Railroading of Assange continues as case goes back to London court

Billboard outside the court at the Old Bailey

[Please understand that this article had been interfered with. The Pen is republished it, without alteration. It happens that this has an external source. The Pen is working hard to stop it. Corrections have now been made. ]

Julian Assange’s extradition hearing in London resumed on 7 September, and the miscarriage of justice continues under a prejudiced judge. Assange was not allowed extra time to consult with his legal team. He has been denied access for 6 months.  He is now facing an extra charge. A request for time to prepare a case would normally be regarded as reasonable. Not in this case. In the court, he remains isolated in a glass box. The hearing has been scheduled to last 4 weeks. This article by Kevin Gosztola (The Dissenter) gives a run down on what took place as the hearing resumed.

Judge Vanessa Baraitser rejected a request by the legal team for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to remove conduct from a fresh extradition request brought by the United States.

Defence attorneys also requested that the court adjourn until January, after Baraitser refused to take action.

According to Baraitser, in August, she acknowledged the issues his defence had with the request. She offered to allow them to apply for adjournment of proceedings, which would have moved the trial portion of the extradition hearing, which was previously scheduled for May, to a later date.

Baraitser seemed to believe Assange’s legal team should’ve better understood the law and asked for an adjournment instead of demanding she exercise her authority.

The defence did not immediately ask for an adjournment because they did not want to prolong Assange’s confinement.

Photo from Reuters: Dame Vivienne Westwood joined the crowd of supporters outside the court

Judge Baraitser insisted what the defines asked her to do was not appropriate during this phase of the proceedings.

Baraitser insisted what the defence asked her to do was not appropriate during this phase of the proceedings.

Assange is accused of 17 counts of violating the Espionage Act and one count of violating a computer crime law that, as alleged in the indictment, is also an Espionage Act offense.

The trial portion of Assange’s extradition hearing in London began on September 7 at the Old Bailey Courthouse. It is expected to unfold over the next three to four weeks.

On June 24, the defence learned when a press release was published that Assange would soon face a third indictment. It was their belief that the indictment only added narrative details and expanded the timeline from 2010-2011 to 2010-2015.

The U.S. government served the indictment to the defence, but not the court, on July 2. Then, on August 12, a fresh extradition request based on the third indictment was issued. (It was dated July 17.)

Julian Assange Supporters outside the court

Prosecutors notified the defence on August 21 that the third indictment does not include any additional charges, contrary to the defence’s understanding, the new details are not “mere narrative.” They “constitute the conduct upon which this court is entitled, and indeed must now determine [whether] an extradition offense is made out” under the relevant law.

Mark Summers, a lawyer for Assange, referred to two general allegations—Count 1, which involves an alleged conspiracy to release “national defence information,” and Count 2, which is an alleged conspiracy to commit computer intrusions under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act.

By adding new material, prosecutors believe they can extradite Assange, even if they do not convince the court that publishing disclosures from Pfc. Chelsea Manning was a criminal act.

The defence focused on the fact that multiple alleged “co-conspirators” of Assange, when it comes to the hacking elements, were the “subject of trials” in the U.S. and the United Kingdom a decade ago.

Sigurdur “Siggi” Thordarson, who is the “Teenager” in the third indictment, was mentioned by the prosecution in a filing in 2019. So, they could have included any material from Thordarson in the previous indictment.

As the defence noted, Thordarson was “convicted in Iceland of fraud, theft, and impersonation of Julian Assange.” He sold merchandise through a WikiLeaks store without authorization and embezzled $50,000.

“The Icelandic Interior Minister of the time is reported to have ordered a number of FBI prosecutors, who had arrived in Iceland to investigate the ‘teenager’s’ claims, to leave Iceland. The Interior Minister made statements at the time and has made statements since that he believed the investigation was in order to ‘frame Assange,’” the defence stated in their argument.

Prosecutors entirely omitted the fact that alleged “co-conspirators” “Sabu” (Hector Xavier Monsegur) “Topiary” (Jake Davis), and “Kalya” (Ryan Ackroyd) were prosecuted before the Southwark Crown Court in the U.K. for their alleged involvement with LulzSec in hacking.

From the defence’s argument:

The U.K. prosecution involved over 45,000 pages of materials. Sabu was a named co-conspirator. That prosecution encompassed alleged criminality in the U.K. and the U.S. Despite competing U.S. indictments being issued during the currency of the U.K. case, the U.K. case continued and was concluded in 2013 by guilty pleas. In short, if it had merit, Mr Assange could and should have been prosecuted for this additional conduct years ago, alongside his so-called ‘conspirators’, and that prosecution would have occurred in the U.K. The forum bar is obviously engaged.

In other words, if Assange is a co-conspirator to this offense, why isn’t Assange on trial in the U.K. like Ackroyd and Davis were. Why extradite him to the U.S. to try him for this offense?

Sabu was working for the FBI, but how he came to be a source for allegations against Assange is absent from the fresh extradition request.

Summer mentioned Jeremy Hammond, who was prosecuted for his alleged involvement in hacking Stratfor, which was a private intelligence firm. He is in federal prison finishing up a 10-year sentence that was disrupted by a grand jury subpoena to testify before the grand jury investigating WikiLeaks.

“Like Manning, Hammond was held in contempt of court by Judge Anthony Trenga after refusing to testify. He was released in March 2020 after the conclusion of the grand jury. The parallels with Manning’s treatment are obvious,” the defence suggested.

Summers said the prosecution has rebutted the argument that publishing evidence of war crimes was “necessary” by saying essentially that it was not necessary to hack into an Icelandic bank. They aim to tie Assange to any number of cyber activities that allegedly took place.

As was argued in court, expanding the general allegations should be seen as “fundamentally unfair and unjust without the defendant being able to address” the development.

He is in custody, without access to visits from his legal team for the last five to six months. He has very limited access to legal materials in the case. (Edward Fitzgerald, who is part of Assange’s legal team, said he was able to meet in person with Assange today for the first time in six months.)

Prosecutors maintained there was nothing inappropriate about the fresh extradition request, and the court would be making an error if it removed the conduct because the portion where evidence is heard in the case has not occurred yet.

The defence insisted it was unfair six weeks prior to this extradition hearing to issue a new request.

How Baraitser handled the matter was in line with previous decisions she has made, including the ruling she issued in February to keep Assange in a glass box at the back of the courtroom and bar him from sitting with his attorneys. She repeatedly has refused to make rulings for the defence that she says involve “case management” decisions that should not be

1 Comment on "Railroading of Assange continues as case goes back to London court"

  1. Sally Anne Robbins | 16 September 2020 at 5:11 pm | Reply

    Julian Assange did his democratic duty as a Journalist exposing the Sociopathic War Criminals in our ALLIES ranks.Yet what did our ALLIES Governments do instead of prosecuting those EVIL sociopaths who murdered innocent civilians??? Why they SHOT THE MESSENGER and are persecuting the Messenger in deifiance of their Democratic duties…FREE JULIAN ASSANGE & DEFEND DEMOCRACY

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.


*


This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.