Examining the ‘Political Extradition’ Case against Julian Assange
Much of Day 3 of Julian’s Final Extradition hearing was spent on the assertions of US Prosecutor QC Lewis that Barack Obama’s administration, having opened a secret grand jury with investigations afoot, it proved that Donald Trump’s Administrations 17 charges under the Espionage Act were clearly ‘not politically motivated’, thus valid.
A few bits from Andy Worthington’s Sept. 10, 2020: ‘The Ongoing And Unjustifiable Persecution Of Julian Assange’, worldbeyondwar.com via Popular Resistance (CC) (although given that he’d worked with WikiiLeaks on their Guantanamo releases, and will be a witness for the defense in coming weeks, you might like to read it all):
“The US’s alleged basis for prosecuting Assange is the Espionage Act of 1917, which has been widely criticised. A report in 2015 by the PEN American Center found, as Wikipedia explained, that “almost all of the non-government representatives they interviewed, including activists, lawyers, journalists and whistleblowers, ‘thought the Espionage Act had been used inappropriately in leak cases that have a public interest component.’” As PEN explained, “experts described it as ‘too blunt an instrument,’ ‘aggressive, broad and suppressive,’ a ‘tool of intimidation,’ ‘chilling of free speech,’ and a ‘poor vehicle for prosecuting leakers and whistleblowers.’”
President Obama had considered seeking Julian Assange’s extradition, but had correctly concluded that doing so would constitute an unprecedented and unacceptable assault on press freedom. As Charlie Savage explained in a New York Times article when Assange was charged, the Obama administration had “weighed charging Mr. Assange, but rejected that step out of fears that it would chill investigative journalism and could be struck down as unconstitutional.”
Donald Trump and his administration, however, had no such qualms, and when they decided to proceed with an extradition request for Assange, the British government allowed its disdain for the WikiLeaks founder to override what should have been its own defense of the media’s freedom to publish material that is in the common interest, but that governments may not want published, as part of the necessary functioning of a society that recognises the need for checks and balances on absolute power, in which the media can, and should play a major part.” [long snip]
“As the extradition hearing began on Monday, Mark Summers QC, one of Assange’s lawyers, called the delivery of the [New, second] superseding indictment “abnormal, unfair and liable to create real injustice.” As the Guardian explained, Summers said that the additional material “had appeared out of the blue,” and ”presented extra allegations of criminality which it claimed on their own might be separate grounds for extradition, such as stealing data from banks, obtaining information on tracking police vehicles, and supposedly ‘assisting a whistleblower [Edward Snowden] in Hong Kong.’”
As Summers proceeded to explain, “This is essentially a fresh extradition request,” which was, he said, “presented at short notice at a time when Assange has been ‘inhibited’ from speaking to his defence lawyers.” He also said that Assange and his lawyers believed that the additional material was introduced and an act of desperation, because “the US saw the strength of the defence case and thought they would lose.” He asked Judge Vanessa Baraitser “to ‘excise’ or dismiss the belated extra US indictments,” and also sought to delay the extradition hearing, but Judge Baraitser refused.
It remains to be seen if, as the case progresses, those defending Assange can manage to persuade the judge to deny the US’s extradition request. It seems unlikely, but a key aspect of the extradition treaty is that it is not supposed to be for political offences, even though that is what the US government actually seems to be claiming, particularly through its use of the Espionage Act. As another of Assange’s lawyers, Edward Fitzgerald QC, explained, in the defence argument, which he wrote, the prosecution of Assange is “being pursued for ulterior political motives and not in good faith”.
As he further explained “The [US] request seeks extradition for what is a classic ‘political offence.’ Extradition for a political offence is expressly prohibited by article 4(1) of the Anglo-US extradition treaty. Therefore, it constitutes an abuse of this court’s process to require this court to extradite on the basis of the Anglo-US treaty in breach of the treaty’s express provisions.”
Okeydokey then; what does the US/UK extradition treaty say? From Kevin Gosztola, Feb. 26, 2020:
“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 offense. Espionage is widely recognized as an “offense directed against the state itself.”
An extradition treaty signed [PDF] by both the U.S. and the U.K. in 2003 contains a section that explicitly applies to political offenses. It states, “Extradition shall not be granted if the offense for which extradition is requested is a political offense.”
However, in 2003, the U.K. Parliament passed the Extradition Act and omitted a section on political offenses. The prosecution argues Parliament did not include a right related to political offenses, therefore, Assange cannot invoke the protection to prevent his extradition.
Why the political offense exception was omitted from the 2003 law is unclear. But at the time of passage, it was early in the global war on terrorism.
Christopher Joyner, a professor of international law at Georgetown University, articulated what was a prevalent concern at the time.
“Perhaps most problematic for extradition cases involving acts of terrorism is the political offense exception. Many modern extradition treaties specifically exempt political offenses from extradition, since liberal and democratic governments developed a strong antipathy toward the idea of surrendering dissidents into the hands of a despotic government.”
