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Swedish Authorities Offer To Question Assange In London 169

An anonymous reader writes: Since 2012, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been holed up inside Ecuador's embassy in London trying to avoid extradition to Sweden, where he faces a sexual assault investigation. Now, after the case has been stalled for years, Swedish prosecutors are arranging to come to London and question Assange within the embassy. According to his lawyer, Assange welcomes this, but Sweden still needs to be granted permission from both the UK and Ecuador. "Assange's lawyers, who are appealing against his arrest warrant in Sweden's highest court, have complained bitterly about the prosecutor's refusal to travel to London to speak to him – an essential step under Swedish jurisprudence to establish whether Assange can be formally charged. [Lead investigator Marianne] Ny's refusal, they say, has condemned Assange to severe limitations on his freedom that are disproportionate to the accusations against him." Ny has also requested a DNA sample from Assange.
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Swedish Authorities Offer To Question Assange In London

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  • Don't take any drinks they offer you, or presents (especially ones with suspicious round holes and openings marked "mic").

    As someone who was once on the Cosby Show, trust me on this.

  • by harvey the nerd ( 582806 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @10:10AM (#49249963)
    It's a trap. A legal aussie date may be felonious in Sweden.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday March 13, 2015 @10:13AM (#49249987)

      A legal Aussie date is felonious pretty much anywhere else.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    And ALL persons involved know this.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by NotDrWho ( 3543773 )

      Are you saying that the CIA would trump up a fake rape charge [go.com] just because someone was foolish enough to threaten U.S. interests [guardian.co.uk], only for the truth to come out [nytimes.com] as soon as they got what they wanted [nytimes.com]?

      That's just ludicrous!

      • by Rei ( 128717 )

        No need to write the same reply again [slashdot.org].

        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by Anonymous Coward

          February, 2011: Strauss-Kahn, head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), begins to call for a new global currency to supplant the U.S. Dollar (widely held as the current global standard, to the great benefit of the U.S. of course).

          May, 2011: Strauss-Kahn is publicly dragged off a plane in NYC in handcuffs and paraded in front of the press, in what the NY prosecutor calls a "rock solid" case of sexual assault. Strauss-Khan is shortly thereafter forced to resign as head of the IMF.

          June, 2011 Christine Lag

          • by Uberbah ( 647458 )

            March, 2013: Some Slashdot jackass can't spot the obvious real story here.

            Jackass? More like paid hack. There are lot of rape activists in the world, but Rei is the only single-rape activist on the planet. You can see her in any story about Assange repeating the same debunked talking points, going back years. You know, the usual crap that the Swedish government can't promise Assange that he wont be handed over to the U.S. as soon as they get their hands on him.

            Rei's not too bright, though, as she made u

            • I doubt that Rei is a paid shill, though. If you read her comments that are not about this, it's clear she is no fan of US foreign policy. It's just this one issue that brings out her irrationality, and my guess would be that she was raped at some point and that prejudices her towards believing any rape accusation.
            • Mind you, she's the kind of person who they would want to be a shill, as she's pretty anti-US government most of the time, and has a positive reputation on this board. What those who pay shills ideally want is someone like that to just drive hard for their pet causes and otherwise fit in, to make us think that maybe there's something to what the shill is saying.

              But I would be very surprised if those PR organizations have the staying power to have shills with her kind of history and longevity. That's what
          • by vakuona ( 788200 )

            Are we talking of the same Strauss-Kahn who was being tried for other unrelated sex offences?

  • Kinda like this questioning then link [theatlantic.com]
    Glad to see the rest of the world is learning from America, a truly inspiring nation.
  • DNA sample? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by pla ( 258480 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @10:17AM (#49250017) Journal

    Neither Assange nor his accuser deny that they had sex. They just disagree over how consensually they had sex.

    What, exactly, do they hope to prove from a DNA test?

