), she doesnt seem to have registered ita tellingly upbeat response from a woman who now sprinkles her tweets with hearts and rainbows.

Prison bureaucracy was another story. Almost immediately after coming to the ACLU in 2013, Strangioa trans man himselfbegan work on Mannings civil case, fighting for her to begin receiving hormone therapy. Our goal was to get her the health care that she needed, he explained. Even when there are legal principles that are pretty unambiguously on our side, theres so much cultural bias were confronting in the courts and in other systems. Meanwhile, behind bars, Manning sought equilibrium in other ways. The first thing I learned to do was avoid television, she says. She took out subscriptions to 50 or 60 periodicals, she saysnews and global-affairs publications, science magazines, technical journals, and, of course, fashion glossies. She describes it to me as like having a printed version of the Internet. And she read books: literary classics, fantasy series, contemporary histories. She liked biographies: Queen Isabella, Joan of Arc. She read Cheryl Strayeds memoir, Wild, three times. Many of Mannings favorites seemed to emphasize personal strength or bureaucratic disaffection. She read Catch-22, she says, more than once. I was institutionalized to such a point where my expectations were limited to, Im going to eat the next meal. Im going to go to sleep. Im going to be here the next day, Manning says. Before commutation, this outlook had psychological costs; as recently as last October, she tried to kill herself for the second time. Then, in January 2017, the White House phoned the office of one of her lawyers.

In his statement announcing the commutation, President Obama emphasized that it was not a pardon for her crime. Lets be clear: Chelsea Manning has served a tough prison sentence, he said in a press conference. I feel very comfortable that justice has been served.

On the day of Mannings release, things happened quickly. She picked her first outfit for life as a woman: a black-and-white striped blouse, with matching sneakers. She stopped at a roadside pizza joint, got a pepperoni slice, and posted a photo of it to Instagram. (Freest pizza ever! she tells me.) She had the lawyers who picked her up drive her to the countryside. I think I spent, like, five or six hours sitting outside.

A day after leaving Fort Leavenworth, she posted a new photo (OK, so here I am everyone!!) with the coder-inspired hashtag #HelloWorld. She had on a trim black dress by one of her favorite designers, Gabriela Hearst. Her hair was crisply coiffed; she wore a vibrant lip. In a Guardian column, written while in prison, Manning had discussed her nervousness about moving through the world as a woman. Now that shes no longer worried about being found out by the military, she says, the fear is gone. It feels natural. It feels like its how its supposed to be, instead of this anxiety, this uncertainty, this ball of self-consciousness that comes with pretending to be male, she says. It didnt feel right. I didnt know what it was. I couldnt describe it. Now thats gone.

Poitras, who met Manning for the first time after her release, says she was startled by the young womans focus. There are people who have really put their lives on the line for something, and they come out on the other side of it. You can feel that with her, Poitras tells me. Now that shes free, what is she going to do with her freedom? She adds, When I first met Ed Snowden in Hong Kong, he had the same sort of eerie power.

Twice during our conversations, and in slightly different ways, I ask Manning what she regrets from the period when she was living as Specialist Bradley Manning. Her leaking of state secrets doesnt appear on the list, although that decision remains the most publicly controversial of her life, earning her accusations of treason and reckless endangerment. Ive accepted responsibility for my own decisions and my own actions, she says. When we speak, Reality Winner, the 25-year-old intelligence contractor, has recently been arrested on suspicion of leaking information about Russian hacking in the 2016 U.S. election, adding to a list of leakers who, like Snowden, have become household names. Manning tells me that she has nothing to say about Winner (All I know is what I see in the media reports) but speaks about what she refers to as the larger issue. I think its important to remember that when somebody sees government wrongdoingwhether its illegal or immoral or unethicalthere isnt the means available to do something about it, she says. Everyone keeps saying, You should have gone through the proper channels! But the proper channels dont work.

Manning describes trying to release information to the press before WikiLeaks. In 2010, I was literally scrambling around D.C. trying to get The Washington Post to publish this stuff, and then I went to The New York Times. Manning has said that a reporter at the Post with whom she spoke briefly over the phone wouldnt commit to a story, which she took as a sign of uninterest. At the Times, she says, she left a message on the voice mail of the ombudsman, confusingly called the Public Editor. The editor and his assistant later said that they had no memory of such a message, but explained that they received hundreds a week. I did this all on leave, Manning says. I had only twelve days. The approaching Snowmageddon made it harder still. Manning traveled from public phone to public phone, to avoid a traceable line. I ran out of time, she says. Before returning to Iraq, she sent files to WikiLeaks.

Even so, Manning continues to take her struggle to find an outlet as proof of a systemic problem. We need to have more ways to talk about whats going on in government, she says. I ask what those ways might look like. I dont know whats right, she says. I have certain values. I live by those.

When it comes to information freedom, those values remain controversial. Many lawmakers bridled at her abbreviated sentence; at the time of the commutation, Paul Ryan said, Chelsea Mannings treachery put American lives at risk and exposed some of our nations most sensitive secrets. Others argue that her motives, like a public-interest journalists, were honorableor that the actual damage of the leaks was small. Beyond some vocal LGBTQ advocacy (she was a star of the summers Pride March in New York, waving from a drop-top Nissan alongside Gavin Grimm), Manning herself has mostly stayed circumspect on issues of politics. Still, in a Guardian column from January 25, a few days following her commutation, she offered a soft criticism of President Obamas tactical approach: The one simple lesson to draw from President Obamas legacy: Do not start off with a compromise. They wont meet you in the middle. President Trump, newly elected, lambasted Manning over Twitter: Ungrateful TRAITOR Chelsea Manning, who should never have been released from prison, is now calling President Obama a weak leader. Terrible!

