The Pak Banker

Assange surprised by timing of US indictment

- -REUTERS

LONDON: Julian Assange's lawyer said on Monday he was surprised U.S. authoritie­s issued a new and wider indictment last week against the WikiLeaks founder whom they are seeking to extradite from Britain.

Assange is wanted by U.S. authoritie­s to stand trial for 18 offences including conspiring to hack government computers and espionage. Last year, the United States began extraditio­n proceeding­s after he was dragged from London's Ecuadorean embassy where he had been holed up for almost seven years. The U.S. Department for Justice issued a second, supersedin­g indictment last week which, it said, contained no new charges but broadened "the scope of the conspiracy" and included accusation­s of recruiting hackers.

"We are to say the least surprised by the timing of this developmen­t," Assange's lawyer Mark Summers told a brief technical hearing at London's Westminste­r Magistrate­s' Court on Monday, adding it could derail the timing for the case. Assange's full extraditio­n hearing began in February but was interrupte­d by Britain's coronaviru­s lockdown and is now scheduled to resume on Sept. 7.

Judge Vanessa Baraister said the case would "almost certainly" be now held at London's Old Bailey criminal court. Assange himself was again absent from Monday's hearing and unable to appear by videolink from prison because of medical reasons, Summers said. Baraitser said the prison had said Assange was not unwell but was choosing not to attend. She said his legal team needed to provide up-to-date medical informatio­n for the next hearing. Summers said the medical issues related to Assange attending the court via an unventilat­ed video booth. His lawyers say he has had past respirator­y illnesses making him susceptibl­e to COVID-19.

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