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Wikileaks Co-founder Julian Assange Arrested in London (theguardian.com) 929

Wikileaks co-founder Julian Assange has been arrested at the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where the WikiLeaks founder was granted refuge in 2012 while on bail in the UK over sexual assault allegations against him in Sweden. From a report: At the time, Assange claimed that if he was extradited to Sweden he might be arrested by the US and face charges relating to WikiLeaks's publication of hundreds of thousands of US diplomatic cables. The journalist and Assange supporter John Pilger called last week for people to "fill the street outside the embassy and protect him and show solidarity with a courageous man." US authorities have never officially confirmed that they have charged Assange, but in November 2018 a mistake in a document filed in an unrelated case hinted that criminal charges might have been prepared in secret. London's Metropolitan police released a statement which said officers had executed a warrant after the Ecuadorian government withdrew asylum.
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Wikileaks Co-founder Julian Assange Arrested in London

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday April 11, 2019 @05:51AM (#58419820)

    The worst thing that could happen to him now is that the US doesn't try to extradite him and England only questions him and lets him go. He'll have thrown away 7 years of his life voluntarily and look like a narcissistic idiot (more so than he already does).

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by jeremyp ( 130771 )

      That's not an impossible scenario. There's currently no European arrest warrant outstanding for him or extradition request from the USA, so it depends on whether the Crown Prosecution Service can be bothered to prosecute him for skipping bail.

      Having said that, don't forget that for a proportion of the seven years he spent in the Ecuador embassy, he would have been sent to Sweden to face the rape accusations. So from his point of view, it may not have been time wasted if he thought he would be found guilty.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @06:36AM (#58419976) Homepage Journal

        Hard to say if the CPS will go after him. On the one hand it would open up another can of worms for them, with Assange and Wikileaks going all out to show that he was at risk by releasing potentially sensitive information to use as evidence. There is also a good chance it wouldn't go anywhere - his legal team would argue that he already lost the bail money and spend 7 years in effective incarceration, so even if convicted no further punishment is merited.

        On the other hand, he humiliated the government and caused it to waste many millions on policing outside the embassy. It's also likely that the US will want to get hold of him (they accidentally confirmed that there is an active prosecution) so there will be pressure from across the pond.

        I imagine he has thought all this through and probably has some kind of insurance policy, something he can use as leverage if it goes badly.

        • by Cederic ( 9623 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @06:43AM (#58420000) Journal

          Hard to say if the CPS will go after him. On the one hand it would open up another can of worms for them, with Assange and Wikileaks going all out to show that he was at risk by releasing potentially sensitive information to use as evidence. There is also a good chance it wouldn't go anywhere - his legal team would argue that he already lost the bail money and spend 7 years in effective incarceration, so even if convicted no further punishment is merited.

          Given someone was today given six months for skipping bail for a grand total of ten months I think the CPS will very much be expected to prosecuted.

          That's not even factoring in that his arrest is explicitly _for_ skipping bail.

      • by Zocalo ( 252965 )
        In the scheme of things, the maximum penalties for skipping bail are not that high in the UK (a few years in jail and a fine), although I guess the CPS could also throw in a few extra bits and pieces like wasting police time for the overt police presence that the Met maintained outside the embassy if they really wanted to. My guess is that the CPS will want to move on this quickly to show that justice has been done, so if the judge makes allowances for his voluntary "house arrest" he could potentially get
      • by nojayuk ( 567177 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @06:54AM (#58420040)

        it depends on whether the Crown Prosecution Service can be bothered to prosecute him for skipping bail.

        Someone who skipped bail a few months back and fled abroad has returned to the UK voluntarily, saying he panicked and made a mistake and apologised in court for absconding. He got a sentence of six months for the bail offence added to his in-absentia sentence for manslaughter today.

        Assange has been "on the run" for seven years after skipping bail and had to be dragged kicking and protesting from his hidey-hole and it's unlikely he will apologise in court for skipping bail. I don't see the Crown Prosecution Service thinking "well, he's not worth the effort of prosecuting for absconding while bailed" in those circumstances.

        It's pretty rare for the legal establishment to disregard bail offences as it might encourage others to similarly offend, thinking "I can skip bail and nothing will happen to me."

  • by Cederic ( 9623 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @06:07AM (#58419872) Journal

    In depth analysis of the political situation surrounding his arrest, endless exploration of whether he'll be extradited to the US, complex discussions on why the police were permitted to enter the embassy to arrest him.

    Not a single fucking mention of his cat.

    What's happening to the cat! Come on BBC, step up, help us with the important question here.

    • According the various articles the cat had been given to an animal shelter a few years ago.
  • Pathetic (Score:4, Insightful)

    by bradley13 ( 1118935 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @06:42AM (#58419996) Homepage

    Assange did good work with Wikileaks, years ago. Then he grew an inflated ego, and (um, literally) screwed around. Rather than face any charges (which, iirc, were never formally filed), he fled.

