Chelsea Manning threatened with ‘indefinite solitary …

Whistleblower Chelsea Manning, who is currently serving an unjust thirty-five year jail sentence and who has already been tortured under US military supervision, is now being threatened with "indefinite solitary confinement" for alleged infractions that are so minor it's actually hard to believe.

Our friends at Fight For the Future have created a petition where you can sign on to a letter condemning the US Army's treatment of Chelsea.

According to the Army, Chelsea swept food onto the floor in the prison mess hall (unclear if it was an accident or on purpose). Then, when pulled aside about the incident by a corrections officer afterwards, she said, among other things, "I want a lawyer." Afterwards, prison officials found "prohibited" books and magazines in her cell, including the now famous Vanity Fair with Caitlyn Jenner on the cover. She was also charged with having "expired toothpaste" in her possession. For this, she faces "indefinite solitary confinement."

This may sound like an exaggeration, but it's not. Below are the actual charges, word for word, from the Army.

Solitary confinement, as even Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy recently wrote, is a barbaric punishment that can drive prisoners madyet thousands of prisoners are subject to it in the United States per year. As Fight For the Future states, even if these charges against Manning are 100% true, it is no reason to throw a person in solitary confinement for an indefinite period and is a violation of anyone's human rights - whether they are a whistleblower or anyone else.

It should go without saying that the Army should drop these frivolous charges immediately.

We are taking donations to Chelsea Manning's legal fund as she tries to fight her conviction under the Espionage Act. You can donate here.

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Chelsea Manning threatened with 'indefinite solitary ...

The Persecution of Chelsea Manning

Politics

According to her lawyer, the former intelligence analyst is being threatened with indefinite solitary confinement for the most minor transgressions imaginable.

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Chelsea Manning, the former Army intelligence analyst convicted of giving a trove of secrets to WikiLeaks, is serving a 35-year sentence inside a military prison. And now she may be thrown into solitary confinement indefinitely, her lawyer says.

A lengthy stay in solitary confinement is arguably torture. Shane Bauer, who spent seven months isolated in an Iranian prison, thinks so. The ACLU says yes. Physicians for Human Rights agree. The Center for Human Rights and Constitutional Law and several other prisoner rights groups recently filed a petition with the United Nations claiming just that, he wrote in a harrowing article about his experience. Human Rights Watch says at the very least, it constitutes cruel, inhuman, and degrading treatment, which is prohibited by international law.

In U.S. prisons, reformers have been urging wardens to stop relying so much on solitary confinement. Some respond that they have no other way to control violent inmates who belong to prison gangs and pose a danger to the safety of others.

But Chelsea Manning was not being violent in prison. She poses no apparent risk to fellow inmates, nor has she been adjudged at risk herself. And if you try to guess the transgressions that may trigger this punishment, theres no way youll hazard anything more petty than the truth.

Heres what Reuters is reporting:

Manning has been charged with a number of disciplinary infractions and will attend a hearing before a three-person discipline adjustment board on Aug. 18 at the prison, attorney Nancy Hollander said.The alleged disciplinary infractions on July 2 and July 9 included attempted disrespect, the possession of prohibited books and magazines while under administrative segregation, medicine misuse pertaining to expired toothpaste and disorderly conduct for pushing food onto the floor, Hollander said. The maximum penalty she faces is indefinite solitary confinement. Items confiscated from Manning included a Vanity Fair magazine with former Olympic athlete Bruce Jenner, who is transitioning to life as a woman, posing in a white strapless leotard on the cover.

Boing Boing says its seen a word-for-word rendering of the charges. Id have thought that a transgender inmate reading about Bruce Jenner in Vanity Fair would be the most innocuous infraction imaginable, but then I read this with jaw agape:

On 8 July 2015, while under administrative segregation pending investigation, your cell was inspected and a tube of anti-cavity toothpaste may-keep-in-cell, was found in your possession past its expiration date.

Did Martha Stewart draft new rules for all federal prisons while she was incarcerated?

Heres the attempted disrespect charge explained:

On 2 July 2015, during dinner chow, inmate Manning was approached by [a correctional specialist] to inform inmate Manning to be aware of her surroundings because [the correctional specialist] was almost hit with some food inmate Manning swept off the table. [The correctional specialist] informed inmate Manning to stand by at "Commons 1" once chow was completed so [the correctional specialist] could talk to inmate Manning and explain what she had done wrong while at "Commons 1."