Manning has avoided a rejoinder to the presidents tweet. And to the extent that WikiLeaks of 2017 (which seems to have pursued specific electoral outcomes in France and America and is dogged by the troubled reputation of its leader, Julian Assange) has a different public reputation than the 2010 organization (which claimed more categorical anti-secrecy principles), she has avoided opinions there, too. Ive been in prison for seven years! Ive been completely disconnected from all of that, she tells me. Her plan is to live in New York until late summer, then move to suburban Maryland, not far from where she was before.

By then, she hopes to be acclimated to a new life. For the moment, certain habits of this decade strike her as weird. Our phone fixation, for example. Were sitting in the same room as each other but looking at our phones constantly, she says. Before I was in prison, I was one of the only people on social media. I was a novelty. Now everybodys on social media all the time! Its too much. I think thats where a lot of this miscommunication, polarization, friction, and chaos is coming from.

Thus, though she tweets and Instagrams, Manning has tried to focus on more in-the-moment pursuits. She still loves video games, though she has forsworn the violent ones. Soon after leaving prison, she began teaching herself the programming language Rust. (It has a lot of features that werent available seven years ago, she says.) She hopes to begin datingIm not planning to be single!but intends to wait until her life settles, in Maryland.

She is also at work on a memoir. Im trying to tell the story as if it was happening now and youre with me, she explains. Hawkins, the documentarian, says he plans to stop shooting soon, as Mannings personal narrative finds its own way in the world: Shes too young for this film to attempt to be the definitive story of her life.

Manning does not know what her career will be. While living as Bradley Manning, she expressed an interest in running for political office. I ask whether thats still on her mind. Im certainly not going to say no, and Im certainly not going to say yes, she says. My goal is to use these next six months to figure out where I want to go.

I have these values that I can connect with: responsibility, compassion, she goes on. Those are really foundational for me. Do and say and be who you are because, no matter what happens, you are loved unconditionally. Its the lesson, she says, that she wishes she learned earlier. Unconditional love, she says. It is OK to be who I am.

In front of an apartment building in the East Seventies, near Central Park, Manning meets up with Strangio to pay a visit to a hero of New Yorks LGBTQ past. Its 90 degrees, clear, and sticky. Manning arrives late, looking addled and a little faint. She had a subway snafu, she explains, and then a long walk. Strangio takes her shoulders and gives them a shake. Oh, my Godhi! he says with get-ahold-of-yourself astringency. Inside, they board a tiny elevator that seems as old as the building.

Everybody in! Strangio says merrily as it begins groaning upward. Well just get stuck in here a few days.

Ive got a flashlight, Manning deadpans.

At a time when drag queens were widely shunned, Jack Doroshow, better known as Flawless Sabrina, blazed a trail across Philadelphia and New York with her high-profile drag pageants, forcing the cities to acknowledge and accept their androgyne and transgender communities. Bobby Kennedy helped her book a venue. Andy Warhol helped secure funding for a film on the pageants, The Queen (1968), which went to Cannes. Flawless posed for Diane Arbus, acted for John Waters, and dated William S. Burroughs. Along the way, she was arrested several times and came to be known as a mother figure in the queer community. Now in her late 70s, she suffers from various age-related ailments. There are good days and bad days, but today is good.

The long wall of Flawlesss sitting room is mirrored, floor to ceiling. A desk near the window supports pineapple-esque lamps and on the far wall is a framed canvas that looks likeis assumed to bea late-period Picasso. Scattered through the room are heads: mannequin heads, papier-mch heads, other heads, one sporting a costume-ball mask and feather headpiece, another wearing a wig and sunglasses, a third stabbed at the scalp with hypodermic syringes.

Just then, Flawless enters the room. Gorgeous! she says, looking at Manning. Girl, thats what Im talking about.

She is sitting in a wheelchair pushed by Curtis Carman, an artist who is Flawlesss partner. She looks old, alert, and not unlike Picasso herself: bald, with a striped shirt and a big, knitted navy cardigan. Carman helps her climb into a thronelike chair behind the desk. Now, hows your family? she asks Manning.

Theyre all right, she says. Theyre laying low a little bit. She hasnt seen her mother yet, Manning explains. She lives in the care of her family and cannot travel.

But youll do that, Flawless says. Its not a question. Youre young, arent you?

Twenty-nine. I hope thats young.

You bet. Flawless allows herself a smile. I mean, as I look at it, everybodys pretty new.

Flawless brings her palms together. All I see is a very natural, very beautiful little girl, she says. The only jarring thing is that theres so much power. This is somebody who has changed history.

Manning thanks her and keeps talkingabout her move to Maryland, and then about her writing. Flawless starts shaking her head. I cant get over how beautiful you are, she says.

Through the next half-hour, they discuss the military, the Tonys, the past. Before Manning leaves, Flawless is keen to pass on some wisdom. Think about your story, she says.

Im not done yet! Manning protests.

No, Flawless says slowly.

Strangio says they should let Flawless rest.

Its not easy to change the world, Flawless chirps. She draws Strangio close. I am so proud of you, she says, and gives him a tight hug.