    Ultimately, he imprisoned himself for 8 long years.

    I have no idea whether the US would have tried to extradite him from Sweden. Maybe they would have, if Sweden had actually charged him with a crime. But in the meantime, the Swedish case has ended. And the UK can't charge him with much more than skipping a court appearance, which is pretty trivial. He should have long since left the embassy.

    And now this. Ecuador has finally had enough, and tells him to leave. Rather than acting like an adult, and walking out with some dignity, he has to be carried out like a child throwing a tantrum. Pathetic.

    • by shanen ( 462549 )

      Not surprised the trolls are so eager to censor you. Just lucky I stumbled across it. Sorry, but I never get a mod point to give. At least not in the last decade or two.

      Mostly just expressing agreement, but I think it's also important to consider how the money drove Assange down this path. He didn't have any funding to do real journalism, but he became desperate for the publicity that would bring in some donations. There were some interesting journalism-like ideas buried in Wikipedia, but they got lost a lo

    • Re:Pathetic (Score:5, Informative)

      by Theaetetus ( 590071 ) <theaetetus,slashdot&gmail,com> on Thursday April 11, 2019 @12:25PM (#58421830) Homepage Journal

      But in the meantime, the Swedish case has ended.

      Technically, only the assault charge, which he successfully evaded until the statute of limitations expired. The rape charge is still pending.

  • by shanen ( 462549 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @07:24AM (#58420150) Homepage Journal

    It's obvious that journalism needs new economic models, but WikiLeaks is NOT one of them. Having read several books about WikiLeaks, I think the underlying problem was the lack of a viable economic model. There was a good idea under there, but it was buried so deeply and Assange got so far away from any form of actual journalism that the cart got in front of the horse.

    At first WikiLeaks actually understood that the documents should be vetted to make sure they weren't being used to propagate propaganda. Also real journalism requires considering the possible negative ramifications of the release of the information, as when an innocent person might get murdered because their identity is revealed to a vengeful criminal. Multiple sources are important, too, and it is very rare that information cannot be verified by some method or other.

    However Assange rather quickly decided it was more important to prioritize the releases of information for maximization of the value to WikiLeaks, including how the information would affect the increasingly important financial donations WikiLeaks needed. Fairly early in the process, they were overwhelmed with more information than they knew what to do with, so they were forced to start picking and choosing what to reveal, and when, and that is when Assange started tasting the poisonous fruit. Follow the money.

    Solution time? My own proposed solution approach for the economic troubles of journalism would be a solution-based approach. The readers would be able to contribute to solution projects with the journalists earning a percentage for revealing and publicizing the problems. I think there would also need to be an independent entity (I call it the charity share brokerage) that would provide project guidance and evaluation, as well as handling the money.

    Disappointed but not surprised that I couldn't find any substantive comments here on Slashdot, and especially not among the trolls' mods. Enough time for now, so I bid you ADSAuPR, atAJG.

  • by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @09:22AM (#58420664) Journal

    The arrest of Assange demonstrates our freedom to criticize the state to evolve our culture is over. Dissent will not be tolerated and any illusion of First world freedom is a myth concocted to keep us in the mindset of slaves to interest rates on housing loans.

    I've been studying the changes to freedom of speech and association laws in the US, UK, Canada (well the english half), Australia and, NZ. I've written hundreds of pages of submissions about Anti-terrorism law, its structure and wording to try to do anything I could to fight to preserve the freedom we have left and failed 95% of the time.

    Knowing these laws, I can certainly say that I fear for Assange if he is charged under them. The absolute power the state has over an individual in that circumstance is terrifying and was previously reserved for those conducting espionage. Activism, such as what Assange has conducted, threatens the status quo so much it must be crushed with an iron fist. Soviet style.

    In the first double bind of this law, the state assumes control of all evidence that can defend you which you are responsible for presenting. Even people witnessing an arrest and telling a family member can be charged and sentenced to 5 years jail. All sentences are strict liability so magistrates have no authority to vary time served. These laws are designed to destroy lives.

    I only spend hundreds of hours doing what I do, these people give up everything trying to preserve our freedom. Whistle blowers are heros. More so, what does it tell us that more of these whistle blowers are from military and intelligence services. Snowden, Manning and lessor known people like Annie Machon (UK), David Shayler (UK) and Susan Lindauer (US) were all former intelligence agents trying to tell us the mess being made with these laws. Shayler died whilst arrested under these laws and an attempt was made to chemically lobotomize Lindauer and attack her mental health to destroy her reputation. Machon was the only one who refused to face arrest which has preserved her mental health.

    The pages of law, in our first world countries, dictating how technology can be used to suppress the populace has grown from nothing in 2001 to well over 2400 pages in 2019, constitutionally adjusted to suit each nation. That's just the stuff I've read, there were bills I missed.

