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United States News

US Intelligence Sources Discussed Poisoning Julian Assange, Court Told (theguardian.com) 138

hackingbear shares a report: Plans to poison or kidnap Julian Assange from the Ecuadorian embassy were discussed between sources in US intelligence and a private security firm that spied extensively on the WikiLeaks co-founder, a court has been told. Details of the alleged spying operation against Assange and anyone who visited him at the embassy were laid out on Wednesday at his extradition case, in evidence by a former employee of a Spanish security company, UC Global. Microphones were concealed to monitor Assange's meetings with lawyers, his fingerprint was obtained from a glass and there was even a plot to obtain a nappy from a baby who had been brought on regular visits to the embassy, according to the witness, whose evidence took the form of a written statement.

The founder and director of UC Global, David Morales, had said that "the Americans" had wanted to establish paternity but the plan was foiled when the then employee alerted the child's mother. Anonymity was granted on Tuesday to the former employee and another person who had been involved with UC Global, after the hearing was told they feared that Morales, or others connected to him in the US, could seek to harm them. Details of their written evidence were read out at the Old Bailey in London on Wednesday by Mark Summers QC, one of the lawyers for Assange, who is fighting extradition to the US on charges relating to leaks of classified documents allegedly exposing US war crimes and abuse.

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US Intelligence Sources Discussed Poisoning Julian Assange, Court Told

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  • heh (Score:5, Insightful)

    by nomadic ( 141991 ) <nomadicworldNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Wednesday September 30, 2020 @02:21PM (#60558004) Homepage

    If you read the story, the source doesn't really sound that credible. The US government dislikes Assange but the latter's narcissistic paranoia to the contrary, he's more of an irritant than a feared enemy.

    • The plan is to inject Lyso and bleach into the arms of Julian Assange, as ordered by the Commander-in-Chief of the US military.

      • Yeah. No.

        Absolutely ZERO chance that would happen.

        This shit sounds like something coming out of russia or more likely china.
        • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

          US method is for prisoners to fall down stairs, get attacked by other prisoners, screw with eating and sleeping and isolation, deny medical services until you tire and die. In this case it is all too be done in the UK by pommie cunts. You not keep adding stuff to the extradition request until assange dies in prison. No trial they can not win, so imprisonment until death via prosecution as punishment. You know the crap, two years later, the whole proceeding must start again because 'er' 'um' one of the 'i's

          • Yeah. Geee. So you were able to read what happened under W 15 years ago. That's nice.

            In the meantime, reality is taking over.
      • What were they trying to do? Deodorize him? Good luck with that, the Ecuadorians were trying for years, and they even had direct access to him this whole time.

    • Re:heh (Score:5, Insightful)

      by tinkerton ( 199273 ) on Wednesday September 30, 2020 @03:30PM (#60558190)

      Yeah I recall how he fled to the Ecuadorian embassy with the preposterous claim that he feared the US might try have him extradited. How paranoid can you get!

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      They are trying to build a case that he had good reason to fear for his life.

      It's probably just a show trial anyway.

    • Also, the source is a pretty poor source.

      A security company employee that leaks operational information to one of the subjects they're surveilling? That wouldn't even be legal in many places; at a minimum it would be honest services fraud if he didn't return the pay; and since it was his employer who was paid, that's really dicey.

      And so this dishonest actor also says a bunch of bad things about the people he backstabbed? So what?

      Scrounging a diaper from the trash to establish paternity is a pretty normal, l

      • by Hizonner ( 38491 )

        So stool pigeons aren't to be trusted, eh?

        The "source" submitted testimony to a COURT OF LAW about the CRIMINAL INTENTIONS of the people he "backstabbed".

        Not all of us get our morality from the Mafia.

        • No, taking diapers from the trash is not a crime, and becoming dishonest with your client over that is clearly unethical.

    • by Hizonner ( 38491 )

      Of course they don't think the guy is a threat. That doesn't mean they don't want to make an example of him to deter others, and it doesn't mean they wouldn't at least think really hard about resorting to dodgy measures to achieve that. And, by the way, I read "poison him" not as "try to kill him", but "try to make him sick enough that he has to leave the embassy, so that we or the UK can grab him".