Manning comes next. Flawless wraps her aged arms around her small frame. Thank you so much, she whispers, so softly that Manning may not hear. Thank you so much. When Manning stands, she moves briskly toward the door. Flawlesss eyes are wet with tears.

In this story:Fashion Editor: Phyllis Posnick.Hair: Jimmy Paul for Bumble and Bumble; Makeup: Alice Lane.Tailor: Maria Del Greco for Christy Rilling Studio.Set Design: Mary Howard

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Chelsea Manning Changed the Course of History. Now Shes Focusing on ...

Fox News reporter calls Chelsea Manning by her deadname during Julian …

Following the arrest of WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange in London, in the coming weeks we are likely to be hearing the name Chelsea Manning a lot.

The former US soldier, activist and whistle-blowerwas convicted by US authorities in 2013for disclosing nearly 750,000 classified documents to WikiLeaks, whom she is believed to have known Assange through.

Assange has also been arrested by US officials who have charged him with a hacking conspiracy linked to Manning, who was jailed last Friday for contempt of court.

When reporting on the arrest, Fox News correspondent, Greg Palkot, rather than refer to Manning as her chosen name,instead repeatedly called her by her deadname 'Bradley'.

Julian Assange, famous or infamous depending on who you are talking to, for the leaks coming from his WikiLeaks organisation.

Classified information about the Iraq and Afghan war. Classified state department cables, coming with the help at that time of Bradley Manning.

Later on, Palkot used the dead name again saying:

Assange, famous for releasing information to is WikiLeaks side on the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, Pentagon classified state department cables, at the time, back in 2010, with the help of the then Bradley Manning.

Manning has identified as female since her sentencing in 2013,has identified as female since childhood and has requested to be called Chelsea since then.

Calling a trans person by their deadname is considered to be incredibly offensive and insensitiveand Fox News and Palkot have been criticised for referring to Manning by such a name.

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Fox News reporter calls Chelsea Manning by her deadname during Julian ...

UPDATE 4-U.S. charges WikiLeaks’ Assange with hacking conspiracy with …

(Adds former prosecutor on additional charges)

By Mark Hosenball

WASHINGTON, April 11 (Reuters) - U.S. prosecutors announced charges on Thursday against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, accusing him of conspiring with former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning to gain access to a government computer as part of one of the largest compromises of classified information in U.S. history.

Assange, arrested by British police and carried out of Ecaudor's embassy in London, faces up to five years in prison on the American charge, the U.S. Justice Department said in a statement. His arrest paved the way for his possible extradition to the United States.

Assange's indictment arose from a criminal investigation dating back to former President Barack Obama's administration.

It was triggered in part by WikiLeaks' 2010 publication of hundreds of thousands of U.S. military reports about the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and American diplomatic communications, a disclosure that embarrassed Washington and caused strained relations with allies.

The Justice Department said Assange, 47, was arrested under an extradition treaty between the United States and Britain and was charged with conspiracy to commit computer intrusion.

The indictment, filed in March 2018 and unsealed on Thursday, said Assange in March 2010 engaged in a conspiracy to help Manning crack a password stored on Defense Department computers connected to the Secret Internet Protocol Network (SIPRNet), a U.S. government network used for classified documents and communications.

Manning had access to the computers as an intelligence analyst and was using them to download classified records to transmit to WikiLeaks, the Justice Department said. Cracking the password would have enabled Manning to log on under a username other than her own, making it harder for investigators to determine the source of the illegal disclosures, it said.

Manning, formerly named Bradley Manning, was jailed on March 8 after being held in contempt by a judge in Virginia for refusing to testify before a grand jury in what is widely believed to be related to the Assange investigation.

Manning was convicted by court-martial in 2013 of espionage and other offenses for furnishing more than 700,000 documents, videos, diplomatic cables and battlefield accounts to WikiLeaks while she was an intelligence analyst in Iraq. Obama commuted the final 28 years of Manning's 35-year sentence.

"Journalists around the world should be deeply troubled by these unprecedented criminal charges," Barry Pollack, a lawyer for Assange, said in a statement, saying the allegations "boil down to encouraging a source to provide him information and taking efforts to protect the identity of that source."

A law enforcement official close to the case refused to discuss whether additional charges could be filed against Assange.

Mark MacDougall, a former federal prosecutor, said on Thursday he believes the government's case against Assange looks like a "placeholder indictment."

"They had to thoroughly investigate the Manning case," he said. "I think what you are seeing in this short indictment is a small sample of the fruit of that investigation."

Representatives for Manning had no immediate comment.

The indictment said Manning downloaded four massive U.S. government databases containing some 90,000 Afghanistan war reports, 400,000 Iraq war reports, 800 Guantanamo Bay detainee assessment briefs and 250,000 State Department cables. U.S. officials said the leaks endangered the lives of American troops.

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Special Counsel Robert Mueller scrutinized the actions of WikiLeaks in his 22-month investigation into Russia's role in the 2016 U.S. election. The website published emails damaging to Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton that Mueller and U.S. intelligence agencies have said were stolen by Russia in a bid to boost Republican Donald Trump's candidacy.

The Obama administration decided not to prosecute WikiLeaks and Assange on the grounds that the website's work was too similar to journalistic activities protected by the U.S. Constitution's guarantee of freedom of the press.

The indictment quoted from a conversation in which Assange encouraged Manning to provide more information: Manning told Assange that "after this upload, that's all I really have got left," with Assange replying that "curious eyes never run dry in my experience."

