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[October 11, 2020]
The second indictment of alleged violations of the Espionage Act belatedly
filed by the US against Wikileaks founder Julian Assange actually should
not include him since there is no contention that he spied for any warring
enemy, nor is he a U.S. citizen or resident, which the 1917 law targeted.
The original indictment focused on allegations that Assange had criminally
aided Chelsea Manning in “hacking” into and downloading
secret documents that show U.S. war crimes. That case went sour when
the government prosecutors could find any evidence. Furthermore, Manning
was authorized to download those documents and had no need of assistance
from Assange.
So the second indictment admitted Assange is a publisher who put government
informant lives in danger, a crime. Ample defense evidence was presented
showing how Assange had carefully redacted out names of informants.
Some names were mentioned by The Guardian and other mass media, because
editors did not redact their names.
Part of the prosecution’s case was not built on Assange ordering
18 year-old Sigurdur Thordarson to hack into Iceland politicians’
phone conversations. Even if earlier charges fell apart, the new allegation
could still form grounds for extradition. The new charges included using
FBI informant Thordarson, but he had been convicted in Iceland for fraud,
embezzlement, and impersonating Assange. He served time in an Icelandic
prison, and was diagnosed as a sociopath.
In 2010-11, Thordarson worked with Wikileaks first as a volunteer and
for some months on staff. In August, 2011, he contacted the U.S. embassy
in Reykjavik to give them information about Assange and Wikileaks. Eight
FBI agents and a prosecutor flew to Iceland in a private jet to interview
him. The Icelandic government had the courage to tell them to leave,
fearing that the FBI and a mole sought to frame Assange. The FBI took
their pigeon to ever-compliant Denmark to interview him. They did this
several times.
In 2013-5, Thordarson was also tried for various sexual offenses, promising
boys from 15-20 years of age cars and money in exchange for sex. This
is the man whom the U.S. government had as its key witness in the new
indictment. The UK hearing judge appeared to have no problem with that.
Another problem with the government admitting that Assange is a publisher
is that under the US Constitution’s First Amendment journalist-publishers
have special protection against prosecution for engaging in free-speech
and press activities. So, in another change of tactic, the government
now interprets the Espionage Act to mean that anyone, journalists and
publishers alike, can be charged with crimes of violating the Espionage
Act. That includes any all media personnel in the entire world —
perhaps ordinary citizens too, who simply access Wikileaks materials.
Edward Snowden wrote about reading former British ambassador Craig Murray’s
daily accounts of court proceedings: “Read this and tell me the
show trial of Assange doesn’t read like something from Kafka.
The judge permits the charges to be changed so frequently the defense
doesn’t know what they are. The most basic needs are denied. No
one can hear what the defendant says—a farce.”
Defense Witnesses
I take from Murray’s daily reports published at Consortium News.
https://consortiumnews.com/
“The willingness of Judge Vanessa Baraitser to accept American
red lines on what witnesses can and cannot say has combined with a joint
and openly stated desire by both judge and prosecution to close this
case down quickly by limiting the number of witnesses, the length of
their evidence and the time allowed for closing arguments.”
Andy Worthington was one such case. He was “at court and ready
to give evidence, but was prevented from doing so. The United States
government objected to his evidence about his work on the Guantanamo
Detainee files being heard, because it contained allegations of inmates
being tortured at Guantanamo.” [Hardly a surprise to anyone, certainly].
“Baraitser said her ruling was not going to consider whether torture
took place at Guantanamo, or if extraordinary rendition had happened.
Baraitser said she wanted the prosecution and defense to produce a witness
schedule that would get the case finished by the end of next week, including
closing statements. She wanted them to agree what evidence could and
could not be heard. Where possible she wanted evidence in uncontested
statements with the defense just reading out the gist.”
World-renowned linguist and political author Noam Chomsky was granted
such a “gist” of FOUR minutes, in order to show that the
U.S. case against Assange is political.
Murray criticized defense attorneys for not protesting omission of the
significant stories that Wikileaks had played in exposing U.S. torture.