      As for source credibility, the story doesn't give you much to assess the source one way or another... although

  • by jellomizer ( 103300 ) on Wednesday September 30, 2020 @02:29PM (#60558020)

    I am not surprised that US Intelligence discussed getting rid of Assange. I will not surprised that the US Intelligence has discussed ways to kill of any major figure that may have a tendency against American Interests. This is kinda the job of a Countries Intelligence, KBG, CIA, MI6... How many times when the Press asks the question about a problem, they will say All options are on the table. They are some really bad options that we hope the president and the leaders hope they don't need to do.

    My main guess is what Assange did, the state he is in, isn't worth the risk of public relations of if such went through. However, I figured they would have talked about it. The United States, isn't the good moral country, It isn't under Trump, It isn't Under Obama, It isn't Under Bush, It isn't under Clinton. Actions that go against nations self interest will have discussions to how to stop it. Many items discussed, are quickly considered unconscionable, others are considered impractical, others they figure it will cause more problems then it solved...

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Wednesday September 30, 2020 @02:46PM (#60558066)
      where the difference between my government carrying out an assassination of a foreign citizen or not isn't "how's this gonna play out in the press".

      We need to stop excusing the horrible things our country does in the name of "National Interests". If I came into your home, killed your family and took your stuff then said "well, it was in my interests" you'd be upset. The US does this as a matter of course and we're all like "meh, gotta protect our interests".
      • They didn't do a horrible thing. A Spanish company discussed if they wanted to do a horrible thing, and ultimately they chose not to.

        But you seem confused; you say

        The US does this as a matter of course

        but the actual story is, they didn't try to do that, even when it was offered as a service.

      • We could live in a world where we never find out about the assassination attempts (and successes). Be glad we at least live in a world (some of us) where public reaction over a plot like this carries enough weight to discourage government from going that route.
        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

          We could live in a world where we never find out about the assassination attempts (and successes). Be glad we at least live in a world (some of us) where public reaction over a plot like this carries enough weight to discourage government from going that route.

          Depends on the country. Russia is well known for poisoning inconvenient people, at least in recent memory, and one of them was earlier this year. The other I believe one died and his spouse survived after they applied poison on the doorknob.

          Anyhow, an

      • Individuals function differently and are different than groups managed by hierarchies of people. Haven't you ever been in a staff meeting and watched the cumulative IQ drop as more people enter the room?

        Planning for many options is routine. Some whole departments are tasked with dreaming up and planning for every possible idea-- and other groups evaluate "proposals". They filter and edit stuff before it even gets to the top level decision meetings. So illegal, immoral, petty, disproportionate options ha

      • where the difference between my government carrying out an assassination of a foreign citizen or not isn't "how's this gonna play out in the press".

        To be more specific, an assassination of someone who did nothing illegal.

    • I am not surprised that US Intelligence discussed getting rid of Assange. I will not surprised that the US Intelligence has discussed ways to kill of any major figure that may have a tendency against American Interests. This is kinda the job of a Countries Intelligence, KBG, CIA, MI6... How many times when the Press asks the question about a problem, they will say All options are on the table. They are some really bad options that we hope the president and the leaders hope they don't need to do.

      My main guess is what Assange did, the state he is in, isn't worth the risk of public relations of if such went through. However, I figured they would have talked about it. The United States, isn't the good moral country, It isn't under Trump, It isn't Under Obama, It isn't Under Bush, It isn't under Clinton. Actions that go against nations self interest will have discussions to how to stop it. Many items discussed, are quickly considered unconscionable, others are considered impractical, others they figure it will cause more problems then it solved...

      The US government can be pretty amoral, but part of that amorality includes maintaining a certain public image.

      And a public assassination of anyone but a labelled terrorist is well outside that brand.

      What's being described isn't an American Op, it's a Russian one straight out of Putin's playbook.

      I don't know if it's real (the article sounds sketchy) but if it is then it came from Mr. Orange.