WikiLeaks has faced criticism from U.S. officials including Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, who when he was CIA director in 2017 called Assange a "fraud" and WikiLeaks a "hostile intelligence service often abetted by state actors like Russia."

But Trump praised the website during the presidential campaign. At a rally shortly before the election, Trump said "I love WikiLeaks" after it released the hacked Democratic emails that harmed Clinton's candidacy.

Assange, who took refuge in Ecuador's embassy in 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden in a sexual assault investigation, has said he did not know the source of Democratic Party-related emails WikiLeaks published before the election, but said he did not get them from Russia.

(Reporting by Mark Hosenball and Sarah N. Lynch in Washington, Nathan Layne in New York; writing by Will Dunham; editing by Jonathan Oatis and Alistair Bell)

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UPDATE 4-U.S. charges WikiLeaks' Assange with hacking conspiracy with ...

Edward Snowden and activists claim Julian Assange’s arrest …

Edward Snowden, the fugitive former National Security Agency contractor who leaked classified information from the agency in 2013, condemned Thursday's arrest of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assangeas a "dark day for press freedom."

After being arrested in London, Assange was charged by the U.S. with one count of conspiracy to hack a computer in relation to WikiLeak's 2010 release of thousands of classifieddocuments and videos about the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, confidential diplomatic cables and files from Guantanamo Bay about prison camp detainees, according to a criminal complaint unsealed Thursday. The secret government records and communications were stolen by a former U.S. Army Intelligence analyst, now known asChelsea Manning.

The single charge, conspiracy to commit computer intrusion, comes from what prosecutors said wasAssange's agreement to break a password to a classified U.S. government computer.The indictmentwas filed in court last year on March 6 and includes no evidence that the password-cracking effort succeeded.

"Images of Ecuador's ambassador inviting the UK's secret police into the embassy to drag a publisher of like it or not award-winning journalism out of the building are going to end up in the history books," Snowden, who was charged with espionage in 2013 and now lives in Russia under political asylum, wrote on Twitter. "Assange's critics may cheer, but this is a dark moment for press freedom."

Assange has been living in Ecuadorian Embassy in Londonsince 2012, but the country's president, Lenin Moreno, said Thursday that his government had made a "sovereign decision" to rescind Assange's political asylum due to "repeated violations to international conventions and daily life." The founder of the whistleblower website took refuge in the Ecuadorian Embassy nearly seven years ago toavoidextradition to Sweden, where he faced questions about allegations thathe had sexually molested one woman and rapedanotherin August 2010. Assange hasmaintained his innocence in connection to the sex abuse allegations, which he has cast it as a ploy for his eventual extradition to the U.S.

Snowden on Thursday also shared a message to journalists covering Assange's arrest, asking them to remember that the U.N. had formally ruled Assange's "detention to be arbitrary, a violation of human rights."

"They have repeatedly issued statements calling for him to walk free including very recently," Snowden tweeted.

The NSA whistleblower shared a December 2018 statement from the U.N.'s Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner, which noted that U.N. human rights experts had repeated demands that the U.K. abide by its international obligations to allow Assange to "walk free from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London."

Snowden was far from alone in criticizing Assange's arrest.

Former Catalan leader Carles Puigdemont said he was "deeply shocked" by news of Assange's arrest, writing on Twitter that "human rights, and especially freedom of expression, are under attack once again in Europe," along with the hashtag #FreeJulianAssange.

"Any prosecution by the United States of Mr. Assange for Wikileaks' publishing operations would be unprecedented and unconstitutional, and would open the door to criminal investigations of other news organizations," the ACLU said in a statement. "Moreover, prosecuting a foreign publisher for violating U.S. secrecy laws would set an especially dangerous precedent for U.S. journalists, who routinely violate foreign secrecy laws to deliver information vital to the public's interest."

Journalist Dan Froomkin said Assange's arrest was "chilling" for his field, while defense and intelligence correspondent Ewen Macaskill noted it sets a "terrible precedent."

Meanwhile, CNN national security and legal analyst Susan Hennessey saidthe charges against Assange are "all good, old-fashioned Computer Fraud and Abuse Act charges. Not much in here that should give journalists anxiety."

And national security lawyer Bradley Moss wrote, "Journalists do not assist sources in cracking passwords. Journalists are actually given legal training tell them NOT to do stuff like that. Assange and his allies can scream about press freedom now all they want, but it's going nowhere. Prosecute away."

"This charge [against Assange] has nothing to do with press freedom,"CNN legal analyst Renato Mariotti tweeted. "It is a crime for anyone to conspire to hack a server."

Tom Winter, a cybersecurity reporter at NBC News, called Thursday's arrest an "important day for journalism students."

"Asking a potential source for what classified information they posses is generally legal," he said. "Offering to help that same source to defeat security systems or break passwords is going to get you on the government's radar."

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Edward Snowden and activists claim Julian Assange's arrest ...

Edward Snowden: Assange’s arrest ‘a dark moment’ for freedom

Former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden on Thursday lamented Julian Assange's arrest by authorities outside the Ecuadorian embassy in London, calling the event "a dark moment" for freedom.

Snowden, 35, who lives in Moscow, Russia under political asylum after he leaked classified information to reporters, made a brief statement via Twitter about the Assange arrest. He linked to a video showing officials entering the embassy and removing a startled-looking Assange.

[ WATCH: WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange dragged out of Ecuadorian Embassy in London by police]

"Images of Ecuador's ambassador inviting the UK's secret police into the embassy to drag a publisher of--like it or not--award-winning journalism out of the building are going to end up in the history books. Assange's critics may cheer, but this is a dark moment for press freedom," Snowden said.