[The correctional specialist] attempted to talk to inmate Manning, but she continued to cut [the correctional specialist] off by stating words to the effect of "you are accusing me," "this interview is over" and "I want my lawyer."

[The correctional specialist] ended the conversation and inmate Manning left to go get medication.

Says the same document, the maximum charge for these offenses is indefinite solitary confinement. Thankfully, there is no guarantee that it will be imposed. But the mere possibility of that sanction for rule-breaking so minor is a bracing insight into Americas military prisons, where more scrutiny is apparently warranted.

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The Persecution of Chelsea Manning

Chelsea Manning Faces "Indefinite Solitary Confinement …

Chelsea Manning, who is currently serving a 35-year prison sentence for leaking government documents to WikiLeaks, has been threatened with possible indefinite solitary confinement for a series of seemingly trivial infractions, including owning expired toothpaste and sweeping food onto the floor, her lawyer said on Wednesday.

ACLU attorney Chase Strangio says Manning is additionally accused of disrespect for requesting her lawyer while speaking to a guard and prohibited property for owning books and magazines that include the Caitlyn Jenner cover issue of Vanity Fair.

In response to the charges, Mannings supporters have started an online petition providing a detailed list of her alleged violations:

According to the website, Mannings prohibited property was as follows:

Vanity Fair issue with Caitlyn Jenner on the cover, Advocate, OUT Magazine, Cosmopolitan issue with an interview of Chelsea, Transgender Studies Quarterly, novel about trans issues A Safe Girl to Love, book Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy The Many Faces of Anonymous, book I Am Malala, 5 books by Robert Dorkin, legal documents including the Senate Torture Report, book: Hidden Qualities that Make Us Influential.

Given the materials that were confiscated, it is concerning that the military and Leavenworth might be taking action for the purpose of chilling Chelseas speech or even with the goal of silencing her altogether by placing her in solitary, Strangio told Buzzfeed News. Hopefully with public scrutiny the prison will respond by dismissing these charges and ensuring that she is not unfairly targeted based on her activism, her identity, and her pending lawsuit.

Mannings attorney says she is scheduled to have a hearing on the charges on August 18th.

The Associated Press reports that military officials have yet respond to requests for comment.

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Chelsea Manning Faces "Indefinite Solitary Confinement ...

Chelsea Manning Facing Solitary Confinement

By Sky News US Team

Chelsea Manning could be placed in indefinite solitary confinement for allegedly having prohibited reading material and disorderly conduct while serving her 35-year prison sentence.

The former intelligence analyst has been charged with a number of disciplinary infractions at the all-male military prison in Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and will attend a hearing before a three-person adjustment board on 18 August.

Nancy Hollander, her lawyer, said the alleged infractions on 2 July and 9 July included disrespect, possession of prohibited books and magazines while under administrative segregation, medicine misuse pertaining to expired toothpaste and disorderly conduct for pushing food on to the floor.

Manning is said to have had a copy of this Vanity Fair magazine

The maximum penalty is indefinite solitary confinement.

Among the items that were confiscated from Manning were a Vanity Fair magazine with former Olympic athlete Caitlyn Jenner on the cover.

Ms Hollander said: "I think it's harassment. It appears to be an attempt to silence her.

Private Manning after the sentencing in 2013

"Chelsea writes quite a bit. She is vocal. Certainly it's not a national security issue."

Manning, who was born a man but identifies as a woman, was convicted in 2013 as Bradley Manning of providing more than 700,000 documents, videos, diplomatic cables and battlefield accounts to WikiLeaks.

It has been described as the biggest classified material breach in US history.

Associated Press news agency contacted the US Army to clarify what kinds of reading material were banned at the prison, but did not receive a response.

Manning worked as an intelligence analyst in Baghdad when she leaked the government material.

The Pentagon said last year the US Army will provide gender identity treatment for Manning.

Ms Hollander said she was receiving hormone treatment.

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Chelsea Manning Facing Solitary Confinement

Chelsea Manning having troubles with military brig …

Manning's prison mugshot taken April 15.

Chelsea Manning, serving a 35-year term for leaking classified military documents to WikiLeaks, is having some run-ins with the authorities at the military brig at Fort Leavenworth in Kansas.