      • by Cederic ( 9623 )

        I don't know if it's real (the article sounds sketchy) but if it is then it came from Mr. Orange.

        Tim Roth is now controlling US foreign policy?

        It makes sense. After all it was Tim that joked about drone striking Assange:
        https://torontosun.com/2016/10... [torontosun.com]

        Out of curiosity have you asked DC police to interrogate Tim Roth and find his movements on the morning Seth Rich was murdered?

    • Wikileaks is not against american interests, it is for american interests. Good journalism has a function in a democracy to expose power so the citizens can judge it.
      Currently power controls the media so it will control the stories going out in order to make you hate good journalism and then it will destroy it and you won't care.

      What happened in 2017 was even more simple. "wikileaks has made the CIA lose face. Therefore the CIA will get revenge and fuck american interests whatever that means".

      You have a ver

  • War crimes ... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Wednesday September 30, 2020 @02:34PM (#60558028)

    Don't we have to have a declaration of war for that?

    We considered it years ago, but that would have triggered allies' cooperation, particularly NATO.

    • No, Assange is a civilian, so if we call him a terrorist it's OK to murder him in his sleep.
      • Re:War crimes ... (Score:4, Interesting)

        by CaptainDork ( 3678879 ) on Wednesday September 30, 2020 @08:56PM (#60559080)

        "War crimes ..."

        What war?

        The last time the United States formally declared war, using specific terminology, on any nation was in 1942, when war was declared against Axis-allied Hungary, Bulgaria, and Romania, because President Franklin Roosevelt thought it was improper to engage in hostilities against a country without a formal declaration of war. Since then, every American president has used military force without a declaration of war.

        ~ wiki

    • Don't we have to have a declaration of war for that?

      We considered it years ago, but that would have triggered allies' cooperation, particularly NATO.

      No, you don't have to declare war on anybody for a Spanish security company to have a discussion with you about doing something illegal. Especially if, as in the story, you chose not to do the thing.

  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Wednesday September 30, 2020 @02:40PM (#60558048) Journal

    Assassination is currently against US law, and would be stupid in such a high-profile case.

    • Re:Come on (Score:5, Insightful)

      by chadenright ( 1344231 ) on Wednesday September 30, 2020 @03:06PM (#60558126) Journal
      Assassination is only illegal if you are a peasant. If you are one of the elite, it's a legally authorized tool of the state. If you're powerful enough in the US, it's even legal to assassinate US citizens.
    • Yeah exactly.

      There is no possible way that such a high profile person could possibly ever be assassinated and no one be brought to justice over it and everyone just shrug their shoulders and say "that is suspicious but they say it was a suicide so what are you going to do?" and just get on with their lives and forget about it.
    • Re:Come on (Score:4, Interesting)

      by mi ( 197448 ) <slashdot-2017q4@virtual-estates.net> on Wednesday September 30, 2020 @04:27PM (#60558380) Homepage Journal

      Assassination is currently against US law

      That didn't help Osama bin Laden, did it? Even though the same helicopter, that extracted his corpse, could've extracted him alive, Obama ordered him killed [theatlantic.com]... No judge, no jury. And not just him — having said so much against Guantanamo, Obama couldn't afford to send new prisoners there. So he started killing them instead [theguardian.com]...

      And we're talking about the brilliant jurist and an otherwise nice guy and a Nobel Peace Prize laureate, not the Orange Usurper, here...

      Why would Assange be treated any better by the same regime?

    • Assassination is currently against US law, and would be stupid in such a high-profile case.

      When has the law ever stopped the president?

      • Assassination being illegal hasn't stopped at least the last two.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        To be fair Trump has been denied by the law a few times, most recently on his TikTok ban and destroying the USPS to rig the vote.

        His mistake is not doing it in secret like Obama did so that by the time anyone finds out and can make a legal challenge it's too late.

