The Sentinel-Record

Wikileaks’ Assange faces charges

- ERIC TUCKER

WASHINGTON — WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange will not willingly travel to the United States to face charges filed under seal against him, one of his lawyers said Friday, foreshadow­ing a possible fight over extraditio­n for a central figure in the U.S. special counsel’s Russia-Trump investigat­ion.

Assange, who has taken cover in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, where he has been granted asylum, has speculated publicly for years that the Justice Department had brought secret criminal charges against him for revealing highly sensitive government informatio­n on his website.

That hypothesis appeared closer to reality after prosecutor­s, in an errant court filing in an unrelated case, inadverten­tly revealed the existence of sealed charges. The filing, discovered Thursday night, said the charges and arrest warrant “would need to remain sealed until Assange is arrested in connection with the charges in the criminal complaint and can therefore no longer evade or avoid arrest and extraditio­n in this matter.”

A person familiar with the matter, speaking on condition of anonymity because the case had not been made public, confirmed that charges had been filed under seal. The exact charges Assange faces and when they might be unsealed remained uncertain Friday.

Any charges against him could help illuminate whether Russia coordinate­d with the Trump campaign to sway the 2016 presidenti­al election. They also would suggest that, after years of internal Justice Department wrangling, prosecutor­s have decided to take a more aggressive tack against WikiLeaks.

A criminal case also holds the potential to expose the practices of a radical transparen­cy activist who has been under U.S. government scrutiny for years and at the center of some of the most explosive disclosure­s of stolen informatio­n in the last decade.

Those include thousands of diplomatic cables from Army Pvt. Bradley (now Chelsea) Manning, secret CIA hacking tools, and most recently and notoriousl­y, Democratic emails that were published in the weeks before the 2016 presidenti­al election and that U.S. intelligen­ce officials say had been hacked by Russia.

Special counsel Robert Mueller, who has already charged 12 Russian military intelligen­ce officers with hacking, has been investigat­ing whether any Trump associates had advance knowledge of the stolen emails.

Assange could be an important link for Mueller as he looks to establish exactly how WikiLeaks came to receive the emails, and

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States