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United States Government The Courts

Julian Assange Launches Legal Challenge Against Trump Administration (theguardian.com) 244

SonicSpike shares a report from The Guardian: Julian Assange, the fugitive WikiLeaks founder whose diplomatic sanctuary in the Ecuadorian embassy appears increasingly precarious, is launching a legal challenge against the Trump administration. Lawyers for the Australian activist have filed an urgent application to the Washington-based Inter-American Commission of Human Rights (IACHR) aimed at forcing the hand of U.S. prosecutors, requiring them to "unseal" any secret charges against him. The legal move is an attempt to prevent Assange's extradition to the U.S. at a time that a new Ecuadorian government has been making his stay in the central London apartment increasingly inhospitable.

The 1,172-page submission by Assange's lawyers calls on the U.S. to unseal any secret charges against him and urges Ecuador to cease its "espionage activities" against him. Baltasar Garzon, the prominent Spanish judge who has pursued dictators, terrorists and drug barons, is the international coordinator of Assange's legal team. He has said the case involves "the right to access and impart information freely" that has been put in "jeopardy." The Trump administration is refusing to reveal details of charges against Assange despite the fact that sources in the U.S. Department of Justice have confirmed to the media that they exist under seal. The application alleges that U.S. prosecutors have begun approaching people in the U.S., Germany and Iceland and pressed them to testify against Assange in return for immunity from prosecution. Those approached, it is said, include people associated with WikiLeaks' joint publications with other media about U.S. diplomacy, Guantanamo Bay and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

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Julian Assange Launches Legal Challenge Against Trump Administration

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  • by elrous0 ( 869638 ) on Wednesday January 23, 2019 @09:32PM (#58012462)

    Everyone on Slashdot has assured me repeatedly over the years that neither the UK nor Sweden has any intention of ever extraditing him to the U.S.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by geekpowa ( 916089 )
      That was before interfering with US election process was on the table. Maybe if Assange stuck with the original remit of providing a whistleblower safehaven instead of whatever the fuck he has been doing lately with Roger Stone et al, and limited himself to consensual sexual activity, he wouldn't be in self-imposed prison for 6+ years.
      • by Okian Warrior ( 537106 ) on Wednesday January 23, 2019 @09:57PM (#58012558) Homepage Journal

        That was before interfering with US election process was on the table.

        And before that, Hillary asked her staff for ways to kill him - and was taken serious enough that a couple of aides took it at face value and researched ways to do it.

        So your statement could be expanded as:

        That was before tanking Hillary's election because she threatened to kill him.

        But of course he did that, and now America wants revenge.

        And all of this, originally, over making public the "collateral murder" videos (and a bunch of other stuff). America talks big about whistleblowers, but when it comes right down to it, our government is just as petty and vindictive as any dictatorship.

        • by elrous0 ( 869638 ) on Wednesday January 23, 2019 @10:34PM (#58012682)

          America talks big about whistleblowers, but when it comes right down to it, our government is just as petty and vindictive as any dictatorship.

          I once heard a lawyer who put it best (and I'm heavily paraphrasing here): "Nobody ever thanks a whistleblower. At best they might have a movie made about them or have someone praise them in an op-ed. But even then, long after all the positive press has stopped, they've still lost their job and been permanently black-balled in their field. And there will always be people who will resent and hate them for what they did. They'll always be looking over their shoulders, looking for work in a world where no one wants to hire them, and probably wishing they had just kept their mouth shut. And that's the best case scenario. Worst case, they end up dead or in prison."

          • by Anonymous Coward

            America talks big about whistleblowers, but when it comes right down to it, our government is just as petty and vindictive as any dictatorship.

            I once heard a lawyer who put it best (and I'm heavily paraphrasing here): "Nobody ever thanks a whistleblower."

            Assange is not a whistleblower from what I can tell. It seemed to be more about a cult of personality. He had to know he was being used, and possibly had some ideas about who by. I had a pretty good idea at the time how awful Trump was, but they somehow dug up enough bullshit that combined with a mediocre run by Hillary resulted in Putin's puppet winning.