Supporters said Manning is to have an August 18 hearing over having unauthorized books and toothpaste and some minor scrapes with prison guards. The Chelsea Manning Support Network said the woman could be handed solitary confinement because of the infractions:

Chelsea faces this incomprehensibly severe punishment as a result of ridiculously innocuous institutional offenses, including the possession of books and magazines related to politics and LBGTQ issues (which she received openly via the prison mail system), and having a tube of toothpaste that was past its expiration datedeemed medical mis-use. The catalyst for this attack on Chelsea seems to have been an incident in the mess hall where she may have brushed, or accidentally knocked, a tiny amount of food off of her table. When aggressively confronted by a guard, she asked to speak to her lawyer.

The reading contraband, the support network said, included "a novel about transgender issues, the book 'Hacker, Hoaxer, Whistleblower, Spy The Many Faces of Anonymous,' the book 'I am Malala,' an issue of Cosmopolitan magazine containing an interview with Manning and the US Senate report on CIA torture."

Manning's Twitter feed published some of the charging documents.

In a military first, Manning was approved for hormone therapy in February as part oftransition-related care.

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Chelsea Manning having troubles with military brig ...

The Fight to Free Chelsea Manning | The Nation

It continues in the courts of law and public opinionbut justice is expensive.

Mural of Chelsea Manning (Photo by Timothy Krause, CC BY-NC 2.0)

This article is a joint publication of TheNation.com andForeign Policy In Focus.

Chelsea Manning was an all-American patriot when she joined the US military in 2007 at the height of the surge in Iraq.

But when she saw what her country was actually doing abroadhanding over thousands of Iraqi Sunnis to be tortured by state-sponsored Shiite death squads, for instanceshe decided she couldnt be a part of it. Nor could she just do nothing as injustices were committed in her and every Americans name.

So, using the access available to her as an Army intelligence analyst, she downloaded gigabytes of classified evidence that war crimes were being committed onto CDs labeled with something like Lady Gaga, as she told a federal informant.

In 2013, a military court sentenced Manning to 35 years behind bars for leaking that evidence, including thousands upon thousands of diplomatic cables, to the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks. The guilty verdict came after Manning was subjected to 11 months of what the UN special rapporteur on torture called cruel and inhuman solitary confinement.

If she serves her full sentence, Manning, now 27, will be 60 years old when released, though she will reportedly become eligible for parole in 2020. But supporters want her out nowand believe that the way she was treated before she went to trial could be the key.

We have to appeal this on Chelseas behalf, said criminal defense attorney Nancy Hollander, one of a team of lawyers looking to do just that. Hollander was speaking as part of a recent panel discussion on the Obama administrations war on leaks. This war, like others declared on nouns, has tended to hurt the least deserving: in this case, conscience-driven whistleblowers like Manning, but not any of those chatty senior administration officials who casually leak inside information to the press.

Such is the difference between releasing classified information that informs the public but bothers the national security state, as Manning did, and leaking what often proves to be disinformation that flatters those in power, as their lackeys do.

Lets remember what landed Manning in prison: releasing a video of an incident in which US soldiers killed more than a dozen unarmed civilians in Iraq, including two journalists working for Reuters. At the time of the incident, a military spokesman said that the soldiers, who fired at a man driving a minivan with his kids inside, were clearly engaged in combat operations against a hostile force. Manning proved otherwise.

Manning also revealed that Yemens former dictator, Ali Abdullah Saleh, was colluding with the Obama administration to cover up an undeclared US war against Al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (of which any military-age male killed in a drone strike is considered to have been a member). That war has killed hundreds of civilianswith one US airstrike alone wiping out 41 innocent Yemenis, including 21 children, according to Amnesty International.

That differenceleaking things not to portray ones self in a better light, but to soothe a conscience inflamed by injusticeis part of the appeal that Hollander is drafting with fellow attorney Vincent Ward. During her first trial, Chelsea wasnt even allowed to put on the defense of why she felt it important for the public to know about these human rights abuses, said Hollander at the discussion hosted by Hastings College of Law in San Francisco. We have to appeal this for all of our sake. And we really have to stop this because it is illegal for the government of the United States to classify info that embarrasses the government.

But justice is expensive. In 2014 alone, the Chelsea Manning Defense Fund spent $149,000, out of a total of $247,000 in donations, on Mannings legal team. As of this March 31, that team was owed close to $100,000.

