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Julian Assange Free and Back To Australia On USA Plea Deal 25th June 2024
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Julian Assange at Stansted Airport on 24 June. Pic: WikiLeaks
Stella Assange backed the Dead Man's Switch project.
Assange was filmed boarding a plane and is due to appear at a court on Saipan, one of the Northern Mariana Islands, on Tuesday.
The hearing is taking place in the US Commonwealth territory because of Assange's opposition to travelling to one of the 50 American states and the court's proximity to Australia, his country of birth
Julian Assange begins journey to freedom
Assange was filmed boarding a plane and is due to appear at a court on Saipan, one of the Northern Mariana Islands, on Tuesday.
The hearing is taking place in the US Commonwealth territory because of Assange's opposition to travelling to one of the 50 American states and the court's proximity to Australia, his country of birth
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Julian Assange plea deal: what does it mean for the WikiLeaks founder, and what happens now?
Julian Assange plea deal: what does it mean and what happens now? (rte.ie)
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Analysis: The deal sets a practical, if not legal, precedent that a publisher can be convicted under the Espionage Act in the US
By Holly Cullen, The University of Western Australia
After years of appeals and litigation, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has entered into a plea deal with the US government, according to court documents. He was facing one count of computer misuse and multiple counts of espionage stemming from his work with WikiLeaks, publishing sensitive US government documents provided by Chelsea Manning. The US government had repeatedly claimed that Assange's actions risked its national security.
Documents filed in the US Federal Court in Saipan, in the Northern Mariana Islands, show Assange will plead guilty to one count under the US Espionage Act. The rest of the charges would be dropped and the request for his extradition to the US would be withdrawn. The US is yet to publicly confirm the deal.
The deal is subject to a hearing and sentencing in Saipan on Wednesday morning, where outlets are reporting Assange will appear in person. He's been released from London's Belmarsh prison, with WikiLeaks sharing vision of him en route to London's Stansted Airport.
What's in the deal?
Assange has been granted bail by the UK High Court. Upon his guilty plea, Assange will be sentenced to 62 months in prison: time he's already served in Belmarsh. It puts an end to all the ongoing legal action, including the proceedings in the UK High Court and the extradition order from the UK Home Secretary.
The plea deal seems largely consistent with rumours circulating earlier this year. It was widely assumed Assange would plead guilty to one charge, which was expected to be a misdemeanour charge of mishandling documents rather than under the US Espionage Act. The initial rumours also indicated that he would be able to complete the process remotely, whereas he will appear in person before the court.
This is significant as it's a national security offence for which he's served more than five years behind bars. This will place limitations on his future travel, including to the US, which is unlikely to grant him a visa. It also sets a practical precedent, if not necessarily a legal one, that a publisher can be convicted under the Espionage Act in the US. While the devil will be in the details of the deal, this is what many journalists were afraid of.
It means somebody who did nothing more than receive and publish information has been convicted under major US national security laws. If the deal had been about the Computer Misuse Act, this scenario wouldn't have arisen. The concern may be that now it's been done once, it could happen again.
Why is there a deal after all this time?
We may never know the US' full reasoning, but there are several possibilities as to why it decided to go to a plea deal and not continue with litigation.
The Australian government has been pushing hard for a couple of years now for this case to end. The case for stopping prosecution has had bipartisan support here. Although not confirming or denying the existence of a plea deal just yet, a spokesperson for the government reiterated Prime Minister Anthony Albanese's position that there was "nothing to be gained from his [Assange's] continued incarceration".
The fact the government has been consistent on this for about two years has changed the political environment for this prosecution. There's a growing consensus in the US, even among some Republicans, that it's not in the public interest to continue.
The UK general election will be held next week, and given the anticipated change of government there, the extradition order may have been reconsidered anyway. All of this would likely have informed the US' cost-benefit analysis to ultimately bring the Assange saga to an end.
What happens now?
Following the hearing in Saipan, Assange will be free to return to Australia. The court was chosen because of Assange's opposition to travelling to the continental US, as well as its proximity to Australia.
Assange will likely find it difficult to travel in the future, given his serious criminal conviction. This may also apply in the UK, where he has also been convicted of absconding from bail, for which he was sentenced to a year's imprisonment.