Snowden has been charged by the Department of Justice on two counts of violating the Espionage Act of 1917 and one charge of stealing property of the U.S. federal government. The Russian government has continuously extended his asylum status for one-year periods since 2013.

Following the Assange arrest, a spokesman for Russian President Vladimir Putin said Putin wants the authorities to respect Assange's basic rights as they move forward with a prosecution.

We of course hope that all of his rights will be observed," Putin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters on Thursday.

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Edward Snowden: Assange's arrest 'a dark moment' for freedom

From Daniel Ellsberg to Edward Snowden | The New Yorker

Daniel Ellsberg and Bradley Manning: two men who tried to counter war through leaks. For Ellsberg, it was Vietnam. For Manning, it was primarily Iraq. Now there appears to be a third man in this group, Edward Snowden, for whom it is the war on terror. Each was, in his time, denounced by the right and hailed by the left. Ellsberg and Manning were declared psychologically unstable; Snowden likely will be soon, too. They have been called heroes, patriots, and traitors. Ellsberg and Manning acted out of what both described as a kind of idealismand Snowden has said something similar. Ellsberg avoided prison. Manning will learn his sentence soon. Snowden is in Hong Kong waiting for whatever comes next.

Leaks, leak investigations, and war go together. War abroad has a way of turning into war at homeas the government seeks to ferret out who is giving secrets to whom in the press. War also alienates young men and women in government. People come to work for candidates who promise peace. In power, the same leaders start wars, or at least join them. This was as true of Kennedy, Johnson, and Nixon as it has been for Bush and Obama.

All three men served in the military and became disillusioned. Ellsberg was a Marine turned civil servant who ended up working for a government contractor, RAND, with access to lots of documents. Manning was an Army sergeant. Snowden enlisted in the Army, with the hope, he says, of joining the Special Forces. Eventually, like Ellsberg, he ended up at a contractor, Booz Allen Hamilton in Snowdens case, that helps store our nations secrets.

For Ellsberg, the transition into disillusionment, and the decision to leak, took years: he spent time in Vietnam and gradually turned against the conflict. He began to think about how he could stop it. And then, one day, he heard a speech from a young college student who proclaimed that prison was his only hope to help stop the war. I left the auditorium and found a deserted mens room. I sat on the floor and cried for over an hour, just sobbing. And I was thinking, my country has come to this. That the best thing a young man can do is go to prison. Soon, he went to RANDs safe and then to the modern device of his day, the Xerox machine.

For Manning, the path was similar but quicker. In the log of a chat with the hacker Adrian Lamo, Manning explains his growing frustration about his country. At one moment, he explains how he felt after learning that fifteen detainees taken by the Iraqi Federal Police were simply critics of Prime Minister Nouri al-Maliki. Manning writes:

i immediately took that information and *ran* to the officer to explain what was going on he didnt want to hear any of it he told me to shut up and explain how we could assist the FPs in finding *MORE* detainees everything started slipping after that i saw things differently i had always questioned the things worked, and investigated to find the truth but that was a point where i was a *part* of something i was actively involved in something that i was completely against

We dont know nearly as much about Snowdenat least not yet. But he, too, seems to have gone through a period of growing disenchantment. Here he is, talking with the Guardian: Over time that awareness of wrongdoing sort of builds up and you feel compelled to talk about. And the more you talk about the more youre ignored. The more youre told its not a problem until eventually you realize that these things need to be determined by the public and not by somebody who was simply hired by the government.

There are important differences between the three men. Ellsberg was forty when he leaked the Pentagon Papers, quite a bit older than Manning, who was twenty-two at the time of his leak, and Snowden, who is twenty-nine. Ellsberg knew exactly what he was doing, and he moved more slowly. There was a year and a half between the time he copied the documents and when he sent them to the press. Manning sent his immediately. Snowden leaked PowerPoint slides from a presentation in April. Ellsberg was a veteran who had spent nearly a decade thinking about his war. Manning and Snowden were more impulsive: they took files and dumped them. This morning, Ellsberg published a piece praising Snowden.

Manning and Snowden, meanwhile, are both a pair and opposites. Mannings quest was to show that the government couldnt keep secrets from the people. Snowden seems more concerned about letting the people keep secrets from the government. Manning was battling opacity; Snowden, a panopticon. Manning has said that he was dissatisfied with his lifehe was dealing with issues of gender identity and lost love. Snowden seems to have worried about being too content: he was, after all, a young man with a G.E.D. earning two hundred thousands dollars a year in Hawaii.

Some of what Snowden says sounds too absurd to be true. His claim that he, personally, could get access to the private data of the President of the United States seems somewhere between bravura and baloney. Theres also the peculiar question about his decision to flee to Hong Kong, which is, after all, part of the most heavily monitored country on earth.

Theres another question we dont know the answer to: Did recent reports on the Obama Administrations crackdown on leaks have anything to do with Snowdens decision to come forward now? Did the stories about the Department of Justices investigation into the action of reporters at Fox and the Associated Press have any effect on his sense of the mounting awareness of wrongdoing? The general surveillance of civilians is different from the surveillance of journalists and government officialsbut the issues and the tools used are related.