“The truth of these matters plainly goes to the Article 10 of
Defense, and by pandering to the denial of a notorious and plain fact,
this court will be held up to mockery.”
Political consideration
This is clearly selective political prosecution as Julian Assange is
the only publisher charged with crimes for publishing vital information
when hundreds of mainstream media personnel who also published what
Assange/Wikileaks provided are not indicted.
It was President Donald Trump, a political figure, who ordered Assange’s
arrest. The Espionage Act was made law to imprison U.S. citizens or
residents who campaigned against U.S. participation in the European
war, particularly anti-war activists, labor leaders, and socialists
such as its key leader Eugene Debs. President Woodrow Wilson, who initiated
the law as he prepared to invade Russia to crush its socialist revolution,
called the law a “firm hand of stern repression”.
Trump’s political engagement in these illegal juridical proceedings
included an attempted bribe. Jennifer Robinson, a member of Assange’s
legal team, had a statement read out in court on her behalf. She recounted
a visit by then U.S. Congressman Dana Rohrabacher to Julian Assange
at the Ecuadorian embassy, on August 15, 2017, to which Robinson was
present.
Robinson stated that Rohrabacher claimed to be representing President
Trump, who would look “favorably” on preventing an indictment
of Assange in return for his naming his source for the Democratic National
Committee emails, which Wikileaks had released. These emails led
to Democratic Party allegations—repeated by the CIA director,
John Brennan, who Obama had appointed—that Russia had hacked into
the DNC network and provided those documents to Wikileaks, and that
Trump was in league with both Russia and Wikileaks, in order to hurt
his challenger, Hillary Clinton.
Trump tried to appeal to Assange’s political sense of morality
by having Rohrabacher tell him that Assange could help deescalate new
Cold War tensions if he could provide evidence who the actual leaker
of the emails was. Assange refused to provide any information he might
have had.
Defense witness Bradford University political science professor Paul
Rogers established that Assange is motivated by a political viewpoint
placing him as a political opponent to his accusers. Rogers cited statements
of intent to take down both Assange and Wikileaks made by attorney generals
Trump had appointed, Jeff Sessions and William Barr, and his Secretary
of State and former CIA director, Mike Pompeo.
Recall what Secretary of State Pompeo told an audience at Texas A&M
University, April 15, 2019.
“When I was a cadet [West Point] our motto was: You will not
lie, cheat, or steal, or tolerate those who do… [when] I was the
CIA director, we lied, we cheated, we stole. It was like we had entire
training courses. It reminds you of the glory of the American experiment.”
The selected audience whistled and applauded his glorious admission.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DPt-zXn05ac
I wonder if by “the glory of the American experiment”, the
second most powerful man in the United States government was referring
to American Exceptionalism, which seems to give every U.S. government,
even every U.S. citizen, the “right” to dominate the world
by lying, cheating, stealing, and, left unsaid, a permanent state of
war.
In response to the second indictment, the defense provided a history
of why no journalist had ever been prosecuted for violating the Espionage
Act. Three U.S. presidents sought to charge journalists but they were
opposed by their own lawyers, as well as Justice Department lawyers
and attorney generals, because doing so would violate the 1st amendment
guarantee of “free press.” No prosecution of journalists
has materialized because of that.
In 1971, the Supreme Court decided the Nixon government could not censor
The New York Times from publishing the secret Pentagon Papers by invoking
this law. President Barak Obama’s Attorney General Eric Holder
decided not to prosecute Assange under the Espionage Act.
Nevertheless, Britain’s attorneys, speaking for the Trump government
told the court, that the U.S. “Supreme Court has never held that
a journalist cannot be prosecuted for publishing national defense information,”
It is to say that NYT journalists could have been so prosecuted
when publishing the Pentagon Papers but the charges were not brought
and so the courts have not ruled on the issue.
Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked the Pentagon Papers, was a defense witness.
He testified that if Assange were extradited to the U.S. and convicted
of charges under the Espionage Act no journalist in the world would
be safe from being kidnapped to the U.S. to face life imprisonment for
reporting on truthful information such that whistleblower Chelsea Manning
released to Wikileaks.
