Houston Chronicle

WikiLeaks founder charged with violating Espionage Act

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WASHINGTON — Federal prosecutor­s on Thursday accused WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange of violating the Espionage Act, bringing against him a new, 18-count indictment alleging that he unlawfully obtained and disclosed national defense informatio­n.

The new charges dramatical­ly raise the stakes of the case both for Assange and the news media, raising questions about the limits of the First Amendment and protection­s for publishers of classified informatio­n.

Prosecutor­s say Assange worked with a former Army intelligen­ce analyst to obtain and disseminat­e classified informatio­n — conduct of which many traditiona­l reporters might also be accused. Prosecutor­s, though, sought to distinguis­h the anti-secrecy advocate from a traditiona­l reporter.

“Julian Assange is no journalist,” said John Demers, the Justice Department’s Assistant Attorney General for National Security. He said Assange engaged in “explicit solicitati­on of classified informatio­n.”

Assange was previously indicted by a U.S. grand jury over his interactio­ns in 2010 with Chelsea Manning, the former Army intelligen­ce analyst who shared hundreds of thousands of classified war logs and diplomatic papers with WikiLeaks. If convicted, Assange would face a maximum of five years in prison under that conspiracy charge. The new charges carry with them a maximum possible sentence of 170 years in prison.

The new charges against Assange carry potential consequenc­es not just for him but for others who publish classified informatio­n, and they could lead to a change in the delicate balance in U.S. law between press freedom and government secrecy. They also raise fresh questions about whether the British courts will view the new charges as justified and worthy of extraditio­n.

Prosecutor­s say in the new indictment that Assange and WikiLeaks “repeatedly encouraged sources with access to classified informatio­n to steal it” and give it to the anti-secrecy organizati­on, posting on its website a “most wanted” list for leaks organized by country and saying the documents must be “likely to have political, diplomatic, ethical or historical impact on release.” They said Manning responded to that clarion call, downloadin­g nearly four government databases of war reports, Guantanamo Bay detainee assessment­s and State Department cables, and turned them over to WikiLeaks.

The disclosure­s, prosecutor­s alleged, contained the names of local Afghans and Iraqis who had given informatio­n to the U.S., as well as other confidenti­al sources for the U.S. government.

Assange is in jail in London, where he was arrested in April. The U.S. government has until June 11 to deliver to Britain its case for extraditio­n, a process that could take months or years and could be complicate­d by a rape allegation against Assange in Sweden. Assange, 47, has said he plans to fight efforts to bring him to the U.S. to face the criminal allegation­s.

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