Orlando Sentinel

Repercussi­ons for Assange arrest?

Even some critics of WikiLeaks founder see a threat to free speech in prosecutio­n

- By Raphael Satter

Groups worry what WikiLeaks founder behind bars could mean for free speech protection­s.

In a divided Washington, few causes have as much bipartisan support as prosecutin­g WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

Many Democrats seethed when the radical transparen­cy activist humiliated Hillary Clinton by publishing the content of her campaign chairman’s inbox. Most Republican­s haven’t forgiven Assange for his publicatio­n of U.S. military and intelligen­ce secrets. Much of the American media establishm­ent holds him in contempt as well.

But academics, civil rights lawyers and journalism groups worry that an attempt to put Assange behind bars could damage constituti­onal free speech protection­s, with repercussi­ons for newsrooms covering national security across the United States.

“This isn’t about Julian Assange, this is about the First Amendment and press freedom,” said Elizabeth Goitein, who co-directs the Liberty and National Security Program at the Brennan Center in New York. “You can’t support First Amendment freedoms and still support the government chipping away at those freedoms of people you don’t like.”

U.S. officials clearly have been itching to get their hands on Assange for some time. And Assange’s longtime claim that prosecutor­s secretly were preparing charges against him was vindicated late Thursday when his name accidental­ly surfaced in an apparently unrelated legal filing.

A person familiar with the situation confirmed that charges against Assange have in fact been filed under seal. The person spoke on condition of anonymity because the charges have not been publicly announced.

“A very black day for journalism” is how WikiLeaks’ recently appointed editorin-chief, Kristinn Hrafnsson, described the developmen­t during a brief interview in Reykjavik, Iceland.

The American Civil Liberties Union and a host of other groups also have voiced their disquiet.

The nature of the charges isn’t clear. Until recently, most discussion­s of prosecutin­g WikiLeaks involved the Espionage Act, a century-old law that was used to imprison former Army Pvt. Chelsea Manning, arguably WikiLeaks’ most important source.

But the act has been used so far to prosecute sources who had sworn an oath or signed a non-disclosure agreement — not publishers.

The Justice Department “has drawn a line between the people who actually steal or leak informatio­n and people who publish it,” Goitein said. “To extend that line to include people who have never in any way signed away their First Amendment rights is incredibly dangerous.”

Few discussion­s of Assange are complete without hand-wringing over whether he qualifies as a journalist. Assange insists that he is, and Hrafnsson called WikiLeaks “a legitimate journalist­ic organizati­on.” Others, such as former FBI Director James Comey, have argued the opposite, calling it a publisher of “intelligen­ce porn” and “a conduit for the Russian intelligen­ce services.”

Goitein says such distinctio­ns are irrelevant when it comes to free speech rights.

“The First Amendment doesn’t use the word ‘journalism,’ and it doesn’t apply only to journalist­s. The First Amendment protects anyone who publishes informatio­n, regardless of whether they carry the mantle of journalism,” she said.

Bastiaan Vanacker, program director for the Center for Digital Ethics and Policy at Loyola University Chicago, said it was the difficulty of separating WikiLeaks from more traditiona­l media outlets that convinced the Justice Department to shy away from pursuing Assange more aggressive­ly during Barack Obama’s presidency.

“I think the Obama administra­tion had it exactly right,” Vanacker said. “It’s just too difficult to make that distinctio­n.”

He cautioned that the leak of the sealed charges didn’t necessaril­y mean the Trump administra­tion was taking a tougher line.

“It’s very well possible that there are new facts that came to light that perhaps would give a stronger case for prosecutio­n,” he said.

In particular, he wondered if the government was pursuing Assange in connection with his publicatio­n of CIA surveillan­ce software beginning in March 2017, something Vanacker speculated WikiLeaks might have tried to leverage in a bid to secure favorable treatment from President Donald Trump.

A similar possibilit­y occurred to independen­t journalist Marcy Wheeler, who noted that Assange tried to negotiate a deal with the Trump administra­tion shortly before the CIA files started leaking.

An extortion-related prosecutio­n still would be bad news for Assange, of course, but as far as journalism in general, “that would not be as dire,” Vanacker said.

“You can’t support First Amendment freedoms and still support the government chipping away at those freedoms of people you don’t like.” Elizabeth Goitein, co-directs the Liberty and National Security Program at the Brennan Center in New York

 ?? FRANK AUGSTEIN/AP ?? WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange waves from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, where he’s been granted asylum.
FRANK AUGSTEIN/AP WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange waves from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, where he’s been granted asylum.

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