One of the most striking matters in this open defiance of the First
Amendment is that the mass media either ignored it, or simply stated
what the prosecution stated. There has been no outrage, no solidarity
with Assange by the mass media in England, and not in the U.S., as far
I know.
In Denmark, where I live and monitor the media, the hearings are not
even covered, as far as I can ascertain. When I pointed this out to
the leading liberal daily here, Politiken, I actually got an email answer
from the chief editor. “Thank you for your mail and encouragement
to cover this case. We continuously have our attention on it.”
That was September 9. As I write, October 6-8, Politiken has still not
written a word about the hearings nor has the government-sponsored mass
media Denmark Radio print and broadcast media.
Abuse of Power
Defense witness law professor Michael Tigar showed how the Nixon impounded
grand jury case against Daniel Ellsberg, 1971-3, was thrown out due
to presidential abuse of power. President Nixon had his criminal “plumbers”—Howard
Hunt and Gordon Liddy (1)—break into Ellsberg’s psychiatrist
office to steal confidential files on his client; had Ellsberg illegally
wiretapped; and attempted to bribe the judge by offering him the FBI
directorship. Because of that the judge ordered a mistrial.
Compare that decisive action with the response of the court to evidence
of the CIA contracting the Spanish security firm to illegally spy 24/7
on Assange in the Ecuadorian embassy, especially privileged talks with
his attorneys, doctors, journalists even visiting diplomats. Assange’s
defense documents were stolen and sent to the U.S. If that is not enough
“abuse of power”, the CIA discussed plans to kidnap and
poison Julian Assange. All in a day’s work of the U.S. “intelligence
community”, and of no concern to the British court considering
the US government's extradition case.
Ellsberg wrote in an e-mail that what the Nixon administration did to
him is comparable, and not even as bad to what the Obama-Trump administrations
are doing to Assange. “That’s essentially the same information
that ended my case and confronted Nixon with impeachment, leading to
his resignation. In other words, Julian may, miraculously, walk free
on the basis of this (eventually), just as I did!”
Testimony read out to the court from one of Assange’s attorneys,
Gareth Pierce, explained how his attorneys still feel “anxiety”
and “fear” about being monitored even now. Attorney Pierce
also spoke of Assange’s belongings at the embassy, including thumb
drives and legal documents, which were put in a diplomatic pouch, sent
to Ecuador and from there onto the United States “intelligence
community”. Assange possessions have not been returned.
The U.S. government, and its British prosecutors, admit by their silence
that this happened yet contend that what happened in the embassy and
with Assange’s possessions is “irrelevant” to its
indictments against him, and to his extradition.
Judge Baraitser did not seem concerned about these intrusions either,
not even the fact that the US government prosecution has benefitted
from knowing, through illegal surveillance, what its defense preparations
might be in case of extradition procedures. An objective judge would
have called for a mistrial on this evidence alone.
Instead Judge Baraitser usually rules in favor of the prosecution’s
objections to defense evidence as she did about an important matter
of political motivation, as well as abuse of power. The defense tried
to introduce a statement made by U.S. Attorney General William Barr
on September 15, 2020.
“The power to execute and enforce the law is an executive
function altogether. That means discretion is invested in the executive
to determine when to exercise the prosecutorial power,” as
reported by the New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/09/16/us/politics/william-barr-sedition.html
The NYT maintained that Barr’s “actions have thrust the
Justice Department into the political fray at a time when Democrats
and former law enforcement officials have expressed fears that he is
politicizing the department, particularly by intervening in legal matters
in ways that benefit Mr. Trump or his circle of friends and advisers.”
The defense interpreted Barr’s contention of executive authority’s
“right” to prosecute as it sees fit rather than consider
what the constitution stipulates as bolstering its argument that this
case is political. Yet the judge rejected this as a new piece of evidence.
Here is what Murray wrote, Day 12. He called the hearings, a “Charade
Court Case”.