    Now, I suppose it would certainly put quite an interesting spin on all this if it turns out Assange didn't have sex with her, but other than that totally-out-there possibility, what other use could they have for his DNA?

    Ah, that last, mostly rhetorical question brings out the paranoid anti-government side of me. What other use could they have? "Hey, check it out, we "found" his DNA in hundreds of previously-unprocessed-for-decades rape kits from the US!" And just like that, the US would have direct standing to extradite him.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

      What, exactly, do they hope to prove from a DNA test?

      Nothing, it's just standard operating procedure to take your DNA whenever you interact with the police these days.

      Even innocent people reporting crimes are often asked to provide samples, supposedly so that theirs can be distinguished from the criminal's at the crime scene. Someone I know gave them his 1 year old daughter's DNA for this purpose, and she will now be on their files for almost the entirety of her life.

      Also, in this case it helps confirm that the DNA sample that the US already has for him is co

    • "lets grab some of his dna and plant it various places"

      yeah, this is an akbar. ie, a trap.

      meet with her behind sealed glass, if you must. don't shake hands, don't go near her or any of her party.

      and, in fact, I see no reason why this can't be done REMOTELY. if all they want to do is 'talk', we could have handled this years ago with wires. if no wires, then wet string and 2 paper cups.

    • Neither Assange nor his accuser deny that they had sex. They just disagree over how consensually they had sex.

      What, exactly, do they hope to prove from a DNA test?

      According to wikipedia:

      The allegations are of "non-consensual behaviour within consensual sexual encounters."[120] One of the allegations is that, during consensual intercourse, Assange ejaculated inside of one of the women against her wishes.[121] Assange denies the allegations.[122]

      So I think that would explain why they want the sample. He says he didn't, she says he did. If they find a match, then that answers the question. Or it least it could rule out his guilt. It can't prove his guilt for the same reason why the pull-out method of contraception doesn't work.

    • by aliquis ( 678370 )

      Isn't the argument about the use of a condom or not?

      I guess if they have AssangeÂs semen they can show he didn't used one.

      And then what?

  • Finally (Score:5, Interesting)

    by techsoldaten ( 309296 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @10:17AM (#49250019) Journal

    Finally.

    It's not like this is unprecedented. I don't know what's so special about Assange that they could not have done this a long time ago.

    My guess on what's about to happen:

    - Sweden interviews him and drops the charges.

    - Assange steps out of the embassy and is immediately arrested.

    - Assange is charged in the US and extradited within a few days.

    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by burtosis ( 1124179 )

      Finally.

      It's not like this is unprecedented. I don't know what's so special about Assange that they could not have done this a long time ago.

      My guess on what's about to happen:

      - Sweden interviews him and drops the charges.

      - Assange steps out of the embassy and is immediately arrested.

      - Assange is charged in the US and extradited within a few days.

      Bollocks. The United States of America is the nexus of true freedom in this universe. They love whistleblowers, I hear they want snowmen back to apologize to him about the whole misunderstanding and return the ill gotten rights of the government, obtained by one or two bad apples, to the citizens. Furthermore the USA would never resort to underhanded tactics like that. How could you be so insulting to such great nations? I dare you to find a SINGLE real world example!!!

      • Re:Finally (Score:5, Insightful)

        by NotDrWho ( 3543773 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @10:37AM (#49250191)

        I hear the President invited Snowden back to the U.S. for a special "We Love Whistleblowers!" party, where there will be cake. Better hurry up and get on that plane Edward, before the cake is all gone!

      • by JustNiz ( 692889 )

        >>>> The United States of America is the nexus of true freedom in this universe.

        Bwahahahahahaha. Thanks I needed a laugh.

      • I hear they want snowmen back to apologize

        the snowmen are now melted; its spring time.

        can we send in rudolph the red nosed reindeer, in place of the snowmen?

      • by Livius ( 318358 )

        I wanted to moderate this 'Funny' but far too many people actually believe stuff like this.

