Sweden drops some sexual-abuse cases against Julian …

Swedish prosecutors announced Thursday that they were dropping their investigation into someof the sexual-abuse allegations against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who has been holed up for three years in the Ecuadorean Embassy here in the British capital.

But a more serious accusation of rape remains lodged against Assange, meaning that the white-maned whistle-blower doesnt plan to quit the small suite of rooms in Londons tony Knightsbridge neighborhood, which he hasnt left since June 2012.

His persistence in staying put, out of reach of British authorities charged with arresting and extraditing him to Sweden, has basically allowed Assange to run out the clock on allegations that he sexually abused two women in separate incidents in Stockholm five years ago this month. The investigation into allegations of molestation and unlawful coercion in one of those incidents was dropped Thursday; the allegation of molestation in the other incident will lapse next Tuesday.

Julian Assange, on his own accord, has evaded prosecution by seeking refuge in the embassy of Ecuador, Marianne Ny, Swedens director of public prosecution, said in a statement. As the statute of limitation has [expired] on some of the crimes, I am compelled to discontinue the investigation.

But the deadline for the investigation into the rape allegation is not until August 2020, Ny added. Her office will continue negotiating with Ecuadorean authorities over the possibility of interviewing Assange inside the embassy in London, rather than hauling him back to Stockholm.

The Australian-born Assange denies the accusations against him and insists that he is willing to submit to questioning to clear his name. He says he was forced to seek refuge in the embassy, which counts as Ecuadorean soil, to avoid extradition for fear that Sweden would hand him over to the U.S. to be tried for WikiLeaks publication of an enormous trove of classified American military and diplomatic files.

Since then, he has been granted political asylum by Ecuador but has no way of getting there, because British police watching out for an attempted escape have been posted outside the embassy in an around-the-clock vigil costing an estimated $19 million so far.

To his supporters, Assange remains a towering hero; to his opponents, a cowering fugitive. He has boasted of frequent visits by celebrities who take his side, including actors John Cusack and Maggie Gyllenhaal.

In his cramped quarters, which he shares with Ecuadorean diplomatic staff, Assange has use of a phone, the Internet, a shower, a treadmill, a kitchenette and a sun lamp to help compensate for his inability to step outside to soak up natural sunlight.

He acknowledges having had sex with the two women at the center of the allegations but says it was consensual.

Claes Borgstrom, the lawyer for one of the women, said his client wanted to put the matter behind her.

She had wanted him to stand before the court and answer the accusations, but its five years ago and shes not interested in going to court now, Borgstrom told the BBC. Its been a difficult time for her, and shes now trying to forget about it and move on with her life.

Assange was first arrested by British police in December 2010 and remained under a form of house arrest at a friends country estate in eastern England while various British courts heard his appeals against extradition. At the end of May 2012, his final appeal to Britains Supreme Court was denied.

Three weeks later, he fled to the Ecuadorean Embassy, just a few days before he was to be handed over to Swedish authorities.

MORE ON WIKILEAKS' JULIAN ASSANGE:

WikiLeaks' Julian Assange leads hidden, busy life in Ecuador's embassy

Sweden bends in Julian Assange case, asks for interview in London

New moves to resolve Swedish standoff with WikiLeaks founder Assange

Originally posted here:
Sweden drops some sexual-abuse cases against Julian ...

Sex claims against WikiLeaks founder Assange to expire …

Assange (right) has always denied the sexual assault allegations against him [AP]

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is set to be cleared of three sexual assault allegations made in Sweden within days, as a five-year statute of limitations against the charges expires.

Three of the charges of sexual molestation involving two women he met during a visit to Sweden five years ago will expire on August 13 and August 18.

The statute of limitations on a fourth and more serious allegation of rape is not set to expire for another five years.

Inside Story: The curious case of Julian Assange

Never charged

Assange, who has been holed up at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London for more than three years, has never been charged with any offence and has denied all of the allegations.

His lawyer, Thomas Olsson, told Swedish Television last week that it was "lamentable that it's taken such a long time to wind up this case" and called on Swedish prosecutors to close the investigation.

OPINION: WikiLeaks and Anonymous respond to status quo journalism

However, he said it was unlikely that the closing of the case itself would be enough to prompt Assange to leave the embassy, where he has sought asylum since June 2012, as he remained concerned over being extradited to the US to face charges over WikiLeaks' publication of classified US military and diplomatic documents.

"The reason he is at the embassy is his concern over being extradited to the US and prosecuted there because of the very serious accusations the US made about WikiLeaks publications and because of personal threats made by people in public office," Olsson said.

