Austin American-Statesman

Chelsea Manning free after 7 years in lockup

WikiLeaks soldier is ‘looking forward to so much’ on outside.

- By Jim Suhr

The Army private who fed more than 700,000 U.S. documents to WikiLeaks is focusing on future.

Army Pvt. Chelsea Manning, spared by presidenti­al clemency from the rest of a 35-year prison term for giving classified materials to anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks, stepped out of a military lockup Wednesday and into a future she said she was eager to define.

“I’m figuring things out right now — which is exciting, awkward, fun, and all new for me,” Manning said by email hours after being released from confinemen­t at Fort Leavenwort­h, Kan., having served seven years behind bars for one of the largest leaks of classified informatio­n in U.S. history.

“I am looking forward to so much! Whatever is ahead of me is far more important than the past,” added Manning, 29.

Manning’s immediate plans, including living

arrangemen­ts, remained unclear. The Oklahoma native had previously tweeted that she planned to move to Maryland, where she has an aunt, but her attorneys have cited security con- cerns in refusing to make public specifics about her release or where she was headed. The Army is allow

ing her to live where she pleases — still on active duty

but under a special, unpaid status.

Manning relished her newfound freedom, posting on social media photos of her lunch — “So, (I’m) already enjoying my first hot, greasy pizza,” she declared of the slice of pepperoni — and her feet in sneakers, with the caption, “First steps of free- dom!!”

Manning, who is transgende­r and was known as Bradley Manning before she transition­ed in prison, was convicted in 2013 of 20 counts, including six Espi- onage Act violations, theft and computer fraud. She was acquitted of the most serious charge of aiding the enemy.

Manning, a former intel- ligence analyst in Iraq, has acknowledg­ed leaking the materials, including more than 700,000 military and State Department docu- ments, along with battle- field video.

Manning said she wanted to expose what she considered to be the U.S. military’s disregard of the effects of war on civilians and that she released informatio­n that she didn’t believe would harm the U.S.

Critics said the leaks laid bare some of the nation’s most sensitive secrets and endangered informatio­n sources, prompting the State Department to help some of those people move to protect their safety. Several ambassador­s were recalled, expelled or reassigned because of embarrassi­ng disclosure­s.

President Barack Obama’s decision in January to commute Manning’s sentence to about seven years, including the time she spent locked up before being convicted, drew strong criticism from members of Congress and others, with Republican House Speaker Paul Ryan calling the move “just outrageous.”

Her attorneys have said Manning was subjected to prison violence, and they argued the military mistreated her by requiring her to serve her sentence in an all-male lockup, restrictin­g her physical and mental health care, and not allowing her to keep a feminine haircut.

‘Whatever is ahead of me is ... more important than the past.’ Pvt. Chelsea Manning In email after release

 ??  ??
 ?? REX SHUTTERSTO­CK / U.S. ARMY / ZUMA PRESS ?? Pvt. Chelsea Manning was released from prison Wednesday after seven years behind bars. Her immediate living arrangemen­ts remained unclear.
REX SHUTTERSTO­CK / U.S. ARMY / ZUMA PRESS Pvt. Chelsea Manning was released from prison Wednesday after seven years behind bars. Her immediate living arrangemen­ts remained unclear.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States