And, here, its instructive again to go back forty years. Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger were obsessed by leaks: in 1969, the first year of the Administration, they began tapping the phones of reporters and government officials, hoping to determine who was leaking information about bombings in Cambodia. Then, in June of 1971, Ellsberg leaked the Pentagon Papers to the New York Times and Washington Post; two months later, Nixon assembled his White House plumbers, whose first task was to break into the office of Ellsbergs psychiatrist. It was John Ehrlichman, a Nixon aide, who later called it The seminal Watergate episode. The pattern went like this: war, leaks, war on leakers, more leaks, more war on leakers.

Barack Obama and Richard Nixon are very different people, and they operate at very different moments in history. There is a lesson to be learned, though. Information gives you power, and surveillance gets you information. But theres a risk in going too farand theres a danger of disillusionment and backlash, as more and more people think the country you lead isnt living up to its ideals.

Above: Photograph of Daniel Ellsberg in the nineteen-seventies. Hulton Archive/Getty.

[#image: /photos/59095103ebe912338a37265d]

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Edward Snowden: Julian Assange arrest is a ‘dark moment …

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American whistle-blower Edward Snowden has described Julian Assanges arrest at the Ecuadorian Embassy as a dark moment for press freedom.

Mr Snowden, a former CIA employee who fled the US after leaking top-secret National Security Agency (NSA) documents, took to Twitter shortly after Assange was dragged out of the embassyby police.

Images of Ecuador's ambassador inviting the UK's secret police into the embassy to drag a publisher of--like it or not--award-winning journalism out of the building are going to end up in the history books, he wrote.

Assange'scritics may cheer, but this is a dark moment for press freedom.

The post was retweeted over 5,600 times within an hour of publication.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange arrested at Ecuadorian embassy

The 35-year-old also used the social media platform to alert journalists to important background material, posting a screenshot of a statement from the UN Human Rights High Commissioner.

Julian Assange's cat looks on from the embassy (Alex Lentati)

The United Nations formally ruled his detention to be arbitrary, a violation of human rights. They have repeatedly issued statements calling for him to walk free-- including very recently, Mr Snowden added.

Mr Snowden, who now lives in an undisclosed part of Moscow, is president of the Freedom of Press Foundation - an organisation that claims to defend and supportcutting-edge transparency journalism in the face of adversity.

Assange was arrested on Thursday, April 11after spending seven years inside the Ecuadorian Embassy in London.

He sought asylum at the embassy in 2012 to escape extradition to the US for questioning, after publishing thousands of classified military and diplomatic cables through WikiLeaks.

He was seized by police after Ecuador abruptly withdrew asylum from him. He was arrested for failing to surrender to the court and was taken in custody to a central London police station this morning.

Scotland Yard later issued a statement saying he had been further arrested on behalf of US authorities on arrival at the police station.

A spokesman said: "This is an extradition warrant under Section 73 of the Extradition Act. He will appear in custody at Westminster Magistrates' Court as soon as possible."

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WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange arrested in London; U.S. seeks …

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April 11, 2019, 9:41 AM GMT/ UpdatedApril 12, 2019, 6:00 AM GMT

By Patrick Smith, Ken Dilanian and Alex Johnson

LONDON The Justice Department revealed Thursday that it has charged Julian Assange with computer hacking hours after the fugitive founder of WikiLeaks was arrested in London following a U.S. request to extradite him.

Assange, the publisher of state secrets that embarrassed governments around the world, was wanted in Britain for skipping bail in 2012, when he was under investigation in Sweden on charges of sexual assault and rape. He spent almost seven years living in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London to avoid extradition to the U.S.

Assange is charged with one count of "conspiracy to commit computer intrusion for agreeing to break a password to a classified U.S. government computer," according to the indictment released Thursday by the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia. If convicted, he faces up to five years in prison.

Prosecutors say the password was being sought by Chelsea Manning, a former Army intelligence officer who provided Assange with a trove of secret government documents that WikiLeaks published in 2010 "one of the largest compromises of classified information in the history of the United States," according to the indictment.

Assange, 47, has said that the United States is trying to infringe on his journalistic freedoms. The indictment accused him of going beyond the role of a traditional journalist when he helped Manning crack the password that gave her access to hundreds of thousands of classified files.

Appearing at Westminster Magistrates' Court on Thursday afternoon, Assange pleaded not guilty but was convicted of failing to surrender to police on June 29, 2012. He will be sentenced in Crown Court, where more serious crimes are heard.

Assange faces extradition hearings on May 2 and June 12.

Addressing the media outside the court after the hearing, Assange's London-based attorney, Jennifer Robinson, said his arrest "sets a dangerous precedent for all media organizations and journalists."

"Since 2010 weve warned that Julian Assange would face extradition to the U.S. for his publishing activities with WikiLeaks," Robinson said. "Unfortunately today weve been proven right."

She added that she had just spoken to Assange, whose message to the world was: "I told you so."

In an interview with NBC News, Robinson said she was concerned about her client's health, adding that "he was in the middle of treatment for [a] root canal when he was arrested."

A source directly familiar with the situation told NBC News that the U.S. is making plans to seek Assange's extradition.

Footage shot by the Ruptly news video agency showed a bedraggled and bearded Assange being hauled out of the Ecuadorian Embassy by seven men. As he was bundled into a waiting police van, Assange shouted: "You must resist. You can resist. ... The U.K. must resist."

Ecuadorian President Lenin Moreno said in a video message that Assange had his diplomatic asylum withdrawn due to "repeatedly violating international conventions."

