USA TODAY International Edition

Chelsea Manning, who leaked 700,000 documents, is freed

Army private served seven of 35 years

- Jane Onyanga- Omara and Tom Vanden Brook

Pvt. Chelsea Manning was released from Fort Leavenwort­h military prison Wednesday after serving seven years of a 35- year sentence for leaking thousands of diplomatic cables and other secret documents to WikiLeaks.

The transgende­r soldier, 29, who entered prison as a man named Bradley Manning, will remain on active duty, unpaid but eligible for health care and other benefits while her court- martial conviction remains under appeal, said Dave Foster, an Army spokesman. She will have access to commissari­es and military exchanges.

“After another anxious four months of waiting, the day has finally arrived,” Manning said in a statement after her release. “I am looking forward to so much! Whatever is ahead of me is far more important than the past. I’m figuring things out right now — which is exciting, awkward, fun and all new for me.”

She tweeted, “First Steps of Freedom!!” above a photo showing tennis shoe- clad feet — presumably hers — taking a step on a wood floor.

Nancy Hollander and Vincent Ward, Manning’s clemency and appellate lawyers, said in a joint statement that she “has expressed her deep appreciati­on to her supporters and looks forward to the future.”

Cynthia Smith, an Army spokespers­on, confirmed Manning left Fort Leavenwort­h’s U. S. Disciplina­ry Barracks, but Smith declined to provide additional informatio­n because of privacy act restrictio­ns.

Manning was convicted of leaking more than 700,000 classified documents, including battlefiel­d reports on Iraq and Afghanista­n and State Department cables, while working as an intelligen­ce analyst in Iraq. Manning said the leaks were intended to expose wrongdoing.

The soldier was arrested outside a U. S. Army base in Iraq in May 2010. The sentence was commuted in the final days of the Obama administra­tion, a move that infuriated some in the military, as well as Donald Trump. She would have been eligible for parole in six years.

Chase Strangio, staff attorney with the American Civil Liberties Union, said that despite solitary confinemen­t, Manning “has emerged with grace, resilience and an inspiring amount of love for others.”

The Pulse Films production company announced at the Cannes Film Festival in France that Manning would be filmed for a documentar­y upon her release Wednesday.

Manning’s mother, Susan, told The Guardian that it will be very hard for Manning to adjust after prison but that she will stay in Maryland where she has family to look out for her.

“Chelsea is so intelligen­t and talented, I hope she now has the chance to go to college to complete her studies and to do and be whatever she wants,” Susan Manning told the British newspaper. “My message to Chelsea? Two words: ‘ Go, girl!’ ”

The Courage Foundation, an internatio­nal organizati­on that supports people who place themselves at risk to contribute to historical records, Reporters Without Borders Germany and the German- based non- profit group Wau Holland Foundation, which says it supports moral courage in the digital realm, started a fundraisin­g campaign Wednesday to help Manning pay for her legal appeal.

 ?? AP ?? Pvt. Chelsea Manning was formerly known as Bradley.
AP Pvt. Chelsea Manning was formerly known as Bradley.

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