      • by ACE209 ( 1067276 )

        Bollocks. The United States of America is the nexus of true freedom in this universe. They love whistleblowers, I hear they want snowmen back to apologize to him about the whole misunderstanding and return the ill gotten rights of the government, obtained by one or two bad apples, to the citizens. Furthermore the USA would never resort to underhanded tactics like that. How could you be so insulting to such great nations? I dare you to find a SINGLE real world example!!!

        True story.
        In fact they are a prime example of selflessness.
        They brought so much justice and democracy to the world that nothing of it is left at home.

        • I'm not sure if the down votes my parent comment got were because people thought i was serious or too pissed off at America to take any mention lightheartedly.
    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

      Assange won't leave until his arrest warrant is dropped and he is guaranteed passage out of the UK, presumably to Ecuador. The UK may well agree since it's costing so much to guard the embassy and providing a source of constant embarrassment. There is basically zero chance of him leaving otherwise, he continues to have an active life and role from within.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by NotDrWho ( 3543773 )

        The UK doesn't care about the cost of guarding that embassy 24/7. That's a trivial cost to them to keep their U.S. masters happy.

        • It is a matter of principle - A british court has ruled the EAW to be valid . Assange has exhausted all his appeals and is now a fugitive from the law. If the government were not to attempt to enforce the court's order , the home secretary will find herself in hot water with the judiciary and in the parliament. By voluntarily submitting himself to the british courts and then refusing to comply once the decisions dint fall his way , assange has left the uk no option.It was a massive miscalcualtion by Correa
        • by aliquis ( 678370 )

          The UK doesn't care about the cost of guarding that embassy 24/7. That's a trivial cost to them to keep their U.S. masters happy.

          It was said today that here in Sweden we'll spend ~250 million (SEK, worth 1/8.6 as much in USD) in a case on cheating with uhm... was it household assistance or something such? Worth ~11 million.

        • by aliquis ( 678370 )

          UK twist:

          "He's truly sorry and have agreed to pay these £100 000 in compensation" (from the coffins of London/UK to not have to bother any more ;D)

    • by Megol ( 3135005 )

      Bullshit. It isn't standard procedure to send legal people to conduct interviews. In some cases it is done but only if the person of interest can't otherwise be heard - e.g. if in jail or so sick they can't be moved. In this case the person in question have selected to hide citing idiotic reasons.

      Anyone with some clue understands that the idea Sweden is more likely to extradite anyone to the US than the UK is thoroughly wrong and easily disproved using actual extradition statistics.
      Anyone that thinks Sweden

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Anyone with some clue understands that the idea Sweden is more likely to extradite anyone to the US than the UK is thoroughly wrong and easily disproved using actual extradition statistics.
        Anyone that thinks Sweden would extradite anyone possible facing the death penalty (AS CLAIMED BY ASSANGE) don't know shit about the law - last I checked there are a number of murderers walking free in Sweden as they can't be extradited without guarantees of not facing death.

        (anonymous because of moderation)

        Extradition from Sweden, or the UK, would as I understand it require judicial trial. If he was facing a prosecution risking the death penalty then I do doubt Sweden would hand him over. But there's a non-judicial route in Sweden if the US wanted him for assistance in an other case (say some side-line/spin-off to Snowden's case), and that could be decided by a civil servant without judicial involvement.

        Anyone think the US might "find something unexpected" to charge him with once on US soil?

        Sweden - Oops, so

    • by TheCarp ( 96830 )

      I think you are half right. This is the first step to dropping all charges and walking away.

      He will not be immediately arrested because, he has already been neutralized and their ability to effectively imprison people like him has been demonstrated by effectively keeping him imprisoned for years. Few people would be so lucky in his shoes, so their point is well made.

      Typically the last thing they would really want is a messy and contentious trial. They would much rather it fade away into obscurity.