Melissa Keith works for the Chelsea Manning Support Network, a project of Courage to Resist, a group that supports conscientious objectors. She told me that the $100,000 not spent on legal fees in 2014 went toward defending Manning in public. Another $74,000 went to the salaries of staff who worked on public education and awareness, said Keith, which involved placing ads and Mannings own writing in newspapers, as well as organizing and promoting events to draw attention to her case. The network also says that the fund helps pay the travel costs of those visiting Manning, especially her mother and relatives living in Wales, and for her college education.

Though owed tens of thousands of dollars, Mannings lawyers have not stopped working (the fund paid $10,000 toward its bill in March after receiving $10,636 in donations, or $9,412 after bank fees). The shortfall has led Manning herself to appeal for funds on her new Twitter account. Her posts are currently dictated over the phone from military prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, to an employee of the public relations firm Fitzgibbon Media, according to a handwritten letter from Manning. That firm has been paid by the Chelsea Manning Support Network to promote Mannings cause.

Since Chelseas initial tweets, weve raised about $40,000, said Keith, who estimates that about $8,000 came as a direct result of those posts on the 140-character social network. That still leaves the funds debt to the legal team at more than $50,000and with Hollander charging $400 an hour (not unusual for a top-tier defense attorney, according to lawyers I asked to review the invoice), the legal debt grows by about $10,000 a month.

Legal expenses are very high currently, as the new legal team is tasked with reviewing the entire record of the trial, the most voluminous in the history of American military law, said Keith. Now is the time of heavy lifting. The arguments formulated now will be the arguments that carry Chelsea through until the end of this process.

Where does that process end, though? Mannings lawyers expect to have a hearing before the US Army Criminal Court of Appeals sometime this year. If that appeal goes nowhere, though, the case could go to the civilian systemand from there to the Supreme Court.

Donations to support Mannings defense can be made to the Chelsea Manning Defense Fund. One can also donate to a legal trust, 100 percent of the contributions to which are used to cover legal expenses, by making a check out to IOLTA / Manning and sending it to: Courage to Resist, 484 Lake Park Ave. #41, Oakland, CA 94610.

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The Fight to Free Chelsea Manning | The Nation

Chelsea Manning Faces Solitary for Her Caitlyn Jenner Stash

Chelsea Manning, the transgender Army intelligence analyst serving time for leaking military secrets, faces solitary confinement for possessing the Caitlyn Jenner cover issue of Vanity Fair magazine and other "prohibited" books and magazines.

Manning faces an Aug. 18 hearing at the Fort Leavenworth military prison in Kansas where she will have to answer to numerous disciplinary infractions, according to Reuters. Infractions on July 2 and July 9 include attempted disrespect, possession of prohibited books and magazines while under administrative segregation, medicine misuse pertaining to expired toothpaste, and disorderly conduct for pushing food onto the floor.

Manning's attorneys have called the charges "absurd and a form of harassment," reported The Guardian, which said the Army private has written columns for it on intelligence issues and transgender rights.

"I'm concerned that books have been taken from her," said Nancy Hollander, one of Manning's attorneys. "Those books came to her legally and are clearly not a security threat."

Along with the Jenner Vanity Fair issue, Manning was found with the book "I Am Malala" by Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai, a novel "A Safe Girl to Love," that features trans women, the LGBT publication Out Magazine, and a copy of Cosmopolitan magazine that included an interview with Manning.

"It is not uncommon in prisons to have charges that to the rest of us seem to be absurd," said Hollander, according to USA Today. "Prisons are very controlled environments and they try to keep them very controlled and sometimes in that control they really go too far and I think that this is going too far."

Chase Strangio, an American Civil Liberties Union attorney handling Manning's case, told The Guardian he believed his client was being targeted.

"They could chill her activities or even silence her altogether," said Strangio. "Chelsea has a growing voice in the public discussion and it would not surprise me were these charges connected to who she is."

The former Bradley Manning, 27, was found guilty in February 2013 on 10 counts connected with the WikiLeaks scandal and was sentenced in August of 2014, noted USA Today. Manning then announced shewas a female and asked that she be referred to as Chelsea and withfeminine pronouns. Related Stories:

2015 Newsmax. All rights reserved.

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Chelsea Manning Faces Solitary for Her Caitlyn Jenner Stash

Chelsea Manning and the Deepwater Horizon Killings …

Five years ago Monday, 11 men died on the Deepwater Horizon oil rig despite Chelsea Mannings effort to save their lives.

Let me explain.

