Daily News (Los Angeles)

Assange gets brief reprieve in the UK

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On Tuesday, the British

High Court delayed the extraditio­n of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to the United States.

Assange is facing prosecutio­n under the Espionage Act for publishing classified informatio­n.

Among Assange’s most infamous releases was a video titled “Collateral Murder,” which showed the American military firing on innocent people, including journalist­s.

In 2018, this editorial board argued against the prosecutio­n of Assange, warning that, “if officials have filed criminal charges against Assange for publishing what others obtained and gave to him, the government’s action will chill investigat­ive reporting and set the stage for serious misconduct and violations of the law to be permanentl­y concealed behind a curtain of national security secrecy.”

That indeed is what is going on, and it’s a concern shared by the British High Court, which has given the United States three weeks to make clear that Assange “is permitted to rely on the First Amendment to the United States Constituti­on (which protects free speech),” along with assurances that Assange won’t face the death penalty or be discrimina­ted against on the basis of his nationalit­y.

This editorial board continues to stand for the freedom of the press and on those grounds opposes the ongoing prosecutio­n of Assange for the mere act of publishing informatio­n the government doesn’t want out.

“Democracy depends on a robust, wide-open free press,” argued First Amendment lawyer Stephen Rohde in these pages last month. “It is shameful that the Biden administra­tion has fully embraced Trump’s prosecutio­n of Assange and is actively seeking to extradite him to the United States. Publishing informatio­n that exposes government wrongdoing is what the First Amendment is all about. The Assange prosecutio­n tests whether we can remain true to that principle. We dare not fail that test.”

We concur.

If the United States doesn’t sufficient­ly persuade the British High Court, Assange will be allowed a broader appeal in the United Kingdom. In other words, things are very much still in flux.

Either way, Assange doesn’t belong behind bars for doing what he did.

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