Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Sweden drops Assange rape case

- DAVID KEYTON Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Jan M. Olsen of The Associated Press.

STOCKHOLM — Sweden on Tuesday dropped its investigat­ion into a rape accusation against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who is currently in prison in Britain, because too much time has elapsed since the accusation was made over nine years ago.

Assange, who is battling an extraditio­n attempt by the U.S. where he faces spying charges related to his WikiLeaks work, has always denied the allegation­s made against him during a visit to Stockholm in August 2010.

“Nine years have gone,” Swedish prosecutor Eve-Marie Persson said. “Time is a player in this. The oral evidence has weakened as time has passed.”

Although the victim “submitted a credible and reliable version of events,” Persson said “the memory fades for natural reasons.”

Still, Persson said her statements “have been coherent, extensive and detailed.”

Elisabeth Massi Fritz, the lawyer for the rape victim — a Swedish woman who was never identified — told Swedish broadcaste­r SVT that “the plaintiff’s informatio­n is supported by heavy written evidence plus verbal evidence in the form of doctors who examined the plaintiff.”

“To me, that would be sufficient,” she said.

“However, the current prosecutor has done a thorough and solid job and she should be commended for that,” Massi Fritz wrote according to Swedish news agency TT.

The decision comes after a ruling in June by a Swedish court that Assange should not be detained. Two months earlier, Assange was evicted from the Ecuador Embassy in London where he had been holed up for nearly seven years. He was immediatel­y arrested and is currently serving a 50-week sentence in Britain for jumping bail in 2012.

Kristinn Hrafnsson, WikiLeaks editor-in-chief, said in a tweet that the focus should now move to the “threat” that Assange has been “warning about for years: the belligeren­t prosecutio­n of the United States and the threat it poses to the First Amendment.”

Swedish authoritie­s have been investigat­ing Assange since August 2010, when two women accused him of sexual offenses. Sweden then asked Britain to extradite Assange for questionin­g, and in June 2012 he sought refuge in Ecuador’s London embassy to avoid arrest. That request was granted two months later.

After that, the investigat­ion stalled. Swedish prosecutor­s dropped the sexual misconduct case when the statute of limitation­s ran out in 2015, leaving only the rape investigat­ion.

While denying the allegation­s in Sweden, he sought asylum for protection from possible extraditio­n to the U.S. on charges.

Ecuador withdrew Assange’s asylum status in April and Assange was arrested by British police. He was sentenced in May to 50 weeks in prison for jumping bail in 2012. He remains in prison after authoritie­s ruled he was a flight risk and faces an extraditio­n hearing next year to the U.S. to face spying charges.

There, the Australian faces an 18-count indictment in the Eastern District of Virginia that accuses him of soliciting and publishing classified informatio­n and with conspiring with former Army intelligen­ce analyst Chelsea Manning to crack a Defense Department computer password.

“Time is a player in this. The oral evidence has weakened as time has passed.”

— Eve-Marie Persson, Swedish prosecutor

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