        • Yeah well when you break it so often eventually at some point it'll accidentally catch you out ;-)

  • by gavron ( 1300111 ) on Wednesday September 30, 2020 @02:40PM (#60558050)

    Option 1:
    1. Indict someone for a criminal event [or have a grand jury indict them]
    2. Have them appear before the court and provide bail as per bail guidelines (what will bring you back to court, not the nature of the crime)
    3. Have a jury [or judge] find them guilty
    4. Sentence them as per the federal sentencing guidelines
    5. Serve sentence
    6. "Rehabilitation" (I'm not even going to Fn touch this)

    Option 2:
    Poison a person who is not in the US, has not been in the US, has committed no crimes while in the US.

    Seems to me the US has learned too much from Putin... so much that it violates the Constitution.

    E

    • It seems to me you can't comprehend the word "discussed," and that you didn't notice you don't know who raised the issue. All you know is that it was discussed, and the US didn't do it.

      But you think they did? Even though it didn't happen? Weird stuff you got in your attic, man.

      • by gavron ( 1300111 )

        When the US government DISCUSSES something that is BLATANTLY UNCONSTITUTIONAL that's wrong.
        That was pretty clear in what I wrote. We want OUR GOVERNMENT ACTING LEGALLY.

        Sorry it flew past your big noggin. No worries about my attic though.

        E

  • Yeah, collateral damage but it is soo "accurate, lethal, and fast"!

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

    Pfff!! Poison, that's so Putin, just make it American.

  • by tinkerton ( 199273 ) on Wednesday September 30, 2020 @03:17PM (#60558154)

    Consortium News is doing good work on the Assange case,
    https://consortiumnews.com/ass... [consortiumnews.com]

    and this is a very thorough debunking of the massive load of smears against Assange.
    https://caitlinjohnstone.com/2... [caitlinjohnstone.com]

  • ...there was even a plot to obtain a nappy from a baby...

    Is that American slang or baby-talk for something else, because I don't get it at all. All I read is "a plot to obtain nap time from a baby" which makes no sense.

    • It would mean dumpster-diving a dirty diaper to get dna from the baby to prove Assange's paternity. The purpose of that I don't know.
  • Discussed (Score:3, Informative)

    by PPH ( 736903 ) on Wednesday September 30, 2020 @04:39PM (#60558428)

    "What are our options for dealing with Assange?"

    "We could poison him."

    "That's just crazy talk. And it would be illegal. What other options do we have?"

    Poisoning has been discussed.

  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Wednesday September 30, 2020 @05:54PM (#60558638) Journal
    This is so wrong. Assange is not an American citizen. He was not caught doing a crime on our soil. All he did, WRT America, is receive stolen goods from a traitor ( who should still be in prison ).

    No doubt this was just posturing by some CIA type ppl, but, bad that they believe that we have the right to murder somebody that has not attacked America.
    • by ledow ( 319597 )

      "Not caught" isn't the same as "isn't suspected".

      And the allegation is that he conspired to break into a classified military system, with someone who was convicted of breaking into a classified military system. (And "breaking into" is just another term for "unauthorised access", the same way you can break into your own home, before you start down that line.)

      The whole article here revolves around someone saying that someone else said "We could leave the doors open and maybe someone will poison him", which i

      • by Cederic ( 9623 )

        the allegation is that he conspired to break into a classified military system

        The whole article here revolves around someone saying that someone else said "We could leave the doors open and maybe someone will poison him", which is hardly sufficient evidence of an assassination attempt

        The allegation is conspiracy to kidnap or poison, and you've just stated that conspiracy justifies international extradition.

        When will the US be handing over the intelligence officials that worked with this Spanish company?

        • by ledow ( 319597 )

          Surely that's a question for Spain?

        • UC Globalâ(TM)s David Morales is being prosecuted in Spain for spying on Assange in the Equadorian embassy. He at least won't escape justice.
          The US is not cooperating with the spanish requests for information.

      • Did assange break into our systems? Nope. All he is guilty of is taking classified information from a traitor. He is no different than other reporters that have outed our secrets. And quite honestly, we no longer work on securing our systems. Back in the 70/80s, we took security as a major concern. Now, because of political correctness, it has become a joke.

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