The BP drilling rig blew itself to Kingdom Come after the mud the cement used to cap the well blew out.

The oil company, the federal government and the industry were shocked shocked! at this supposedly unexpected explosion in the deep waters of the Gulf of Mexico.

But BP knew, and Exxon and Chevron knew, and the U.S. State Department knew, that just 17 months earlier another BP offshore rig had suffered an identical, disastrous blow-out halfway across the planet in the Caspian Sea.

In both the Gulf and Caspian blow-outs, the immediate culprit was the failure of the cement, in both cases caused by the use misuse of nitrogen in the cement mix, a money-saving but ultimately deadly measure intended to speed the cements drying.

The cover-up meant that U.S. regulators, the U.S. Congress and the public had no inkling that the cost-saving quick-dry cement process had failed on an offshore rig only a year before the Deepwater Horizon blew.

But Pvt. Chelsea (formerly Bradley) Manning tried to warn us. The details of the Caspian Sea blow-out off the coast of Baku, Azerbaijan, were revealed in the secret State Department cables Manning released in December 2010 through Wikileaks. Cables from the U.S. ambassador relayed a summary of confidential meetings in which BPs top Azeri executive confided that their big Caspian offshore rig suffered a blow-out in September 2008 leading to the largest such emergency evacuation in BPs history its likely cause a bad cement job.

The message was relayed to Washington after BPs American partners in the Caspian, Exxon and Chevron, asked the State Department to find out why BP had ceased to drill in the Caspian, costing them all millions. State, then headed by former Chevron board member Condoleezza Rice, got the oil chiefs their answer then joined them in keeping it secret.

[Not knowing about the Manning cables, I had to find out about the Caspian blow-out the hard way. Just days after the Deepwater Horizon blow-out, I received a tip from an eyewitness to the Caspian disaster. To check out the facts, I flew to Baku, where my British TV crew and I found ourselves placed under arrest by a team of goons from the Azerbaijan secret police, the military and some of BPs oil-well-insignia-sporting private security clowns. As a reporter for British Television, I was quickly released with the film of the bust captured on my little pen camera. But, terribly, two of my rig-worker witnesses disappeared.]

Had BP or the State Department fessed up to the prior blow-out a disclosure required by U.S. and British regulations it is exceptionally unlikely that BP would have been allowed to use the quick-dry cement method in the deep Gulf of Mexico.

Indeed, there may have been a complete prohibition on the drilling, because Department of Interior experts had opposed deep drilling in that part of the Gulf. To lobby the government to allow drilling there, just six months before the Deepwater Horizon blew, BP executive David Rainey and the presidents of Exxon USA and Chevron testified before Congress that offshore drilling had been conducted for 50 years in a manner both safe and protective of the environment.

It is hard to imagine the oil companies defeating the Interior experts had the executives admitted to the major blow-out in the Caspian Sea.

Ultimately, Rainey was indicted for the crime of making false statements to Congress on a lesser matter. However, indicting the executives for concealing the earlier blow-out was not possible because our own State Department participated in the cover-up.

And thats what Manning exposed though not quickly enough to save those 11 lives.

Pvt. Manning may not have known about the specific memo of the secret meeting of State and BP. It was one in an ocean of cables she released.

But Manning knew this: The truth can save lives. Or, as Manning was brought up to believe: The truth shall set us free.

And if truth sets us free, then official secrets enslave us.

Barack Obama and John Boehner and Mitch McConnell know this. So do Hillary Clinton, Ted Cruz, Marco Rubio and the other candidates for Secret-Keeper-in-Chief.

Years ago, Daniel Ellsberg told me that he was surprised when Judge Stanley Sporkin dismissed all charges against him although Ellsberg had revealed top-secret military intelligence, the Pentagon Papers. The judge noted that the U.S. was unique among nations in having no official secrets act, no law against telling the truth to the public.

No more. The brutal 35-year prison sentence for Manning on espionage charges and the continuing manhunt for Edward Snowden makes it clear that the Obama administration considers truth-telling a crime.

As I see it, the State Department officials who withheld BPs blow-out secret are as culpable as the oil company in the deaths of those 11 workers on the Deepwater Horizon. You can say that the men who died on the rig were victims of the corporate-government enslavement of information, martyrs to official secrecy.