Moreno added that he asked the U.K. not to extradite Assange "to a country where he could face torture or the death penalty." In a subsequent statement, Ecuador's foreign minister said that the U.K. had given its assurance that it would comply with the request.

Alan Duncan, a British government minister, welcomed Assange's eviction and said it was the result of "extensive dialogue" between the U.K. and Ecuador.

Maria Zakharova, a spokeswoman for Russia's foreign ministry, criticized Assange's arrest. "The hand of 'democracy' squeezes the throat of freedom," she said in a Facebook post.

WikiLeaks said in a tweet that Assange's political asylum had been "illegally terminated in violation of international law."

The group has repeatedly claimed that the DOJ is building a criminal case centered on the leaking of Democratic emails hacked by the Russians in the 2016 election.

President Donald Trump's former lawyer, Michael Cohen, told a congressional hearing in February that former Trump campaign adviser Roger Stone was in contact with Assange before WikiLeaks released leaked emails from the Democratic National Committee.

Assange has always maintained that the source of the leaks was not Russia, contrary to the conclusion of U.S. intelligence agencies.

The White House referred questions about the Assange indictment to the DOJ. In an exchange with reporters in the Oval Office on Thursday, Trump appeared to downplay his knowledge of Assange's organization, saying: "I know nothing about WikiLeaks. It's not my thing."

Trump hasnt always been circumspect when it comes to Assange and WikiLeaks. Less than a month before the 2016 election, he showered praise on the organization.

I love WikiLeaks, he said on Oct. 10.

Assange, who founded WikiLeaks in 2006, made international news in 2010 with the publication of the leaked information provided by Manning.

These included a video of a U.S. military helicopter fatally shooting people in Iraq, and thousands of classified military logs revealing sensitive information about the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, thought to be the biggest leaks in U.S. military history.

Manning last month refused to testify before a federal grand jury looking into the release of documents to WikiLeaks.

In November 2010, the Swedish government issued an international arrest warrant for Assange in connection with allegations of sexual assault and rape from two women. Assange, who has denied the allegations, surrendered to British police the following month and was released on bail. He then fled, breaking the terms of his bond agreement.

Sweden dropped its investigation into Assange in 2017. But Sweden's chief prosecutor, Ingrid Isgren, said Thursday that the investigation into Assange could be reopened if he returned to the country before the statute of limitation expires in August 2020.

Elisabeth Massi Fritz, lawyer for one of Assange's accusers, said on Thursday that she would "do everything we possibly can" to get police to reopen the investigation "so that Assange can be extradited to Sweden and prosecuted for rape." The prosecutor's office said it had received a request from the original plaintiff to re-open the rape case.

Assange, a native of Australia, became an Ecuadorian citizen last year, even though his relations with his hosts had soured years ago.

In 2016, the Ecuadorian government cut off his access to the internet in the embassy after WikiLeaks published a trove of emails from Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign. The government said it was trying to make sure he couldn't interfere in the affairs of other countries.

Patrick Smith, Michele Neubert and Laura Saravia reported from London, Ken Dilanian from Washington, and Alex Johnson from Los Angeles.

Patrick Smith is a London-based editor and reporter from NBC News Digital.

Ken Dilanian is a national security reporter for the NBC News Investigative Unit.

Alex Johnson is a senior writer for NBC News covering general news, with an emphasis on explanatory journalism, data analysis, technology and religion. He is based in Los Angeles.

Laura Saravia and Michele Neubert contributed.

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WikiLeaks' Julian Assange arrested in London; U.S. seeks ...

WikiLeaks’ Assange hauled from embassy, faces US charge

LONDON (AP) British police on Thursday hauled a bearded and shouting Julian Assange from the Ecuadorian Embassy where he was holed up for nearly seven years, and the U.S. charged the WikiLeaks founder with conspiring with former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning to get their hands on government secrets.

Police arrested Assange after the South American nation revoked the political asylum that had protected him in the embassy, and he was brought before a British court the first step in an extradition battle that he has vowed to fight.

Ecuadors President Lenin Moreno said he decided to evict Assange from the embassy after repeated violations to international conventions and daily-life protocols, and he later lashed out at him during a speech in Quito, calling the Australian native a spoiled brat who treated his hosts with disrespect.

In Washington, the U.S. Justice Department accused Assange of conspiring with Manning to break into a classified government computer at the Pentagon. The charge was announced after Assange was taken into custody.

Assange, 47, took refuge in the embassy in 2012 after he was released on bail in Britain while facing extradition to Sweden on sexual assault allegations that have since been dropped. He refused to leave the embassy, fearing arrest and extradition to the U.S. for publishing classified military and diplomatic cables through WikiLeaks.

Manning, who served several years in prison for leaking troves of classified documents before her sentence was commuted by then-President Barack Obama, is again in custody in Alexandria, Virginia, for refusing to testify before a grand jury investigating WikiLeaks. Mannings legal team said the indictment against Assange showed prosecutors didnt need her testimony and called for her to be released, saying her continued detention would be purely punitive.

Over the years, Assange used Ecuadors embassy as a platform to keep his name before the public, frequently making appearances on its tiny balcony, posing for pictures and reading statements. Even his cat became famous.

But his presence was an embarrassment to U.K. authorities, who for years kept a police presence around the clock outside the embassy, costing taxpayers millions in police overtime. Such surveillance was removed in 2015, but the embassy remained a focal point for his activities.

