Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UK seeks US assurances on Assange

- SYLVIA HUI AND JILL LAWLESS Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Brian Melley and Eric Tucker of The Associated Press.

LONDON — A British court ruled Tuesday that Julian Assange can’t be extradited to the United States on espionage charges unless U.S. authoritie­s guarantee he won’t get the death penalty, giving the WikiLeaks founder a partial victory in his long legal battle over the site’s publicatio­n of classified American documents.

Two High Court judges said they would grant Assange a new appeal unless U.S. authoritie­s give further assurances within three weeks about what will happen to him. The ruling means the legal saga, which has dragged on for more than a decade, will continue — and Assange will remain inside London’s high-security Belmarsh Prison, where he has spent the past five years.

Judges Victoria Sharp and Jeremy Johnson said the U.S. must guarantee that Assange, who is Australian, “is afforded the same First Amendment protection­s as a United States citizen, and that the death penalty is not imposed.”

The judges said that if the U.S. files new assurances, “we will give the parties an opportunit­y to make further submission­s before we make a final decision on the applicatio­n for leave to appeal.” The judges said a hearing will be held May 20 if the U.S. makes those submission­s.

The U.S. Justice Department declined to comment Tuesday.

Assange’s supporters say he is a journalist protected by the First Amendment who exposed U.S. military wrongdoing in Iraq and Afghanista­n that was in the public interest.

Assange’s wife Stella Assange said the WikiLeaks founder “is being persecuted because he exposed the true cost of war in human lives.”

“The Biden administra­tion should not issue assurances. They should drop this shameful case, which should never have been brought,” she said outside the High Court in London.

The ruling follows a twoday hearing in the High Court in February, where Assange’s lawyer, Edward Fitzgerald, said American authoritie­s were seeking to punish him for WikiLeaks’ “exposure of criminalit­y on the part of the U.S. government on an unpreceden­ted scale,” including torture and killings.

The U.S. government said Assange’s actions went beyond journalism by soliciting, stealing and indiscrimi­nately publishing classified government documents that endangered many people, including Iraqis and Afghans who had helped U.S. forces.

The judges rejected six of Assange’s nine grounds of appeal, including the allegation that his prosecutio­n is political. They said that while Assange “acted out of political conviction … it does not follow however that the request for his extraditio­n is made on account of his political views.”

The judges also said Assange could not appeal based on allegation­s, made by his lawyers, that the CIA developed plans to kidnap or kill Assange during the years he spent holed up in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London to prevent him from trying to flee.

The judges said “plainly, these are allegation­s of the utmost seriousnes­s,” but concluded they had no bearing on the extraditio­n request.

“Extraditio­n would result in him being lawfully in the custody of the United States authoritie­s, and the reasons (if they can be called that) for rendition or kidnap or assassinat­ion then fall away,” the ruling said.

They accepted three grounds or appeal: the threat to Assange’s freedom of speech, Assange’s claim that he faces disadvanta­ge because he is not a U.S. citizen, and the risk he could receive the death penalty.

U.S. authoritie­s have promised Assange would not receive capital punishment, but the judges said that “nothing in the existing assurance explicitly prevents the imposition of the death penalty.”

Jennifer Robinson, one of Assange’s lawyers, said that “even if we receive the assurances, we’re not confident we can rely on them.”

Assange, 52, a computer expert, has been indicted in the U.S. on charges over Wikileaks’ publicatio­n in 2010 of hundreds of thousands of classified documents.

U.S. prosecutor­s say he conspired with U.S. army intelligen­ce analyst Chelsea Manning to hack into a Pentagon computer and release secret diplomatic cables and military files on the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

Assange faces 17 counts under the Espionage Act and one charge of computer misuse. If convicted, his lawyers say he could receive a prison term of up to 175 years, though American authoritie­s have said any sentence is likely to be much lower.

 ?? (AP/Alberto Pezzali) ?? Stella Assange, wife of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, arrives at the Royal Courts of Justice in London on Tuesday.
(AP/Alberto Pezzali) Stella Assange, wife of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, arrives at the Royal Courts of Justice in London on Tuesday.

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