Looking further ahead, it's entirely possible he will be pardoned by the US president, whomever it ends up being after the US election in November. The US allows much more discretion than most in the use of pardons.
For now, Assange will face court in Saipan and come home to Australia, albeit with a serious criminal record.
Holly Cullen is Adjunct Professor in Law at The University of Western Australia. This article was originally published by The Conversation.
Artist Andrei Molodkin at his studio in France
He added: "The owners are really happy… the owner of the Picasso is very, very happy.
"Every day was a big stress. If something happened (to Assange)… we understood we would have to destroy (the art)."
Andrei Molodkin claims his plan to destroy 16 works of art - worth more than $45m - with an "extremely corrosive" substance if Assange died in prison played a role in securing his release.
An artist who planned to use acid to destroy famous masterpieces if Julian Assange died in prison believes the threat helped secure the WikiLeaks founder's release.
Andrei Molodkin claimed earlier this year he had gathered 16 works of art - estimated to be worth more than $45m (£35m) - in a safe with an "extremely corrosive" substance.
"Picasso can vary from 10,000 to 100 million but I don't think it's the number of zeros that makes it more relevant when we're talking about a human life," Mr Abbondio said.
Speaking in February, Mrs Assange called the Dead Man's Switch "a work of art", while describing her husband's imprisonment as "an act of real terrorism against democracy".
"Picasso can vary from 10,000 to 100 million but I don't think it's the number of zeros that makes it more relevant when we're talking about a human life," Mr Abbondio said.
Speaking in February, Mrs Assange called the Dead Man's Switch "a work of art", while describing her husband's imprisonment as "an act of real terrorism against democracy".
Julian Assange: Timeline of WikiLeaks founder's 13-year legal battle for freedom
The road leading to Assange leaving prison and the UK has been full of legal battles, campaigns and diplomatic tensions for him and his family.
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has left prison in the UK after reaching a plea deal with the US over espionage charges.
The 52-year-old Australian national has agreed to plead guilty to a single criminal count of conspiring to obtain and disclose classified US national defence documents.
In a post on X, WikiLeaks said Assange left Belmarsh prison on Monday morning, having been there for 1,901 days.
By the afternoon he was at Stansted Airport where he boarded a plane and left the UK.
His plea and sentencing is scheduled for Wednesday morning, local time in Saipan, the largest island in the Northern Mariana Islands. Once accepted by a judge, he will be free to return to Australia.
Julian Assange at Stansted Airport on 24 June. Pic: WikiLeaks
The road leading to this point has been full of legal battles, campaigns and diplomatic tensions for Assange and his family.
Here is a timeline of some of the key events that has led to Assange's release:
2006
Assange founds WikiLeaks, a website aimed at leakers of classified or sensitive information.
5 April 2010
WikiLeaks releases leaked video from a US helicopter allegedly showing an air strike that killed civilians in Baghdad, including two Reuters news staff.
25 July 2010
WikiLeaks releases more than 91,000 documents, mostly secret US military reports about the Afghanistan war.
August 2010
An arrest warrant is issued over separate allegations of rape and molestation after Assange's visit to Sweden. He is questioned in Stockholm and denies the claims.
October 2010
WikiLeaks releases 400,000 classified military files chronicling the Iraq war. The next month, it releases thousands of US diplomatic cables, including views of foreign leaders and blunt assessments of security threats.
18 November 2010
Interpol put out an international arrest warrant after a Swedish court approves request to detain him on suspicion of rape, sexual molestation and unlawful coercion.
A wanted page for Assange on the Interpol website
December
Assange is remanded in custody after an extradition hearing in London. He later gets bail but is kept behind bars when Swedish authorities challenge the decision.
Conditional bail is reinstated at the High Court when supporters offer up £240,000.
February 2011
The extradition request from Sweden is granted, as a UK judge says it would not breach Assange's human rights. The WikiLeaks founder vows to fight the ruling.
In November of the same year, he loses a High Court appeal against his extradition.
14 June 2012
The UK's Supreme Court rejects Assange's final appeal.
19 June 2012
Assange steps inside the Ecuadorian embassy in Knightsbridge, central London.