"So long as that threat remains - and it's a threat of global scope - he can't leave the embassy."

On Wednesday the Financial Times reported that Ecuador had agreed to hold talks with Sweden about questioning Assange, a move which could end a years-long stand-off.

Swedish officials said Ecuador had wanted Sweden to sign a bilateral agreement on judicial cooperation regarding Assange's case before allowing Swedish prosecutors to question him. Sweden described the demand as unreasonable.

Assange's lawyer Olsson said Assange's lawyers had for several years requested prosecutors to come and interrogate Assange "but had not had a reply".

"What people forget is that Julian Assange voluntarily attended the first interrogation and answered the questions he was asked," Olsson said.

"Then the investigation was closed and a new prosecutor arrived on the scene to open it again."

Bradley Manning, a US army soldier, in 2013 was sentenced in a military court to a maximum term of 35 years' jail for passing on thousands of classified military documents to WikiLeaks for publication.

Source:Al Jazeera and agencies

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Sex claims against WikiLeaks founder Assange to expire ...

Julian Assange’s legal troubles are far from over – CNN.com

Story highlights UK calls for Ecuador to allow the extradition of Julian Assange to Sweden in line with legal obligations Statute of limitations on some charges running out, but allegation of suspicion of rape stands Assange fears that if extradited to Sweden, he could land in the United States

On Thursday, prosecutors announced they are dropping allegations involving sexual molestation and coercion as statutes of limitations in the investigation run out this month.

Their disappearance may not change Assange's predicament. The allegation of suspicion of rape still stands and he may be investigated on it until 2020, Swedish prosecutors have said.

Assange appears still to be stuck at the embassy, where British police stand guard to see to it he can be extradited to Sweden should he set foot outside the door.

The Australian has never been charged and denies the allegations against him in Sweden.

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 haven't even been charged."

A bigger fear may be nagging at Assange. If apprehended by the Swedes, he has said he could eventually end up in the United States, where he could be charged and tried over the leak of confidential U.S. documents to the public via the website WikiLeaks.

If the case of Chelsea Manning, formerly Army Pfc. Bradley Manning, is any indication, Assange could face a heavy penalty in the U.S. justice system. Manning was sentenced to 35 years behind bars for stealing 750,000 pages of classified documents and slipping them to WikiLeaks.

Assange founded WikiLeaks in 2006, and in December 2007, it posted a U.S. Army manual for soldiers dealing with prisoners at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. It drew outrage from critics of the U.S. handling of inmates and from the U.S. government, which condemned the leak as illegal.

In the coming years, WikiLeaks exposed documents from the Church of Scientology, Sarah Palin, a far-right British party and New Yorkers terrified by the September 11, 2001, attacks.

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Julian Assange's legal troubles are far from over - CNN.com

Julian Assange: three cases dropped but inquiry into rape …

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, pictured during a press conference inside the Ecuadorian embassy in London. Photograph: John Stillwell/AFP/Getty Images

Swedish prosecutors have dropped their investigation into allegations of sexual assault against Julian Assange after the deadline for bringing charges expired, but said they would continue to pursue an interview with the WikiLeaks founder over an outstanding rape allegation.

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

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

Swedish prosecutor Marianne Ny said in a statement: Julian Assange has voluntarily stayed away from justice by taking refuge in the Ecuadorian embassy. Now that the limitation period has passed for some of the [alleged] crimes I am forced to discontinue the preliminary investigation in these parts. This means that the investigation of the events is left unfinished because the suspect has not been heard, which I regret.

In early June Sweden submitted a request to interrogate Assange at Ecuadors embassy, Ny said. It is still my hope to be able to conduct a hearing since there is an ongoing dialogue on the issue between Sweden and Ecuador.

Assange said he was extremely disappointed in the outcome, saying the Swedish prosecutor has managed to avoid hearing his side of the story entirely.

From the beginning I offered simple solutions, Assange said. Come to the embassy to take my statement or promise not to send me to the United States. This Swedish official refused both. She even refused a written statement This is beyond incompetence.

After a tense standoff between Sweden and Ecuador over the conditions of access to Ecuadors London embassy, on Monday Sweden offered to open talks with Ecuador to reach a formal agreement on judicial cooperation, potentially breaking the deadlock but not in time to prevent the statute of limitations on most of the accusations expiring.

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.

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Julian Assange: three cases dropped but inquiry into rape ...

Bradley Manning Might Get Solitary Confinement For Bad …

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Remember Bradley Manning? The guy who turned against his own country, got tossed into the clink, and declared himself a woman? Hes back in the news. No fairy tale about a beautiful, persecuted princess is complete without a wicked villain, and in this case that villains name is Leavenworth.