Video posted online by Ruptly, a news service of Russia Today, showed several men in suits pulling a handcuffed Assange out of the embassy and loading him into a police van while uniformed British police formed a passageway. Assange, who shouted and gestured as he was removed, sported a full beard and slicked-back gray hair.

He later appeared in Westminster Magistrates Court, where District Judge Michael Snow wasted no time in finding him guilty of breaching his bail conditions, flatly rejecting his assertion that he had not had a fair hearing and a reasonable excuse for not appearing.

Mr. Assanges behavior is that of a narcissist who cannot get beyond his own selfish interests, Snow said. He hasnt come close to establishing reasonable excuse.

Assange waved to the packed public gallery as he was taken to the cells. His next appearance was set for May 2 via prison video-link in relation to the extradition case.

Assanges attorney, Jennifer Robinson, said he will fight any extradition to the U.S.

This sets a dangerous precedent for all journalist and media organizations in Europe and around the world, she said. This precedent means that any journalist can be extradited for prosecution in the United States for having published truthful information about the United States.

Asked at the White House about the arrest, President Donald Trump declared , Its not my thing, and I know nothing about WikiLeaks, despite praising the anti-secrecy organization dozens of times during his 2016 campaign.

Assange has been under U.S. Justice Department scrutiny for years for WikiLeaks role in publishing government secrets. He was an important figure in special counsel Robert Muellers Russia probe as investigators examined how WikiLeaks obtained emails that were stolen from Hillary Clintons presidential campaign and Democratic groups.

The bottom line is that he has to answer for what he has done, Clinton said later Thursday, at a speaking event with husband Bill Clinton.

WikiLeaks quickly drew attention to U.S. interest in Assange and said that Ecuador had illegally terminated Assanges political asylum in violation of international law.

Powerful actors, including CIA, are engaged in a sophisticated effort to de-humanise, de-legitimize and imprison him, the group said in a tweet over a photo of Assanges smiling face.

But in Assanges native Australia, Prime Minister Scott Morrison told Australian Broadcasting Corp. he had no plans to intervene in the case as the charge was a matter for the United States and had nothing to do with Australia. Consular officials were to visit him Friday in jail.

Ecuadorian officials suggested Assanges own behavior was to blame.

Interior Minister Maria Paula Romo said Assanges mental and physical health worsened while he was holed up, and he began to act aggressively toward his hosts, including smearing feces on the walls of the embassy.

In a fiery speech in Ecuador, Moreno called him an ungrateful and miserable hacker who treated embassy officials poorly.

When youre given shelter, cared for and provided food, you dont denounce the owner of the house, Moreno said to applause at an event outside Quito.

From now on well be more careful in giving asylum to people who are really worth it and not miserable hackers whose only goal is to destabilize governments, he added. We are tolerant, calm people, but were not stupid.

Other Ecuadorian officials in Quito accused supporters of WikiLeaks and two Russian hackers of trying to destabilize the country as the standoff with Assange intensified recently.

Romo said a close collaborator of WikiLeaks had traveled with former Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino this year to several countries including Peru, Spain and Venezuela to try to undermine the Ecuadorian government. She also said a person close to Assange had been detained at Quitos airport trying to fly to Japan. The person, who she did not identify, is accused of conspiring against the Ecuadorian government.

Later Thursday, a senior Ecuadorian official said a Swedish software developer living in Quito had been arrested at the airport as authorities attempt to dismantle a blackmail ring that in recent days had threatened to retaliate against Moreno.

The official identified the person as Ola Bini. The official spoke on the condition of anonymity and didnt provide any additional details about Bini.

On a blog, a Swedish man of the same name describes himself as a software developer working in Quito for the Center for Digital Autonomy, a group based in Ecuador and Spain focused on privacy, security and cryptography issues. It makes no mention of any affiliation with Wikileaks.

On Twitter earlier Thursday, Bini called claims by the Interior Minister that Russian hackers and someone close to Wikileaks were working inside Ecuador very worrisome news and said events looked like a witch hunt.

But former Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa called Morenos decision cowardly, accusing him of retaliating against Assange for WikiLeaks spreading allegations about an offshore bank account purportedly linked to Morenos family and friends.

On Wednesday, WikiLeaks accused Ecuadors government of an extensive spying operation against him. It alleges that meetings with lawyers and a doctor in the embassy over the past year were secretly filmed.

Speaking in the U.K. Parliament after the arrest, British Prime Minister Theresa May said it showed that no one is above the law.

Moreno appeared to suggest a swift extradition to the U.S. was unlikely.

In line with our strong commitment to human rights and international law, I requested Great Britain to guarantee that Mr. Assange would not be extradited to a country where he could face torture or the death penalty, Moreno said. The British government has confirmed it in writing, in accordance with its own rules.

Edward Snowden, the former security contractor who leaked classified information about U.S. surveillance programs, called Assanges arrest a blow to media freedom.

Images of Ecuadors ambassador inviting the U.K.s secret police into the embassy to drag a publisher of like it or not award-winning journalism out of the building are going to end up in the history books, Snowden tweeted from Russia, which has granted him permission to stay there while he is wanted by the U.S. Assanges critics may cheer, but this is a dark moment for press freedom.

___

Associated Press writers Kelvin Chan and Gregory Katz in London; Joshua Goodman in Caracas, Venezuela; Gonzalo Solano in Quito, Ecuador; and Eric Tucker in Washington contributed to this report.

Follow APs coverage of the arrest of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange at https://www.apnews.com/WikiLeaks

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WikiLeaks' Assange hauled from embassy, faces US charge