Joyner continued, “There are, however, no recognized criteria as to what constitutes a ‘political’ offense, nor is there a rule of international law prohibiting the extradition of political offenders. As a result, the decision whether to extradite rests on subjective criteria, as determined by the holding government.”
“Accordingly, the bilateral extradition system can provide only partial remedies for bringing international terrorists to justice. The consequence is that, while governments might agree that terrorist acts rise to being criminal offenses against the international community, strict multilateral enforcement through extradition in prosecuting such acts may still be lacking.”
The U.S.-U.K. treaty dealt with this issue by specifically listing violent offenses that were to be excluded from the political offense exception.
Judge Vanessa Baraitser seemed receptive to the prosecution’s argument for disregarding the treaty. Before James Lewis, the lead prosecutor, responded to the defense, Baraitser instructed the defense to stop their argument about political offenses and focus on whether the treaty is relevant to proceedings.
To this, defense attorney Edward Fitzgerald told the judge the treaty is the basis of the extradition request. “To have an extradition request, you’ve got to have a treaty.”
The Magna Carta of 1215 banned arbitrary detention and granted defendants rights of habeas corpus. Fitzgerald emphasized that such due process protections have been enshrined for centuries, and in fact, the U.S. Constitution contains them as well. But as the “Don’t Extradite Assange Campaign” observed, the judge acted like Parliament overrode the Magna Carta, as the defense outlined why a person should not be subject to arbitrary detention.
The defense offered several salient examples that related to the matter of political offenses...”
(and Kevin quotes them...)
This is a 31 min. Week One catch up by Kristinn Hrafnsson, Jennifer Robinson, and Joseph Farrell (sound glitches are frequent). I can’t say whether or not Jen was there on day 3, but Craig Murray’s coverage made US Prosecutor James Lewis QC sound like a Carnival Barker Buffoon in a court that long ago was considered to be the most dignified and transparent courts in the land (or however she’d said it). It’s very good, not overly long, and even I managed it in three 10-min- sittings.
Day 5 coverage on Twitter:
https://twitter.com/wikileaks/
@kgosztola ‘According to Lewis, Assange will be held in administrative segregation in a prison in Alexandria, Virginia. Subject to Special Administrative Measures (SAMs) before and after trial because he is national security defendant’
(cross-posted from Café Babylon)
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Comments
Absolutely insane
The prosecution of Julian is nothing short of the "ruling class", giving further notice, the rules do not apply if the "establishment" says they don't.
When one looks at the Declaration of Independence, and reviews the "grievances" the colonialists listed as their reasons for breaking away from the British empire, they pale in comparison to what our government is inflicting upon it's own people, and the rest of the world today.
The rule of law only applies to little people, ie people that can not afford to buy off government officials.
Julian represents the "journalistic integrity" the ruling class is trying to stamp out of all of humanity.
His ability to stand by his principals is truly inspiring.
C99, my refuge from an insane world. #ForceTheVote
his persecution has been
relentless. my favorite WikiLeaks motto is: 'We Open Governments.'
but we can't have that, can we? 'putting people at risk' (even if no one was ever harmed) is
justification enough, and as jen robinson said: 'were there such a report, we would know, and in any event, even if any had, his and WikiLeaks' first amendment rights are (supposed to be) sacrosanct.
but all of a sudden on WikiLeaks on twitter, it's all: 'i abhor him! freedom of the press!' (peter hitchens) 'love him or hate him, freedom of the press (GG; 'assange, allegedly a journalist an publisher: freedom of the press! (the duran). i read a bit on RL breaks.
but yeah, they carried this from today: 'Day 5: September 14, 2020 #AssangeCase
SEPTEMBER 14, 2020', assangedefense.org
a few squibs:
The prosecutor is relying heavily on
claims made by Assistant U.S. Attorney Gordon Kromberg. A Prosecutor Who Is Called 'Relentless'. Sami Al-Arian was trapped in a Kromberg prosecution for twelve years.
In 2016 he had Nicolas Young in his crosshairs. Young hasn't fared any better. Getting fifteen years at trial. On appeal, two of the three charges were dismissed, but on resentencing, the district court reaffirmed the fifteen year sentence.
If caught in Kromberg's web, a Muslim jaywalker could expect to serve five years.
More
1999
Fromand marie knew of
kromberg that long ago! fancy that; good on ya.
craig murray had had
some choice words about kromberg, hadn't he? sadly, in his day 3 coverage he 'd gotten some of the names confused, but what a peach of a human being he is!
Adjourned, again
Assange Hearing Day Five
2 L 2 Read for now,
but wot ho? Lewis CQ bitched to vanessa beyotch baraitser? MY time is like a guillotine, oh my stars.
Lewis was complaining about
if he'd managed to piss off
beyotch baraister a bit, let him be cheeky!
Consortium News gives a good 10 minute breakdown of Day 5
https://consortiumnews.com/2020/09/14/watch-cn-live-daily-video-report-o...
