The Justice Department has prepared criminal charges against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and is working behind the scenes to have him extradited to the United States. Press freedom and the right to dissent may hang in the balance.
The criminal charges were accidentally revealed last week when Assangeās name was found on the court filing of an unrelated case, suggesting that prosecutors had copied a boilerplate text and forgotten to change the defendantās name.
Barry Pollack, a U.S. lawyer on Assangeās team, told the New York Times: āThe news that criminal charges have apparently been filed against Mr. Assange is even more troubling than the haphazard manner in which that information has been revealed.ā Pollack continued, āThe government bringing criminal charges against someone for publishing truthful information is a dangerous path for a democracy to take.ā
Assange has been holed up in the Ecuadorian embassy in London since 2012, after seeking protection against sexual assault allegations in Sweden. While the initial arrest warrant has since been revoked, if Assange leaves the embassy he runs the risk of being apprehended by UK authorities and extradited to the United States, a process greatly facilitated by the recent criminal charges.
āUsing free speech against usā
The U.S. government has targeted WikiLeaks and Assange for years. A confidential U.S. Army document from 2008 recommends ālegal actionsā and attacks on the livelihood and reputation of ācurrent or former insiders, leakers, or whistleblowersā connected to WikiLeaks in order to ādamage or destroyā its ātrust as a center of gravity.ā
WikiLeaks enjoyed a brief heyday among Republicans when it released hacked Democratic National Committee (DNC) emails during the 2016 presidential election. Then-candidate Donald Trump mentioned WikiLeaks over 160 times during the final month of the campaign, calling it āamazingā and saying āWe love Wikileaks. Wikileaks. They have revealed a lot.ā
During the campaign, Trump adviser Roger Stone often boasted about being connected to WikiLeaks, even claiming to have had dinner with Assange. Days before the dump of hacked Clinton campaign emails, Stone tweeted, āI have total confidence that @wikileaks and my hero Julian Assange will educate the American people soon #LockHerUp.ā
Donald Trump Jr. was in repeated contact with WikiLeaks during the 2016 presidential election, and then-Congress member Mike Pompeo openly encouraged his social media followers to visit the WikiLeaks site for āproofā of various claims against Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton.
But itās one thing to reveal information about the DNC and another thing entirely to expose a CIA hacking program with domestic spying implications ā which is exactly what WikiLeaks did in March 2017 with its Vault 7 release. Just a month later, reports surfaced that U.S. authorities were preparing charges against Assange, with Attorney General Jeff Sessions calling his arrest a āpriority.ā
After being tapped to head the CIA in early 2017, Mike Pompeo actively began targeting Assange. In his first public speech as CIA director, Pompeo slammed WikiLeaks as a ānon-state hostile intelligence service,ā adding that āwe can no longer allow Assange and his colleagues the latitude to use free speech values against us.ā
āUse free speech values against usā? So much for the First Amendment.
The Espionage Act
Assange was granted Ecuadorian citizenship in late 2017, possibly part of a covert plan to relocate him to Russia in 2018. The British Foreign Office blocked that plan, however, so Assange remains in London.
The situation is untenable. Ecuadorās President LenĆn Moreno sees Assange as an āinherited problemā impacting the countryās relations with the United States. Hanging in the balance for Ecuador could be a military base and an International Monetary Fund loan.
Assangeās recent legal case protesting new asylum conditions was rejected by a court in Ecuador. Meanwhile, his health deteriorates in what amounts to solitary confinement without access to sunlight or fresh air. His contact with the outside world remains severely curtailed.
While the exact criminal charges recently levied against Assange remain secret, the primary issue is whether WikiLeaks is portrayed as a news organization deserving of First Amendment protections or rather as a foreign government agent.
If the Justice Department takes the latter approach, then a World War One-era red-baiting law will probably be used against Assange. Originally intended for spies, the Espionage Act enjoyed a renaissance under President Obama, who used it more than all previous administrations combined ā usually to pursue government officials whoād spoken to journalists.
The ACLU calls the Espionage Act āa fundamentally unfair and unconstitutionalā liability law that treats whistleblowers exposing civil rights violations the same as spies selling damaging documents to foreign dictators. The Act enables leaked material to be retroactively categorized as classified, and with little justification.
It also makes the legal defense of whistleblowers almost impossible. As Jesselyn Radack, Director of the Whistleblower and Source Protection Program at ExposeFacts, wrote in a 2014 op-ed entitled āWhy Edward Snowden Wouldnāt Get a Fair Trialā: āFirst Amendment arguments have failed, largely because they would criminalize the journalism made possible by the āleaks.ā The motive and intent of the whistleblower are irrelevant. And there is no whistleblower defense, meaning the public value of the material disclosed does not matter at all.ā
The stakes of extradition
If extradited to the United States, whether prosecuted under the Espionage Act or not, Assange could become a dead man walking.
Former House Speaker Newt Gingrich has said Assange should be treated like an enemy combatant, while Hillary Clinton has wondered if he could be killed by a drone.
Pompeo recommended the death sentence for whistleblower Edward Snowden. Trump has joked about killing journalists.
Fox host Rush Limbaugh suggested that Assange āwould die of lead poisoning from a bullet in the brain and no one would know who put it there!ā Fox commentator Bob Beckel offered: āDead men canāt leak stuff⦠thereās only one way to do it: illegally shoot the son of a bitch.ā
Assangeās mother āshudders to thinkā what CIA Director āBloody Ginaā Haspel might do to her son. In a recent interview, Christine Assange said, āOnce in the U.S., the National Defense Authorization Act allows for indefinite detention without trial. Julian could very well be held in Guantanamo Bay and tortured, sentenced to 45 years in a maximum-security prison, or face the death penalty.ā
In February 2018, weeks before his internet access was cut, Assange participated in the Austrian Elevate festival. Via videostream he referred to the āPompeo Doctrineā of criminalizing transparency seekers as a āserious threat to the press.ā
Assange said authorities were using his situation as a āgeneral deterrent,ā and added āthe more developed the society and economy, the more skill in installing that fear without resorting to assassinations.ā He concluded by observing that those who have the luxury of living in peace must see through āthe illusions of fear in order to ensure that those people in other countries donāt face the reality of war.ā
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