The Trentonian (Trenton, NJ)

Assange appeals to court against extraditio­n to U.S.

- By Frank Griffiths

LONDON » WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has appealed against the British’s government decision last month to order his extraditio­n to the U.S.

The appeal was filed Friday at the High Court, the latest twist in a decadelong legal saga sparked by his website’s publicatio­n of classified U.S. documents. No further details about the appeal were immediatel­y available.

Assange’s supporters staged protests before his 51st birthday this weekend, with his wife Stella Assange among people who gathered outside the Home Office on Friday to call for his release from prison.

Julian Assange has battled in British courts for years to avoid being sent to the U.S., where he faces 17 charges of espionage and one charge of computer misuse.

American prosecutor­s say the Australian citizen helped U.S. Army intelligen­ce analyst Chelsea Manning steal classified diplomatic cables and military files that WikiLeaks later published, putting lives at risk.

To his supporters, Assange is a secrecy-busting journalist who exposed U.S. military wrongdoing in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

A British court ruled in April that Assange could be sent to face trial in the U.S., sending the case to the United Kingdom government for a decision. Home Secretary Priti Patel signed an order on June 17 authorizin­g Assange’s extraditio­n.

The Australian government has been under mounting pressure to intervene, but last month Prime Minister Anthony Albanese rejected calls for him to publicly demand that Washington drop its prosecutio­n of Assange.

Assange’s supporters and lawyers maintain he was acting as a journalist and is entitled to First Amendment protection­s of freedom of speech. They argue that the case is politicall­y motivated, that he would face inhumane treatment and be unable to get a fair trial in the U.S.

Assange remains in London’s high-security Belmarsh Prison, where he has been since he was arrested in 2019 for skipping bail during a separate legal battle. Before that, he spent seven years inside the Ecuadorian Embassy in London to avoid extraditio­n to Sweden to face allegation­s of rape and sexual assault.

Sweden dropped the sexcrimes investigat­ions in November 2019 because so much time had elapsed, but British judges have kept Assange in prison pending the outcome of the extraditio­n case.

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