“It has been clear to me from Day No. 1 that I am watching
a charade unfold. It is not in the least a shock to me that Baraitser
does not think anything beyond the written opening arguments has any
effect…where rulings have to be made, she has brought them into
court pre-written, before hearing the arguments before her. I strongly
expect the final decision was made in this case even before opening
arguments were received.”
Could it be that conflict-of-interest “Lady” Arbuthnot has
a hand in what Baraitser types on her laptop without needing to hear
defense witnesses and attorneys? (See part 1, note 2)
Assange in Poor Health
Julian’s health is debilitated by callous cruelty imposed upon
him by the English state. His right to “humane treatment”,
which the court maintains he has, is a sham. He is rarely allowed to
see his father, his fiancée and children. When he can, he is
forbidden to touch them. Mostly, he has to call them from a pay-phone.
He must wait in his cell for his turn to make a short call. The phone
is in a hallway and he can’t be by other prisoners. Robinson,
his long-time attorney, hasn’t been allowed to see him for six
months. Other lawyers are severely limited in how often they can see
and talk with him. When attorney-client discussion is allowed, it is
for an hour. Lawyers have to send him pertinent case documents through
the postal service. Sometimes documents sent are not delivered to him,
or he cannot keep those that are.
He is denied a computer making it extra difficult to participate in
his defense. Basically, he is already imprisoned under gothic conditions
common in most US prisons.
Somehow, Assange had hidden a razor blade in his cell. The prosecution
wanted to deny this fact, because medical personnel had failed to record
it. Nevertheless, two wardens saw the blade and confiscated it. Assange
admitted having it. At first, he was charged with a crime. Then the
prison governor dropped the charges.
Defense witness, Michael Kopelman, a neuropsychologist, testified that
Assange is so anxiety ridden that he is a suicide candidate. Kopelman
testified that he had seen Assange 17 times in prison and was certain
that he suffered from severe depression with loss of sleep, appetite
and weight loss.
The magistrate backed up the prosecution’s objection, contending
that this expert opinion was not a factor since there were no longer
any charges against Assange for having the razor blade.
If that reasoning wouldn’t make a sane person mad nothing would.
“Alice in Wonderland” is, after all, a British literary
fantasy, and George Orwell’s “double think” (double
speak) is a British political phenomenon, one which did not become extinct
in 1984.
Conditions under which Julian Assange is imprisoned have been investigated
by the United Nations rapporteur on torture Nils Melzer. He and two
medical specialists on torture conditions examined Assange in prison
and concluded that he is a victim of “psychological torture,”
he said. (2)
https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=25249
https://williambowles.info/2019/06/20/un-rapporteur-on-torture-nils-melzer-becomes-one-of-assanges-most-vocal-advocates/
The Convention on Torture—to which the U.S., UK, Sweden and Ecuador
are parties persecuting and/or prosecuting Assange—requires that
member countries conduct investigations into such charges by the UN
rapporteur. They all refused to do so.
If Assange is extradited, experts on prison conditions in the U.S.,
focusing on the two where he would be held, first during a trial, and
then where he would serve his sentence if convicted, testified that
conditions are extremely debilitating to one’s health. He would
be subject to what the U.S. euphemistically calls Special Administrative
Measures (SAM). Designated federal prisoners are confined behind steel
doors and walls and can only speak with other prisoners by shouting
through these barriers. SAM allows the government to monitor any and
all contact with any visitors, including attorneys and doctors. Yet
it has still been possible for some prisoners subjected to these brutal
conditions to find means of taking their lives. Others have become clinically
insane.
No Fair Trial Is Possible in U.S.
Several U.S. politicians, among Hillary Clinton, have called for “droning” him, or “hunted down”, Sarah Palin. A Canadian politician, Tom Flanagan, former senior adviser to Canadian PM Stephen Harper when issuing “a fatwa against Assange” on the Canadian TV station CBC. “I think Assange should be assassinated…I think Obama should put out a contract and maybe use a drone…”
U.S. government officials contend that Assange has committed the largest
“crimes” of compromises of information in U.S. history.