Consortium News gives a 20 minute review of day 3
Trevor Timm shot down the prosecution claims one by one, the Prosecutor was fighting above his weight class.
https://consortiumnews.com/2020/09/09/watch-cn-live-daily-video-report-o...
The following is from the text link below it (all emphasis mine)
"In the afternoon session, Trevor Timm, a trained lawyer and executive director of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, took the virtual witness stand for the defense and in sparring with prosecutor James Lewis QC on cross examination singlehandedly dismantled key parts of the government’s case."
"..Lewis then said Gordon Kromberg, an assistant U.S. attorney in Alexandria, Virginia, where Assange would be tried, declared that Assange was not a journalist. Timm said it was irrelevant because Assange had engaged in journalistic activity protected by the First Amendment.
Timm demonstrated that he understood what was in the indictment better than Lewis did.
He pointed out that Assange was not being accused of conspiring with Chelsea Manning to break a password to get documents but to help her hide her identity, an obligation of all reporters working with anonymous sources.
He said the government made out anonymous drop boxes, pioneered by WikiLeaks, to be nefarious, when about 60 media organizations, such as The New York Times, The Guardian and The Wall Street Journal use such boxes, developed by his foundation, for sources to deposit material anonymously.
Lewis was a shrunken man. All his bluster from the previous day had melted. He seemed to take it out on Magistrate Vanessa Baraitser in an argument over the time limit she imposed on him–one hour, when she gave the defense only 30 minutes.
Lewis was reduced to trying to undermine Timm’s credibility as an expert witness because he had not included Kromberg’s declaration in his written testimony. “I did not make my judgement on a government press release but what is in the indictment,” Timm said. .."
https://consortiumnews.com/2020/09/09/live-updates-day-three-assange-hea...
thanks for both,
amigo. folks who haven't been reading will no doubt find the recaps helpful. i've been reading coverage every day at kevin's shadowproof (just the written coverage), wsws, sputnik, craig murray's house..., not so much consortium news as joe lauria uses language in a way that's a bit less comprehensible to me. and ugh, the new site is so well...ugly. ; ) but at least not every hyperlink is red now.
hope you have the time to listen (if in stages) to jen, kristinn, and joseph, too. i wasn't familiar with farrell.
Thanks, and I've watched/read all those you named
er...i hope you'd edited in all that
text. if not, it may be time for me to stop blogging altogether. i'd forgotten RT, and t'was they who had the whole speech john pilger had given. so i clicked in, and they have a column or two up. crikey, they swap out content to beat the band. pretty pro-police place now, always MMA fighters (M & F), too often a waste of time.
RT = MMA fan magazine
Yeah, no kidding. I've got their app on my phone, but lately I've considered deleting it. Used to use it quite often, now ...not so much. If anything there's lately even more of the Peyton Place-type coverage of the MMA fighters and/or their romantic interests ...or their various threats to fellow fighters, etc. If you could possibly turn off all that MMA stuff, you'd still be left with the pro-police/pro-authority content.
It's become a real wasteland and it's happened in a relatively short time. Wonder just who they're aiming this stuff at? Of course, I'm getting the American feed. Are feeds for other countries similar? Dunno.
it used to be a place
where subversives to the Imperium could get published, as w/ russian expert prof. stephen cohen, a few others. now they actually do carry a lot of caitlin johnstone's columns, so...there's that.
but i did dig this title from author neil clark there: ‘Julian Assange (and imperialism) on trial: In an age of ‘lockdowns,’ is there any hope left for the WikiLeaks founder?’, sept. 14
he reports what various speakers had to say after RT's livestreaming, etc., but last night i was watching an episode of 'Pillars of Fire'...and all i was able to imagine is: No, they'll burn julian at the stake, just as they did to the heretics in the 13th century.
this is wsws's coverage from yesterday's morning debacle. the quotes from prosecutor Lewis CQ show the flavor and vector --> of the Witch Trial too well, as do the final paragraphs:.
'Assange would not have fair US trial, witness tells Old Bailey', By Thomas Scripps, 15 September 2020
on later edit: as per thomas scripps at wsws:
meaning: judge vanessa baraitser has already begun slowly burning julian at the stake. gawd's blood.
day 6 kevin gosztola, 20 min video
[video:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZVN3Ory5pHU]
he sees a bit of light now?
just a reminder: there will likely be months of appeals after a decision, but last i'd heard, dementia joe had called Julian Assange: 'a high-tech terrorist'.
for posterity on a dead thread:
the penny finally dropped. i'd been dicing veg in the kitchen as i'd listened, and kevin had announced tomorrow's defense witnesses at the end, positing that QS james lewis wouldn't want to commit elder abuse on 88-yr-old daniel ellsberg, but also tomorrow: editor of der spiegel Goetz who'd worked with wikiLeaks, but no guardian nor wapo editors, of course.
yes, it may be illuminating testimony.