      • He will not be immediately arrested because, he has already been neutralized and their ability to effectively imprison people like him has been demonstrated by effectively keeping him imprisoned for years.

        Last I saw, Wikileaks was still alive and well.

        I really doubt this is going to blow over.

    • Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. This is what they charge you with if you used a computer.

      Then Espionage and Conspiracy. The CFAA only goes up to 10 years, I assume someone would want to make an example out of him.

  • by Virtucon ( 127420 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @10:23AM (#49250065)

    There's two dimensions here, first there's the Swedish charges and certainly if the prosecutors can question him in the Ecuadorian embassy then that's great, however he still fled and violated the conditions of his bail while awaiting extradition proceedings in the UK. That's still a problem for him.

    I think Ecuador is going to ship a large "diplomatic pouch" about the size of a refrigerator sometime soon because he has to be stinking up the embassy by now.

    • by Xest ( 935314 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @10:39AM (#49250203)

      Yeah I'm interested to see how that plays out. If Sweden drops it's extradition request, there's every possibility that the British courts may deem that that adds weight to his argument that there was no case to answer, that it was political, and that he shouldn't have had to be on bail in the first place making his fleeing of that effectively irrelevant.

      But then if there is a political dimension, it may be that they'll be happy to get him on whatever they can, and they do indeed punish him for skipping bail.

      It'd be interesting to see how that plays out, but it really depends what happens after the questioning that is finally going ahead.

      It's interesting that Ny cites the impending statute of limitations date as the reason for the change of heart. There have been two other key events in the last 6 months that I suspect were more relevant:

      1) Assange's petition to the Swedish courts to have the case dropped failed, but in the ruling the Swedish judiciary was clear that it could not understand why Ny hadn't just questioned him over here, that it was incredibly odd that she hadn't and that she must do this ASAP.

      2) There has been growing political pressure to stop guarding the embassy. When £10million has been spent on guarding the embassy whilst police forces have been cut MPs have faced increasing pressure from the public and even policing unions to stop wasting time on it. Recent cuts have meant that some crimes such as car crime have become defacto decriminalised because the police no longer have the resources to pursue them. In that context it's rather galling for the police and public alike to hear we're spending millions just to have officers stood around doing nothing.

      So I imagine the weight of these two events have been the key reasons for this shift rather than expiry of statute of limitations for the most minor allegations. If Ny defied the Swedish courts a further appeal to have the case dropped would likely succeed due to Ny refusing to do her job and actually pursue a prosecution. Similarly, the Ecuadorian embassy might stop being watched and Assange could flee anyway.

      She's really been left little choice. At least the case is finally moving, and Ny has been forced to do her job properly rather than simply persisting with long discredited excuses not to do it (the most amusing of which is that the Swedish justice system doesn't allow overseas questioning - what a laughing stock the folks that persisted in pushing that myth have now become).

      • It is still a crime to flee bail, regardless of the merit of the original charges. So the UK may still want to prosecute, particularly since he has flaunted it for years staying in an embassy. They can decide to drop it, of course, but they may not. They don't want to encourage the idea that it is ok to skip bail and run if you think you are innocent. You still need to obey the police.

        • by Xest ( 935314 )

          Yeah it's still a crime, that's not in dispute, but we do have the concepts of extenuating circumstances and public interest in British law.

          I can't see what the public interest would be if it turns out there are no charges to answer, it's not like anyone and everyone can just get an embassy to put them up in order to skip bail, even Ecuador very nearly didn't take him. It's not like people are going to start running to embassies left and right under the assumption they'll get given protection- Assange was a

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 ) *

      The UK can either wait for him to come out and keep paying millions of pounds a year to watch the door, or they can let him leave and go to Ecuador. They will opt for the latter option, because keeping him there clearly isn't working. They can convict him of skipping bail when his is long gone, just to save face.

