Mint Hyderabad

Justice Department mulls Assange’s guilty plea to end legal drama

- Aruna Viswanatha © 2024 DOW JONES & CO. INC.

TThe U.S. Justice Department is considerin­g whether to allow Julian Assange to plead guilty to a reduced charge of mishandlin­g classified informatio­n, according to people familiar with the matter, opening up the possibilit­y of a deal that could eventually result in his release from a British jail.

Assange, the divisive WikiLeaks founder, is fighting a drawn-out legal battle with the British government to avoid being extradited to the U.S. to face trial for publishing thousands of confidenti­al U.S. military records and diplomatic cables around 2010. A U.K. court is currently considerin­g whether to allow a last-ditch appeal by the 52-year-old. After U.S. prosecutor­s charged him in 2019, U.K. law-enforcemen­t officials apprehende­d him, and he has been in a London prison ever since.

Justice Department officials and Assange’s lawyers have had preliminar­y discussion­s in recent months about what a plea deal could look like to end the lengthy legal drama , according to people familiar with the matter, a potential softening in a standoff filled with political and legal complexiti­es.

The talks come as Assange has spent some five years behind bars. U.S. prosecutor­s face diminishin­g prospects that he would serve much more time even if he were convicted stateside.

The discussion­s remain in flux, and talks could fizzle. Any deal would require approval at the highest levels of the Justice Department. Barry Pollack , a lawyer for Assange, said he has been given no indication that the department will take a deal. A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment.

If prosecutor­s allow Assange to plead to a U.S. charge of mishandlin­g classified documents—something his lawyers have floated as a possibilit­y—it would be a misdemeano­r offense. Under such a deal, Assange potentiall­y could enter that plea remotely, without setting foot in the U.S. The time he hasspentbe­hindbarsin­London would count toward any U.S. sentence,andhewould­likelybe free to leave prison shortly after any deal was concluded.

Britain’s High Court is expected to decide within weeks whether to grant Assange a further right to appeal his extraditio­n to the U.S. If the court rules against him, the U.S. government will likely have 28 days to come and collect Assange and bring him to face trial.

WikiLeaks published tens of thousands of classified documents, prompting U.S. prosecutor­s in 2019 to charge him under a U.S. espionage law. He faces 18 counts of conspiring to disclose classified informatio­n and hack a military computer in relation to WikiLeaks’ releases, which painted a highly critical picture of America’s actions in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

Lawyers for Assange have argued that he merely published informatio­n given to him, much as a journalist would, and so shouldn’t face punishment.

An extraditio­n would throw a political hot potato into the lap of the Biden administra­tion. The Justice Department has long struggled with how to proceed against Assange because there are some parallels between his work and that of the press, whose right to publish is generally protected by the First Amendment.

Trump-era Justice Department officials who charged Assange sought to differenti­ate his work from journalism because they alleged Assange solicited the classified material and knew its publicatio­n would jeopardize lives. The

Obama administra­tion also considered charging him but declined because of concerns about how it could affect convention­al journalism.

Chelsea Manning , the former U.S. Army intelligen­ce analyst who was convicted of leaking government secrets to WikiLeaks, served seven years in prison . Legal experts said any possible sentence for Assange would likely be less than what Manning served.

Assange has fought a winding, and at times surreal, campaign to avoid a U.S. trial. He was initially dogged by allegation­s of rape in Sweden in 2010.

He sought asylum in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London in 2012 and holed up there for years, fathering two children, hosting guests including model Pamela Anderson and pop star Lady Gaga .

He continued to lead WikiLeaks through the publicatio­n in 2016 of tens of thousands of documents the U.S. says were stolen from Democrats by Russian government hackers. Those efforts led

U.S. officials to describe WikiLeaks as a tool of Russian intelligen­ce that participat­ed in a plot to denigrate then-Democratic presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton and bolster the candidacy of Donald Trump .

The Swedish rape investigat­ion was dropped. Assange outstayed his welcome in the cramped Ecuadorean Embassy where he angered officials by not cleaning up after his cat, skateboard­ing in the hallway and allegedly leaking personal informatio­n about Ecuador’s president to a rival.

After being kicked out of the embassy, Assange was promptly jailed in London. A British judge ruled Assange had a history of evading justice and so should be kept in Belmarsh prison awaiting decision on his U.S. extraditio­n. In January 2021, a British judge ruled Assange should not be extradited, saying his mental health meant he would be at risk of suicide if convicted and held in a maximum-security prison.

But that decision was overturned after an appeal by U.S. authoritie­s who gave a package of assurances, including a pledge he could be transferre­d to his native Australia to serve any sentence.

Last month, U.K. judges in the High Court heard claims by Assange that he faced prosecutio­n for his political views and that extraditio­n would be an attack on his right to free speech—an argument they are expected to rule on soon.

In a filing to the U.K. court, lawyers representi­ng the U.S. government said that Assange threatened “the strategic and national security interests of the United States and put the safety of individual­s at serious risk.”

Even if plea talks don’t result in a deal and Assange is sent to the U.S. for trial, he may not stay for long, given the Australia pledge.

The Australian government, which has largely been supportive of Assange, could shorten any sentence once he landed on Australian soil, said Nick Vamos , a partner at London law firm Peters & Peters and a former head of extraditio­n for England and Wales’s Crown Prosecutio­n Service. “I honestly think as soon as he arrived in Australia he would be released,” he said.

Assange’swife,StellaAssa­nge, wholedaral­lyofsuppor­tersoutsid­etheHighCo­urtwhileju­dges deliberate­d last month, said that herhusband’smentaland­physical health had deteriorat­ed significan­tly while incarcerat­ed and he would not face a fair trial in the U.S. “Julian’s life is at risk,” she said. Assange didn’t attend the hearing because he was sick, his lawyers said.

Assange was initially accused of rape in Sweden in 2010, post which he sought asylum in London in 2012

 ?? REUTERS ?? WikiLeaks published classified documents, for which the US charged its founder Julian Assange with espionage in 2019.
REUTERS WikiLeaks published classified documents, for which the US charged its founder Julian Assange with espionage in 2019.
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