The following story, by Eric M. Johnson at Reuters, contains a number of typos. Ive taken the liberty of fixing them:

Chelsea Bradley Manning, a soldier imprisoned for leaking classified U.S. information to pro-transparency site WikiLeaks, could face solitary confinement on charges she he violated prison rules by having prohibited reading material, her his attorney said on Wednesday

The former intelligence analyst, who was born a man but identifies as a woman, is serving a 35-year sentence at an all-male military prison at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas

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.

I dont know what attempted disrespect means, and the toothpaste thing seems silly. But can you guess what was among that prohibited reading material? Go ahead, guess.

Yep:

Keeping such contraband out of Mr. Mannings hands which no amount of hormones or surgery or nail polish will ever magically transform into the hands of a woman is an act of mercy. Enabling Mannings delusion that hes a woman doesnt help him. It only prolongs his misery.

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Bradley Manning Might Get Solitary Confinement For Bad ...

Chelsea Manning facing solitary confinement – CNNPolitics.com

Story highlights Chelsea Manning is the former U.S. Army soldier who was convicted of violating the Espionage Act. She faces four charges including disrespect, disorderly contact and medicine misuse after officials discovered an expired tube of toothpaste in her cell.

Bradley Manning wants to live as a woman, be known as Chelsea

Manning faces four charges including disrespect, disorderly contact and medicine misuse after officials discovered an expired tube of toothpaste in her cell, according to a statement on ChelseaManning.org out Wednesday.

Manning is currently facing 35 years in prison after leaking a trove of classified documents to Wikileaks.

Chelsea Manning sues to get transgender medical treatment

The statement said Manning received the books legally through the prison's open mail system.

"The catalyst for this attack on Chelsea seems to have been an incident in the mess hall where she may have pushed, brushed, or accidentally knocked, a small amount of food off of her table. She then asked to speak to her lawyer when confronted by a guard. The absurd charges were tacked on later," the statement said.

Chelsea Manning tweeting from prison

Manning, formerly known as Bradley Manning and was born male, said two years ago that she is female. She eventually filed a lawsuit in federal court claiming she "has been denied access to medically necessary treatment" for her gender disorder.

The statement said Manning regularly publishes op-eds in the Guardian writing about transgender rights, the prison system and government transparency. She recently won the ability to begin hormone therapy after threatening to sue the military.

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Chelsea Manning facing solitary confinement - CNNPolitics.com

Ripple, a Cryptocurrency Company, Wants to Rewire Bank …

A digital-currency company thinks it can protect the personal information used to perform identity checks in the financial industry.

Companies built around Bitcoin and other digital currencies mostly focus on storing and transferring money. But at least one company is trying to prove that some of the underlying technology can have a much wider impact on the financial industry.

That startup, Ripple Labs, has already had some success persuading banks to use its Bitcoin-inspired protocol to speed up money transfers made in any currency, especially across borders (see 50 Smartest Companies 2014: Ripple Labs). Now it is building a system that uses some similar cryptographic tricks to improve the way financial companies check the identity of their customers. The system could also provide a more secure way to log in to other online services.

Verifying identity is a constant, expensive headache for financial institutions, which are bound by strict regulations designed to curtail money laundering and support for blacklisted organizations such as terrorist groups. Most banks turn to one of a handful of large data brokers, such as Experian or Acxiom, to power their ID checks. When you open a new account, a bank gathers key personal information and sends it to its broker to verify your identity, and to confirm that you arent on any block list.

Under Ripples system, the same basic process would take place. However, your personal information would be used to generate a unique cryptographic token. A bank could send the token to a data broker that has its own token, made using your personal information at an earlier time. The math underpinning Ripples system would allow the broker to confirm that the data you had given the bank was correct, without either the bank or the broker ever revealing the data itself.

Apples mobile payment technology uses similar technology to protect credit card numbers (see 10 Breakthrough Technologies 2015: Apple Pay). When you use Apple Pay, only a cryptographic token representing your credit card number is transferred to the merchant. That token can be used to charge your card, but it wont reveal anything to anyone who manages to steal it, and it cannot be reused.

Stefan Thomas, chief technology officer of Ripple, says its ID verification system should reduce the risk that personal data will be stolen or accidentally leaked and should also be faster than the systems used today, which have developed gradually over decades and still use outdated technology. He says Ripple decided to develop the technology after it became clear that the financial system needed more than just new ways to transfer money.

