Los Angeles Times

Assange has outburst during hearing

Wiki Leaks founder tells British judge he and lawyers are being spied on, and he wants to participat­e in court.

- By Christina Boyle Boyle is a special correspond­ent.

LONDON — In an unusual outburst on the third day of his extraditio­n court hearing, Wiki Leaks founder Julian Assange suddenly rose from his seat and complained to the judge that he has as much involvemen­t in his own case as a spectator at the Wimbledon tennis tournament.

Assange expressed frustratio­n at the legal proceeding­s taking place inside Woolwich Crown Court in London and paranoia that his conversati­ons were being listened to.

“I can’t speak to my lawyers with any confidenti­ality,” he said, alleging there were U.S. Embassy staff members in the courtroom and pointing out the microphone­s hanging from the ceiling above him and the two prison officers sitting on either side. “This case already has enough spying on my lawyers as it is.”

Assange is facing 18 charges that he conspired with U.S. Army intelligen­ce analyst Chelsea Manning to release classified documents to the world. Judge Vanessa Baraitser is being asked to decide whether that extraditio­n is legal under the terms of a U.K.U.S. treaty.

Assange was looking visibly tired in the dock during the afternoon’s proceeding­s, repeatedly closing his eyes, and Baraitser stopped the hearing to ask if he needed help.

“I have enough difficulty concentrat­ing,” he said, addressing the judge directly instead of speaking through a legal representa­tive. “I have very little contact with my lawyers — the other party must have something like 100 times more contact hours per day than I do.”

The judge said she merely wanted to know if he was able to follow proceeding­s.

“There is no point on my concentrat­ing on anything since I’m not able to participat­e,” he replied.

“Generally speaking, defendants don’t have a voice unless and until they choose to give evidence,” Baraitser said, cutting him short. “It is completely unusual to let defendants speak for themselves especially while they’re so well and ably represente­d by their lawyers as you are.”

The hearing was adjourned so Assange’s legal team could meet with him in custody.

When they returned, Assange’s lawyer Edward Fitzgerald explained his client was finding it unfair that he could not “communicat­e with us about the issues that are arising, as they arise.”

Earlier in the day, Fitzgerald had also told the court that Assange was on medication and may need frequent breaks.

Assange sits in the dock at the back of the courtroom, behind thick glass. His lawyers said they would make an applicatio­n Thursday morning for him to sit up beside them for the remainder of the hearing.

The judge said she was happy to hear such a submission, but it was unclear how adequate security provisions would be put in place or what legal process would need to be followed.

“This is a gentle man of an intellectu­al nature. There is no reason why he shouldn’t sit with us and be able to communicat­e should he need to during the hearing,” Fitzgerald said.

Earlier in the day, Assange’s lawyers argued that he is being accused of a purely political crime, and that should keep him from being extradited to the U.S. to face trial. Fitzgerald said the U.S. government’s legal team was trying to create a double standard whereby the U.S. unequivoca­lly fights the extraditio­n of its own citizens on political grounds, but believes it is justified in asking Britain to extradite an Australian citizen for exactly that reason.

“It’s not a one-way street,” Fitzgerald said during a morning of legal arguments. He likened the 48year-old’s plight to other high-profile extraditio­n cases, including that of British intelligen­ce specialist Katharine Gun, an Iraq war whistleblo­wer, whose story was portrayed in the movie “Official Secrets” starring Keira Knightley.

Assange’s case is about “the crime of espionage directed against the national interest of the United States and therefore a classic case of a political crime,” Fitzgerald said.

Lawyers for the U.S. government say he helped Manning hack into government computers and recklessly released unredacted classified documents and diplomatic cables that put the lives of sources at risk. Assange’s defense team says he is an investigat­ive journalist who exposed war crimes.

The judge said that the court relies on U.K. law, and Britain’s Parliament removed the defense of political offense from the Extraditio­n Act in 2003. Assange’s lawyer argued that a 2007 version of the treaty still upholds the right not to be extradited for a political offense and should be applicable.

“I’m not pretending this is an easy issue,” Fitzgerald told Baraitser. “But it’s a fundamenta­l issue.

“If it’s not a terrorist case, not a violent case, then the principle you should not be extradited for a political offense is of virtually universal applicatio­n,” he added. “It dates back for more than 100 years.”

Lawyer James Lewis, representi­ng the U.S. government, disputed that analysis, saying that provision could not be applied in this context.

Assange is being held in Belmarsh prison after being arrested by British police in April on a bail violation. He had been living in London’s Ecuadorean Embassy for seven years after being granted political asylum by the country’s government. He was fighting extraditio­n to Sweden, where he was wanted for questionin­g over sexual assault claims that were later dropped.

 ?? Justin Tallis AFP/Getty Images ?? JULIAN ASSANGE on the balcony of Ecuador’s embassy in London in 2017. He is now in Belmarsh prison.
Justin Tallis AFP/Getty Images JULIAN ASSANGE on the balcony of Ecuador’s embassy in London in 2017. He is now in Belmarsh prison.

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