  • by Ecuador ( 740021 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @10:26AM (#49250093) Homepage

    Hmm, nice of them to ask. Guess it is the Excellent Karma?
    Anyway, sure, go ahead, you have my permission.

    • by aliquis ( 678370 )

      Their problem is that if they wait longer the .. possible offenses are hit by the time-bar.

      As such I don't see why Assange should care all that much. Can't he just leave once that happen?

      But supposedly it wasn't for all of it (I've read "some.")

      Anyway they also claim that any court action would have to happen in Sweden so wouldn't that just leave everything where it is now anyway?

  • When Assange went to hide in the Ecuadoran embassy, he had the world's attention. But now looking back, it looks like he basically put himself in prison, and not in the heroic way. If the US had grabbed him, tried him in some kangaroo court and imprisoned him, he'd stay relevant as a sort of journalistic martyr. But his embassy self-imprisonment left him just as isolated, while also looking vaguely like a fugitive instead of a martyr. Basically, he's been rendered irrelevant, without anything actually being
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      If the US had grabbed him, tried him in some kangaroo court and imprisoned him, he'd stay relevant as a sort of journalistic martyr.

      Well that's marvellous and all, except he's got way more freedom in the Ecuadorian embassy than he would have in some solitary cell in gitmo or whereever he wound up.

      Also, his stay with the Ecuadorians comes with 100% less torture!

      It is massively in his favour to be where he is now.

      • From where he is now, he got Snowden into Russian asylum safely. I'd hardly consider that irrelevant.
        • Also, that could be what he'll be charged with if he tries to leave-- aiding and abetting Snowden.
    • If the US had grabbed him, tried him in some kangaroo court and imprisoned him, he'd stay relevant as a sort of journalistic martyr.

      Yes, Chelsea/Bradley Manning is having a great time of it.

      It's really cool to be a journalistic martyr and have all the accolades. I'm told the suicide watch time period of his life was his/her favorite part.

      Either way Wikileaks has been killed without its killers having done anything that looks like a heavy-handed suppression of journalism.

      And yet, leaks still happen.

      Stopping wikileaks was about as successful as plugging a failed river damn with half a square of toilet paper.

      The US may have gotten its childish revenge, but this kind of treatment only pushed a future whistleblower like Snowden to work for our enemies.

  • According to TFA, the statute of limitations on the charges runs out in August of this year. On September 1 he can walk out of there a free man cleared of all charges.

    • On September 1 he can walk out of there a free man cleared of all charges.

      Yeah, he could walk right out of that embassy into a U.S. extradition request on other charges.

  • by gestalt_n_pepper ( 991155 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @11:58AM (#49250831)

    Since clearly, they knew of none of these things years ago when Snowden was first sequestered.

    As Snowden has correctly stated, it's a ruse to allow the USA to take him into custody. Apparently Sweden will do its questioning, probably drop the case for lack of evidence and the USA can go twist in the wind.

    What this really says is just how the USA's power position in the world has changed. Sweden has read the writing on the wall. They'll respond to pressure from the US state department just as much as they need to, which is now apparently, not much.

  • by superdave80 ( 1226592 ) on Friday March 13, 2015 @12:02PM (#49250861)

    Swedish prosecutors are arranging to come to London and question Assange within the embassy

    Sweden still needs to be granted permission from both the UK and Ecuador.

    The phone, motherfuckers, pick it up and CALL HIM WITH YOUR QUESTIONS!!! I am constantly amazed at how people in charge of important things can make simple tasks so convoluted.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I believe Ecuador will agree to this.

    But the best thing about this is, if the UK says no, then it clearly shows that they want to sell him out to the Americans.

  • "the farcical rape charges have once again been leveled against the Pentagon’s Public Enemy Number One. Julian Assange now stands accused of: (1) not calling a young woman the day after he had enjoyed a night with her, (2) asking her to pay for his bus ticket, (3) having unsafe sex, and (4) participating in two brief affairs in the course of one week" ref [counterpunch.org].

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