Thomas adds that by cutting costs and security risks, Ripples system might allow cheaper data brokers to emerge. It could also make it easier for banks to operate in poorer parts of the world, where verification systems can be particularly expensive to operate, even for U.S. banks, he says. And Ripples engineers are also working on ways their protocol can be used to log in to online services.

Sarah Jane Hughes, a law professor at Indiana University who specializes in payment systems, says Ripple has identified a legitimate opportunity. Companies spend a lot on complying with identity verification rules, and mistakes are expensive, she says. For example, PayPal agreed to pay $7.7 million to the U.S. Treasury last week for failing to block just under 500 transactions involving people subject to U.S. sanctions. If you could do verification more rapidly and with a greater degree of certainty, it would be hugely valuable, says Hughes.

However, Hughes says, switching to a new system would not be easy for most financial institutions. They would probably have to retain the old system for some time for compatibility reasons. That means Ripples idea would have to deliver significant benefits to gain traction.

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Ripple, a Cryptocurrency Company, Wants to Rewire Bank ...

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What is WikiLeaks? – Definition from WhatIs.com

WikiLeaks is an independent, non-profit online media organization that publishes submissions of otherwise unavailable documents from anonymous sources. The WikiLeaks website was launched in 2006 by the Sunshine Press. Within a year of its launch, the site claimed a database that had grown to more than 1.2 million documents.

The organizations self-stated mandate explains Our primary interests are oppressive regimes in Asia, the former Soviet bloc, Sub-Saharan Africa and the Middle East, but we also expect to be of assistance to those in the west who wish to reveal unethical behavior in their own governments and corporations.

WikiLeaks releases include:

WikiLeaks was originally a true wiki, allowing any user to add or edit content but the site now follows a more traditional publishing model. The site accepts submissions of restricted or censored material of political, ethical, diplomatic or historical significance. Submissions are vetted by a group of WikiLeaks staff members and volunteers from mainstream news media. A WikiLeaks writer creates copy for the site and links to the submitted document. The identity of the source is protected.

Proponents of WikiLeaks praise the organization, among other things, for its promotion of free speech, transparency and open information. Critics of WikiLeaks assert, among other things, that documents may have been acquired illegally and also may be published without adequate fact-checking.

Julian Assange, an Internet activist and hacker, is WikiLeaks spokesperson. Public opinion of Assange, like that of the organization itself, is divided.

Learn more:

A BBC News article on WikiLeaks: Welcome to a new age of whistle-blowing.

On TED.com, Julian Assange explains why the world needs WikiLeaks.

Declan McCullagh reports on criticism of WikiLeaks.

Continued here:
What is WikiLeaks? - Definition from WhatIs.com

Wikileaks | Electronic Frontier Foundation

A nonprofit whistleblower website launched in 2006, Wikileaks has highlighted important issues about government transparency the free expression rights of online publishers and the unimpeded flow of information on the Internet. While there is heated controversy about its tactics and publication choices, EFF supports the fundamental right of Wikileaks and similar websites to publish truthful political content and the fundamental right of users to read that content.

EFF intervened to protect Wikileaks' domain name from a legal attack in 2008 when Swiss bank Julius Baer filed suit against both the whistleblowing website and its domain name registrar Dynadot. At the time, the court issued a permanent injunction against the wikileaks.org domain name, causing the site to be unavailable through the main URL. EFF and the ACLU filed a motion to intervene and many media and other free speech organizations joined. The judge dissolved his previous orders allowing the wikileaks.org domain name to go back up.

Wikileaks received a great deal of media attention in 2010 when it published a wealth of confidential documents about the United States government. The publications included:

In the wake of the early waves of cables being published online in late 2010, numerous online intermediaries acted in ways that highlighted the fragility of online free speech. Payment providers, cloud service hosting providers, and other intermediaries shut off services to Wikileaks sometimes in response to unofficial government pressure. This raised serious concerns about the power of online intermediaries that worked to shut down free speech without Wikileaks having been formally charged with any crime in relation to the leaks.

In response, the Electronic Frontier Foundation launched a campaign against Internet censorship and sent an Open Letter to Lawmakers reminding them to safeguard free expression when considering the debate over Wikileaks. EFF also created guidelines for constructive direct action against censorship.

In January 2011, it came to light that the United States government had sought certain account information from Twitter about particular users in connection with a Wikileaks-related investigation. EFF and the ACLU announced they would represent Icelandic Member of Parliament Birgitta Jnsdttir in connection to a court order for information from her Twitter account.

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Wikileaks | Electronic Frontier Foundation