            It still boggles the mind how republicans have some defect where they can't see the frame up for what it was and is. For every 100 things you actually

        • Interesting premise. The Trump administration wants revenge for Wikileaks tanking Hillary's election.
      • by rtb61 ( 674572 ) on Wednesday January 23, 2019 @10:14PM (#58012604) Homepage

        Yeah, right. What this is really all about, the US government wants to declare it globally illegal to report the criminal activities of the US government in the rest of the world. So you as citizen witness the criminal activity of a foriegn power, the US government, in your country or in an country where you are at the time, if you report the crime to the authorities of that country, the US want to charge you with the crime of espionage, seriously. You see a CIA agent kill someone, report it and the US government wants to prosecute you and probably kill you in detention, you committed a crime against the US state by reporting the crimes of the US state, when they are the foreign power. A real shite stain, on freedom, democracy and justice, full blow fascism and a populace too cowardly to put a stop to it, even when they are publicly attacked, imagine men allowing the government to fondle their genitals in front of those, well, women's children, they ain't men no more, when they allow that to happen, an emasculated populace, sheeple, trained to be sheared.

        • by 1ucius ( 697592 )

          That sounds like a crazy conspiracy theory

          The truth here is much simpler. Assange is playing to the Ecuador government (and, I suppose, international opinion) by arguing 'you should let me stay because the evil Trump administrations will treat me unfairly...."

          It's a silly argument factually - sealed indictments are a common thing - but he has to play the hand he holds.

      • By the standards of most Western Countries his sex life was consentual. Just in that one country was not using a condum considered non consentual, if he did, and she needed rather a lot of convincing to make the complaint, and the statute of limitations is past. At this point the only thing he's hiding from is charges for skipping bail.
        • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

          by elrous0 ( 869638 )

          The CIA was looking to character assassinate him by any means necessary. First they sent in a CIA plant (Daniel Domscheit-Berg) to undermine Wikileaks from the inside and to advance to the narrative that Assange was just a selfish narcissist. And then they set up a blatantly obvious honeypot operation in Sweden to implicate him as a rapist too. It's the same shit they pulled on Dominique Strauss-Kahn when he was foolish enough to challenge the supremacy [theguardian.com] of the U.S. dollar (and that they've pulled on many ot

        • by jeremyp ( 130771 )

          Also in the UK. Assange tried to get the European Arrest Warrant voided in the UK courts but the UK courts ruled that what Assange was alleged to have done would constitute rape under UK law and therefore the EAW should stand. At that point Assange legged it into the Ecuador embassy.

          Had he been concerned about extradition to the USA, he would not have come to the UK at all or would have gone to the Ecuador embassy as soon as he got here instead of waiting until it became inevitable that he would have to go

      • by Anonymous Coward

        IMHO, he's a Trump proxy. People would like to prosecute Trump, but him controlling the Dept of Justice, and being protected by Mitch McConnell makes that hard. So they want to prosecute Assange as a proxy.

        He's a bit part player, if the Russians hadn't laundered the data through him, they'd have laundered it a different way.

        The real person to blame here is Mitch McConnell.

        Trump is an Elop figure clearly, he's supposed to dismember the US, hand it over to Putin friendly control, and receive $130 million for

      • If he'd dumped documents that made the GOP look bad, you'd be loving him so hard he'd be presenting the Oscars.

        Assange just told the Swedes he's a Syrian refugee. So naturally they dropped rape charges.

        • How do you make someone evil look bad? That's like trying to make Charles Manson "look bad."
          • DURR HURR GOP BAD LOLLLLZ

            Best economy ever. Still pushing to enforce our laws and keep additional illegals out. Telling off our faux allies to start paying for their own defense instead of at the expense of American tax payers. Telling off the evil Chinese dictatorship instead of bowing like previous losers. Simply: putting America first. What a shock having a POTUS who would do that instead of declaring himself a citizen of the world.

            Wait a minute, I'm talking to an NPC script, aren't I? *facepalm*

      • The sexual activity in all cases allegedly began as consensual. Mr. Assange is one of the very few people in the world in such deep political conflict with notoriously criminal security agencies around the world that a conspiracy against him, with women paid, coerced, or politically convinced to testify against him, is feasible. I'd like to see more details about what the original police involved felt was the truth.

    • I'm on /. and I never said such a thing.

      I've been reporting Assange and WikiLeaks ever since they were a thing. Assange was a self-described "spokesperson," at first. He said he has nothing to do with the internal workings of WikiLeaks; that he was sim-ply rhe front man.

      Later on, after he and WikiLeaks fell off the radar and money and attention waned, Assange claimed to be a "publishers," so he could hide behind those credentials.

      The US has wanted Assange, day one. WikiLeaks is guilty of two things: 1.) po

    • Everyone on Slashdot has assured me repeatedly over the years that neither the UK nor Sweden has any intention of ever extraditing him to the U.S.