Assange on the balcony of the Ecuadorian Embassy in London in 2017
He requests political asylum, fearing he could be eventually end up being extradited to the US to potentially face decades behind bars.
16 August 2012
Ecuador grants the asylum request, meaning Assange can be assured police are not able to enter and arrest him - as long as he doesn't leave the building - because of special diplomatic immunity rules.
Metropolitan Police guard the building in case he tries to flee to the safe haven of the South American country.
December 2014
American linguist and philosopher Noam Chomsky and Hollywood actor John Cusack visit Assange at the embassy.
By this point, Assange's team have lost an appeal in Sweden over the decision to uphold the arrest warrant.
Other famous visitors during his time in the embassy include ex-Baywatch star Pamela Anderson - who dropped by on a number of occasions with a spot of lunch, Lady Gaga, Eric Cantona and civil rights campaigner Jesse Jackson.
Nigel Farage is also spotted leaving the embassy at this time but refused to say whether he had met Assange.
13 August 2015
The inquiry into the sexual molestation and unlawful coercion allegations is dropped after a legal time limit passes - but the more serious rape allegation stands and the investigation remains active.
17 January 2017
Barack Obama, the outgoing US president, decides to free WikiLeaks' key whistleblower Chelsea Manning.
19 May 2017
Sweden's prosecutor says the rape case against Assange has been dropped.
Speaking on the balcony of the Ecuadorian embassy at the time, Assange said Sweden's decision to drop the rape claim investigation was an "important victory".
11 April 2019
Assange is arrested at the Ecuadorian embassy after the Ecuadorian ambassador "invited British police" inside.
1 May 2019
Judge Deborah Taylor jails Assange for 50 weeks for breaching his bail by seeking asylum in the embassy at Southwark Crown Court. At the hearing, a letter is passed to the judge in which Assange apologises "unreservedly" to anyone who feels he "disrespected them" by the way he "pursued" his case.
13 May 2019
Swedish prosecutors announce they are reopening the 2010 rape investigation against Assange.
11 June 2019
The US Justice Department formally asks Britain to extradite Assange to the US to face charges that he conspired to hack government computers and violated an espionage law.
19 November 2019
Prosecutors in Sweden drop their case completely, citing a lack of evidence and that too much time has passed since the alleged offences.
13 January 2020
Assange appears at Westminster Magistrates' Court, where he is backed by dozens of supporters - including rapper MIA.
12 April 2020
It is revealed Assange secretly fathered two children while he was living in the Ecuadorian embassy. His partner Stella Moris, issues a plea for his release, amid fears for his health.
24 June 2020
The US Department of Justice issues an updated 18-count indictment over Assange's alleged role in "one of the largest compromises of classified information in the history of the United States".
4 January 2021
A British judge rules that Assange should not be extradited to the US to face criminal charges, due to fears he may take his own life in prison. The US government says it will appeal the decision, adding that he could serve his jail time in Australia.
10 December 2021
The US government wins its High Court bid to overturn the judge's decision not to extradite Assange.
23 March 2022
Assange marries his fiancee Stella at Belmarsh prison. She wears a dress designed by Dame Vivienne Westwood.
Stella Assange departs Belmarsh after her wedding.
17 June 2022
The UK government approves the extradition of Assange to the US, where he faces espionage charges.
The then-home secretary Priti Patel signs the extradition order for the WikiLeaks founder. He is given 14 days to appeal the decision.
June 2023
Judge at London's High Court rules Assange has no legal grounds to appeal.
20 February 2024
Assange launches what his supporters say will be his final attempt to prevent extradition.
26 March 2024
The extradition is put on hold when the court says the US must provide assurances that Assange will not face a potential death penalty.
10 April 2024
President Joe Biden says the US is "considering" dropping its prosecution of Assange following a request from Australia. The country's prime minister Anthony Albanese backed a motion calling for Assange's return to his birth country.
20 May 2024
The High Court gives Assange permission to launch a full appeal against his extradition on grounds that, as a foreign national on trial, he might not be able to rely on the First Amendment right to free speech.
24 June 2024
The US Justice Department and Assange reveal a deal in which he will plead guilty to one criminal count and be sentenced to time served.
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