UK judge to rule on US extradition for WikiLeaks’ Assange
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange will find out
Monday whether he can be extradited from the U.K. to the U.S. to face espionage
charges over the publication of secret American military documents.
District Judge Vanessa Baraitser is due to deliver
her decision at London’s Old Bailey courthouse at 10 a.m. Monday. If she grants
the request, then Britain’s home secretary, Priti Patel, would make the final
decision.
Whichever side loses is expected to appeal, which
could lead to years more legal wrangling.
However, there’s a possibility that outside forces
may come into play that could instantly end the decade-long saga.
Stella Moris, Assange’s partner and the mother of
his two sons, has appealed to U.S. President Donald Trump via Twitter to grant
a pardon to Assange before he leaves office on Jan. 20.
And even if Trump doesn’t, there’s speculation that
his successor, Joe Biden, may take a more lenient approach to Assange’s
extradition process.
U.S. prosecutors indicted the 49-year-old Assange on
17 espionage charges and one charge of computer misuse that carry a maximum
sentence of 175 years in prison.
Lawyers acting on behalf of the U.S. government said
in their closing arguments after the four-week hearing in the fall that
Assange’s defense team had raised issues that were neither relevant nor
admissible.
“Consistently, the defense asks this court to make
findings, or act upon the submission, that the United States of America is
guilty of torture, war crimes, murder, breaches of diplomatic and international
law and that the United States of America is ‘a lawless state’,” they said.
“These submissions are not only non-justiciable in these proceedings but should
never have been made.”
Assange’s defense team argued that he is entitled to
First Amendment protections for the publication of leaked documents that
exposed U.S. military wrongdoing in Iraq and Afghanistan and that the U.S.
extradition request was politically motivated.
In their written closing arguments, Assange’s legal
team accused the U.S. of an “extraordinary, unprecedented and politicized”
prosecution that constitutes “a flagrant denial of his right to freedom of
expression and poses a fundamental threat to the freedom of the press
throughout the world.”
Defense lawyers also said Assange was suffering from
wide-ranging mental health issues, including suicidal tendencies, that could be
exacerbated if he is placed in inhospitable prison conditions in the U.S.
They said his mental health deteriorated while he
took asylum inside the Ecuadorian Embassy in London for years and that he was
diagnosed with an autism spectrum disorder. Assange jumped bail in 2012 when he
sought asylum at the embassy, where he stayed for seven years before being
evicted and arrested. He has been held at Belmarsh prison in London since April
2019.
His legal team argued that Assange would, if
extradited, likely face solitary confinement that would put him at a heightened
risk of suicide. They said if he was subsequently convicted, he would probably
be sent to the notorious ADX Supermax prison in Colorado, which is also
inhabited by Unabomber Ted Kaczynski and Mexican drug lord Joaquin “El Chapo”
Guzman.
Lawyers for the U.S. government argued that
Assange’s mental state “is patently not so severe so as to preclude
extradition.”
Assange has attracted the support of high-profile
figures, including the dissident Chinese artist Ai Weiwei and actress Pamela
Anderson.
Daniel Ellsberg, the famous U.S. whistleblower, also
came out in support, telling the hearing that they had “very comparable
political opinions.”
The 89-year-old, widely credited for helping to
bring about an end to the Vietnam War through his leaking of the Pentagon
Papers in 1971, said the American public “needed urgently to know what was
being done routinely in their name, and there was no other way for them to
learn it than by unauthorized disclosure.”
There are clear echoes between Assange and Ellsberg,
who leaked over 7,000 pages of classified documents to the press, including The
New York Times and The Washington Post. Ellsberg was subsequently put on trial
for 12 charges in connection with violations of the Espionage Act, which were
punishable by up to 115 years in prison. The charges were dismissed in 1973
because of government misconduct against him.
Assange and his legal team will be hoping that
developments in the U.S. bring an end to his ordeal if the judge grants the
U.S. extradition request.