      For many years the USA didn't have any intention of building a wall on a Mexican border either, nor cause a trade shitstorm with every country in the world. People's assurances didn't change. At the time the USA showed precisely zero intention to extradite anyone.

      • by jeremyp ( 130771 )

        The USA still doesn't have any intention of building a wall on the Mexican border, only the twat in the Whitehouse.

        Anyway extradition doesn't work the way the GP seems to think. Neither the UK nor Sweden has any intention of extraditing Assange to the USA but that is because the USA hasn't requested extradition. However, if the USA asked the UK to extradite him, they almost certainly would, which makes me wonder why he came here in the first place, unless it was to avoid a rape trial.

    • Not everyone. Just a few vocal idiots who are certain that their world view is correct and that everyone operates on the same principals of justice that they operate on.

      The words infamy and perfidy have no meaning associated with them that these people can understand... because they themselves are not that underhanded. But yeah, they are fucking crazy and you are not.

  • Poor Julian (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    He probably thought that by helping Donald Trump win with well timed leaks, he'd be able to avoid US prosecution. Julian didn't realize Trump doesn't repay favors (or debts.)

    • Julian didn't realize Trump doesn't repay favors (or debts.)

      This would first require Trump to believe he needed any help winning in the first place. The man is too narcissistic to believe he ever did anything in his life besides pull himself up by his own bootstraps.

    • by quenda ( 644621 )

      Simpler explanation: he disliked Trump, but really hated Hilary. (As it turns out, that applied to a lot of the US voters too.)
      He probably never expected Trump to win.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        Over two years (the digging started well before inauguration), endless funds and rubber stamps, and Commissar Mooler hasn't found shit.

        Yeah. Maybe it didn't have anything to do with Trump. Maybe it had everything to do with the Dems running the most corrupt fuck since US Grant.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Don't worry, the secret charges will be for breaking secret laws and will be tried in a secret court so that you will be full protected and have all of the recourse the Government chooses to allow you. Sounds just like Stalin, Hitler, Xi Jinping, and every other dictator out there.

    How dare him wish to actually find out about the charges and evidence against him? Kind of like exercising his right of discovery is something he lost because the Government is afraid of the truth.

    • by elrous0 ( 869638 )

      Nonsense. It will be a fair process. He'll be allowed to have a secret lawyer who will not be allowed access to the secret evidence, and 5 whole minutes of post-sentence court time to defend himself. The U.S. legal system isn't BARBARIC, you know.

  • How things change (Score:2, Informative)

    When he was leaking things that made Bush look bad you loved Julian Assange so hard that Benedict Cumberbatch played him in the movie.

    ""First Facebook and now Wikileaks as the Guardian reports that studio executives have picked up the screen rights to the forthcoming Julian Assange biography 'The Most Dangerous Man in the World' by award-winning Australian writer Andrew Fowler. The book details Assange's life from his childhood on Magnetic Island in Queensland, Australia, all the way through to his foundin

    • by Freischutz ( 4776131 ) on Thursday January 24, 2019 @06:24AM (#58013690)

      When he was leaking things that made Bush look bad you loved Julian Assange so hard that Benedict Cumberbatch played him in the movie.

      And when he was leaking things that made Bush look bad the right wing hated Julian Assange so hard they had smoke coming out of their collective ears, now they love him because he fixed an election for Trump. People love and hate things based on whether these thing further or hinder their cause which shouldn't surprise anybody.

      • Re:How things change (Score:4, Interesting)

        by DNS-and-BIND ( 461968 ) on Thursday January 24, 2019 @11:05AM (#58014662) Homepage

        Go ahead, blame those dirty foreigners. It's sooo easy to throw it off on someone else. It feels magnificent to retroactively, automatically define your values as the most important ones and those of others as inconsequential and selfish. Make no mistake: Trump's presidential win was the fault of the Democratic Party. They chose a demonstrably corrupt, very rich, connected insider candidate over one - Bernie Sanders - shown by polling to have a better edge over all Republican candidates. It was a spectacular failure of the Clinton machine to consider the impoverished, postindustrial Midwest as a given despite decades of policy neglect. Hillary Clinton herself underestimated just how very unlikeable a person she is. Trump wasn't the best candidate but that's just how little people like Clinton and fear her Beltway aura. Leftists melted down across the Internet, exposing their biases and breathtakingly narrow comprehension of the universes inhabited by others.