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Julian Assange condemns Swedish handling of sexual assault …

Julian Assange with Ecuadors foreign minister, Ricardo Patino. Photograph: John Stillwell/AP

Julian Assange has criticised what he described as the incompetence of Swedens prosecutor after she dropped her investigation into some of the allegations of sexual assault against him due to the expiration of a five-year time limit for bringing charges.

Prosecutors will continue to pursue an interview with the WikiLeaks founder over an outstanding rape allegation.

I am extremely disappointed. There was no need for any of this, Assange said in a statement.

I am an innocent man. I havent even been charged. From the beginning I offered simple solutions. Come to the [Ecuadorian] embassy to take my statement or promise not to send me to the United States. This Swedish official refused both.

The Swedish prosecutor, Marianne Ny, said she regretted leaving the investigation unfinished, but said she was forced to do so because Assange had refused to leave Ecuadors London embassy, where he has taken refuge.

Two women made allegations against Assange five years ago in Stockholm, but no charges were brought because the prosecutor was unable to interrogate him after he challenged an extradition order and sought political asylum in the embassy in June 2012.

Assange, who denies the allegations, believes that travelling to Sweden would leave him vulnerable to extradition to the US to face espionage charges. His repeated requests to the Swedish government for a firm guarantee of his safety have been declined.

For more than four years Ny refused to go to London to interview Assange, but changed her mind in March after a Swedish court questioned her failure to make progress in the investigation. Ny cited the impending expiry of the statute of limitations as a reason for the turnabout.

But it was June before the Swedish government made an official request to Ecuador to enter the embassy, and an agreed date to begin interrogation a week later had to be scrapped. After a tense standoff in which each side blamed the other for delays, this week they agreed to formal talks over judicial cooperation, potentially breaking the deadlock but not in time to prevent the time limit on most of the accusations running out.

It is still my hope to be able to conduct a hearing [on the rape allegation] since there is an ongoing dialogue on the issue between Sweden and Ecuador, Ny said in a statement.

Assange said: She has managed to avoid hearing my side of the story entirely. This is beyond incompetence. I am strong but the cost to my family is unacceptable.

Britain said on Thursday it would make a formal protest to the Ecuadorian government over its decision to provide asylum to Assange.

Ecuador must recognise that its decision to harbour Mr Assange more than three years ago has prevented the proper course of justice, the Foreign Office minister Hugo Swire said in a statement.

The statute of limitations for an allegation of unlawful coercion and one case of sexual molestation expired on Thursday; another allegation of sexual molestation expires on Tuesday. The outstanding allegation of rape expires on 17 August 2020.

Claes Borgstrm, a Stockholm lawyer who represents one of the women whose allegations against Assange will now never be tested in court, said the woman was ambivalent about the situation. On the one hand, she wanted Assange to face trial and answer for what he has done. On the other, she wants to put this behind her.

Helena Kennedy QC, a member of Assanges legal team, said he had spent more time in the embassy than he could ever spend in a Swedish prison, and the remaining allegation against him was just as unlikely to lead to conviction.

The question remains whether we are dealing with incompetence or bad faith or an agenda set by other considerations. I remain unconvinced that this prosecution has been about securing justice for women.

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Julian Assange condemns Swedish handling of sexual assault ...

Sweden Drops Sex Assault Charges But Julian Assange Still …

Police in Sweden say theyre dropping the sexual assault charges against Julian Assange, not because he didnt do ita question of fact that will never be answeredbut because he successfully holed up in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London long enough that the statute of limitations has expired.

(Assange has been accused of coercing two Swedish women into unprotected sex in 2010; Swedish authorities say he purposely tore the condom he was using with at least one of the women. Assange says its all an elaborate honeypot to lure him to Sweden so he can be extradited to the U.S. to stand trial on espionage charges linked documents published on Wikileaks. I say, why cant it be both?)

Anyway, Assange took the news well, bombastically speaking, via CNN:

On Thursday, Assange reacted to the news by lashing out at Swedish prosecutors over his legal troubles. I am extremely disappointed, he said in a statement. There was no need for any of this. I am an innocent man. I havent even been charged.

But despite his technical victory, the flaxen secret-leaker cant leave his diplomatic Swedish rape bunker just yetaccording to CNN, the still-pending rape charges against him wont expire until 2020.

Still, he seems to be making do.http://gawker.com/did-julian-ass...

Contact the author at gabrielle@gawker.com.

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Sweden Drops Sex Assault Charges But Julian Assange Still ...