It is irrelevant to the U.S. and UK governments that the “compromises
of information” exposed truths of major governmental war crimes
punishable by years to life imprisonment.
“Irrelevant”? No, not so! In the view of the Magistrate
Baraister, quite the contrary. It is so relevant that the messenger
of such truths must be tortured under her authority. She, or her chiefs,
has the authority to improve his conditions in prison or grant him bail.
According to Alexandria Virginia’s demographics, the city of 159,000
people is located 12 kilometers from downtown Washington, D.C. Of 96,500
employed persons, 24,000 work directly for the government, mainly for
intelligence services (CIA, NSA) and defense departments. In addition,
many private company employees are government contractors.
Grand Jury selection always includes government employees and private
workers contracted by the government. That is why the government always
prosecutes accused violators of national security laws there, and why
they never lose a case.
Conclusion
During these hearings, 160 current and former world leaders (13 former
presidents) and lawmakers sent a letter to British Prime Minister Boris
Johnson asking him not to send Assange to the U.S.
At the end of the testimony part of the trial, Craig Murray recalled
Harold Pinter’s sage words when accepting the 2005 Nobel Prize
for Literature: “It seems perfectly fit to the trial of Julian
Assange.”
Pinter: “It never happened. Nothing ever happened. Even while
it was happening it wasn’t happening. It didn’t matter.
It was of no interest. The crimes of the United States have been systematic,
constant, vicious, remorseless, but very few people have actually talked
about that. You have to hand it to America. It has exercised a quite
clinical manipulation of power worldwide while masquerading as a force
of universal good. It’s a brilliant, even witty, highly successful
act of hypnosis.”
One of many ironies about this tragic abuse of power is that what is
now happening to him, Julian had predicted a decade ago, and that was
why he sought and received asylum in Ecuador’s embassy. He knew
what was awaiting him at the hands of UK and US “justice.”
Another irony is that he has received as many or more journalistic awards
for doing an excellent job as journalist-publisher than any journalist.
In a Consortium News roundtable discussion following the hearings, Craig
Murray offered a bit of optimism. He said that if the current judge
rules for the U.S., there is real hope that a higher court will overrule
her. That, however, could take years. The court system could still keep
him imprisoned pending appeal, but Murray hopes that bail would be forthcoming.
https://consortiumnews.com/
Julian’s father, John Shipton, expressed warmth for the many supporters
throughout the hearings. Standing before a London rally, he said there
had been 560 vigils and rallies around the world.
Stella, Julian’s partner, ended her speech thusly:
“Julian is a publisher. He is also a son, a friend. He’s
my fiancée and a father. Our children need their father. Julian
needs his freedom, and democracy needs a free press.”
Solidarity with Assange and Free Press. Send help to https://shop.wikileaks.org/donate
Notes:
(1) Howard Hunt had been a leading CIA officer, known for sabotage-subversion
against Cuba, and the 1954 coup against Guatemalan President Jacobo
Árbenz, a democratically elected social democrat. In 2003, when
deathly ill, Hunt confessed on tape to his son that the CIA organized
and participated in the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.
He said he played a minor role. https://www.rollingstone.com/feature/the-last-confession-of-e-howard-hunt-76611/
George Liddy had been an FBI agent, who spent 52 months in prison for
his role in the burglary of Watergate, the Democratic Party national
headquarters. He is also alleged to have been involved in JFK’s
assassination.
(2) The mass media ignores the United Nations assessment that prison
conditions forced upon Assange are torture. In a press briefing at the
United Nations headquarters in New York on October 15, 2019, UN Special
Rapporteur on Torture Nils Melzer restated his assessment that WikiLeaks’
publisher Julian Assange has been subjected to an unprecedented campaign
of persecution that amounts to “torture”.
“Footage aired by the Russian-funded RT outlet showed a grand
total of four people in the audience, surrounded by rows of empty chairs.
To date, the RT article, and an accompanying video, appears to be the
only report on the briefing by any media outlet in the world.”
https://www.wsws.org/en/articles/2019/10/18/melz-o18.html
Copyright © 2006-2012 Ronridenour.com