        By the way, everything Wikileaks has leaked has been true. 100% truthfulness record. Unlike, for example, the US mainstream media which deliberately vilified a bunch of schoolkids, violating their own "journalist ethics" and accepted standards and practices with glee. Assange just did what he's done his whole life: try to do as much damage to America as possible. Ironically spreading dissent by saying the election was fixed is playing right into Russia's hands. The election was legitimate, the outcome was legitimate. If ye claim otherwise you're literally furthering Putin's cause. At least get paid if you're going to do that...working for free is a sucker's job.

      • now they love him because he fixed an election for Trump.

        God damn! If I had only known it was so easy to control people, I could have been President by now. What the fuck people?! Why didn't anyone tell me how easy it is to control millions of people and force them to vote in a particular way?

        Fuuuuuccccccck. I am so dumb. I guess I should take comfort in the fact that both parties are dumb too, so I have lots of company. They spent billions of dollars campaigning and such in an effort to sway the vote, and all it took was Julian Assange releasing some information

      • Cumberbatch also played Cummings. Not a sympathetic figure. Actors do not like to play good or bad real people, they like to olay challenging showcasing roles.

  • These your bros yo.
  • At the start, Assange had this idea of Wikileaks being a truly neutral repository of information. That idea had real merit, and still does. It went to crap from there. Badly. The US hasn't exactly been honorable in how they've dealt with him, but it's obvious that Assange decided to start playing with the big boys - geopolitics, espionage, that sort of thing.

    I lost the last shred of any sympathy for him when it became obvious that he actively colluded with Russia to screw with US election integrity. So
    • by elrous0 ( 869638 )

      At the start, Assange had this idea of Wikileaks being a truly neutral repository of information. That idea had real merit, and still does. It went to crap from there.

      That's the bullshit narrative that Daniel Domscheit-Berg has peddled. And I guarantee you that's it's going to come out one day that he was a CIA plant. Mark my words.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      The question that needs to be asked here is how many secrets is our government really allowed to keep secret? You let them keep too many, they might start disappearing people for whatever reason they might think is necissary. Chicago PD runs a blacksite for christ sakes.

      We're living in an age of parallel construction and we might as well question the juries being picked as well. The more secrets the government keeps the less trust the public has in the government and that in turn creates a viscious cycle

    • He did what he always did his whole life - harm America to the best of his ability. Remember cheering for him when he made Bush look bad? Neutral my ass.

      Wikileaks has a 100% record for the truth, unlike the US mainstream media. If your political party can't handle the truth, you have bigger problems. Hillary lost because she rigged the nomination (we know this from Wikileaks) she urged the press to support Trump (we also know from Wikileaks) and we also know the press obeyed (a lasting stain on their re

    • by ph1ll ( 587130 ) <ph1ll1phenryNO@SPAMyahoo.com> on Thursday January 24, 2019 @04:31AM (#58013450)

      "That he actively colluded with Russia to screw with US election [has] been pretty well documented."

      Has it? Where?

      I mean there are lots of people expressing their opinion or those of "anonymous sources". But that's not the same thing as being well documented.

      Nowhere near.

      • ...

        What I tell you three times is true. Alice in Wonderland by Lewis Carroll.

        What you are seeing is evidence of that.

        Facts don't matter when discussing Truth. Right? ;)

  • by gravewax ( 4772409 ) on Wednesday January 23, 2019 @10:53PM (#58012746)
    fuck if I was Ecuador I would throw his ungrateful arse out the door and lock the gate behind him.
  • by nospam007 ( 722110 ) * on Thursday January 24, 2019 @05:53AM (#58013642)

    Get in line, Julian.

  • by OneHundredAndTen ( 1523865 ) on Thursday January 24, 2019 @09:38AM (#58014244)
    The poor guy, six years holed up in the Ecuadorian embassy in London, is probably losing it. In the last couple of years he's been creating enemies for himself needlessly, and this is certainly not going to endear him to Uncle Sam.
  • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Thursday January 24, 2019 @10:01AM (#58014372)
    "The 1,172-page submission by Assange's lawyers calls on the U.S. to unseal any secret charges against him and urges Ecuador to cease its "espionage activities" against him."

    Seriously, a boi that lives on collecting and publishing secret data and is the embodiment of espionage, suing for both of these things is simply delicious.

    Sorry, boi, you lived by espionage - you of all people should cherish Equador's activity. I'm looking forward to your uncovered activities to be published - something you should approve of, amirite?

    Meanwhile enjoy life in the embassy building.

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