    Lindauer suggests that these laws are lifted from the Soviet criminal code and looking at them it's not hard to believe it. I had to lobby against the power to body cavity search minors as young as 8 yrs as unacceptable for a first world democracy, the government changed it to 14.

    Knowing this makes our countries a parody of the freedoms they once stood for.

    • by ledow ( 319597 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @10:08AM (#58420926) Homepage

      "Shayler died whilst arrested under these laws"

      Eh? I think you might want to check that. He's still around.
        And Machon was dating Shayler at the time.

      The other you mentioned is a dubious telling of her tale. It's almost like you cherry-picked three people, two of whom acted together, the other of whom is mentally unstable but quite clearly still around and airing her views on Russian TV, and held them up as a beacon of hero worship.

      As an outsider, with no real interest or research, I'll happily write all three off as credible witnesses. The first two are 9/11 truthers, claiming all kinds of nonsense, despite the fact that neither have worked for government since the mid 90's. Shayler's a bit of a nutter, who represented himself in court (always a tell of a true idiot) and failed miserably. Hell, he follows David Icke, ffs.

      Just because you "worked for intelligence services" does not mean that you are credible... Hell I know someone who can say exactly that... they book flights for Middle East diplomats. That's their entire job. It's literally just an office job, with a security badge. And they're still subject to the Official Secrets Act just the same.

      Sorry, but you've failed at the first hurdle... associating yourself with people less credible than my local barber. There's a reason why, when a whack-job scientist makes stupendous claims, reputable scientists keep their distance. This is no different.

      I have no doubt that laws are cracking down on this - we're in a different world, technologically, the last 20-30 years. I'd be disappointed if there *wasn't* 2400 pages of technology laws formed in the last 18 years. I'd seriously question what the courts and ministers have been doing otherwise. But that these people are wandering around still talking tripe shows you one thing - the government really doesn't care and isn't at all afraid about you hearing what they have to say. The reason for that is clear... they are all just a bit screw-loose.

      I don't doubt there are violations. I don't doubt that there's stuff to be whistleblown. I don't doubt that there's a lot we don't know and wouldn't approve of it we did. I'm certain of all those. I guarantee you that there's something hidden which, if revealed, would cause absolute uproar among the populace, and even myself.

      But I'm equally certain that not one thing from Wikileaks, Assange, Manning or Snowden, or any of those you mentioned has done anything at all whatsoever to reveal something horrifyingly terrible enough to make people revolt. It was all stuff we either knew, suspected or inferred. All they did was show you that such public whistleblowers are all from the same mindset, and that what they sacrifice their freedom to whistleblow just isn't worth it in the end - nobody is up in arms about any of it.

      A credible whistleblower would strive to be as anonymous as possible, they would not make public appearances, they would not harp on about things they have no personal knowledge of, they would provide evidence which - on its own - does not need explanation and which generates shock and outrage just by its mere existence.

      You know what I want? ANYONE involved in the government side of the Guantanamo stuff to come forward and speak against the government. Even one person. The detainment, justice procedure, behaviour and continued presence there is unbelievably illegal. The general populace? Meh, they don't even care any more. Half of them don't even realise it still exists.

      There's plenty of stuff to get disgusted about. But I can't say that *anything* the people mentioned here ever revealed was worth all that uproar, years of detention, fleeing to Russia, etc. for them, let alone for them to do it so I could "hear" about these things.

      • by MrKaos ( 858439 )

        Eh? I think you might want to check that. He's still around. And Machon was dating Shayler at the time.

        Yes, they were. It was in one of Machon's lectures that she reveal he ended up with a Christ complex and committed suicide, IIRC. So you're saying it was an attempt and he is still locked up?

        And you wonder why Assange didn't want to come under either UK or US control.

        two of whom acted together, the other of whom is mentally unstable

        If you ever read these laws I think you would understand why someone would become that way after being subjected to them. Whilst your response is appealing as a low cognitive solution to the situation that afflicts our culture, the probl

    • Theresa May has announced new plans, saying the era of self regulation is over - and it's for the children:
      https://www.facebook.com/10dow... [facebook.com]
      We're entering a new era of censorship. It will be called 'not censorship, just ...'
      as in just deranking, demonetizing, deplatforming, anti-hatespeech, anti-fake news. anti-russian-disinformation, anti-things-which-sow-dissent.

      The combination of centralisation of power, surveillance, censorship , PR and secrecy has to go wrong , simply because independent of intent you'

  • by green1 ( 322787 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @10:55AM (#58421224)
    Funny how many American apologists were all over themselves to scream that the US never wanted him in the first place, and that it was all just conspiracy theory that they were trying to lay their hands on him. And yet, the instant he's out of the embassy, there's a US extradition warrant waiting for him. Funny that, it's almost as if this was an obvious thing right from the start....
  • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Thursday April 11, 2019 @12:32PM (#58421868)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion

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