WikiLeaks reports that its founder, Julian Assange, was released from UK prison on bail and is in the process of returning to Australia. Court documents filed by the US Justice Department indicate that he has accepted an agreement with Washington that will see the journalist enter a guilty plea to crimes under the Espionage Act.
WikiLeaks published the following statement on X:
“Julian Assange is free. He left Belmarsh maximum security prison on the morning of 24 June, after having spent 1901 days there. He was granted bail by the High Court in London and was released at Stanstead airport during the afternoon, where he boarded a plane and departed the UK.
This is the result of a global campaign that spanned grass-roots organizers, press freedom campaigners, legislators and leaders from across the political spectrum, all the way to the United Nations. This created the space for a long period of negotiations with the US Department of Justice, leading to a deal that has not yet been formally finalized. We will provide more information as soon as possible.
After more than five years in a 2×3 meter cell, isolated 23 hours a day, he will soon reunite with his wife, Stella Assange, and their children, who have only known their father from behind bars.”
Court documents dated Tuesday that were filed in the district of the Northern Mariana Islands show Assange, in exchange for his freedom, will plead guilty to crimes that violated the Espionage Act.
NBC News reports that the journalist will first be transferred from the UK’s Belmarsh Prison to the Pacific Island US territory. From there, he will enter a guilty plea and be sentenced to 62 months in prison, which he has already served. After the proceedings, Assange will return to Australia.
The plea agreement ends an over-decade-long saga for the journalist that began in 2010 when he published troves of documents provided to him by Pvt. Chelsea Manning. Manning was convicted in 2013 under the Espionage Act and sentenced to 35 years in prison before President Obama reduced the term to seven years.
In 2012, Assange entered the Ecuadorian Embassy in London to avoid imprisonment in a US or UK jail, where he remained for seven years. In 2019, the US charged him with violations of the Espionage Act, and he was expelled from the embassy. From British courtrooms, Assange has spent the past five years battling Washington’s extradition request.
The changes were historic as the US had previously only sought to criminally punish individuals who leak information, not the journalists who publish that information. Prior to the plea agreement, Assange was facing 175 years in prison.
Civil rights groups have argued that charging publishers for violating the Espionage Act is a violation of the First Amendment. Receiving and publishing classified information is considered a standard journalistic practice.
The journalist is 52 years-old and is suffering from multiple health issues. His supporters have warned that he would not survive American prison. The United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention found in 2016 that Assange had been arbitrarily deprived of his freedom since his first arrest on December 7, 2010. In 2019, Nils Melzer, then the UN’s special rapporteur on torture, said Assange had been subjected to “psychological torture.”
As the founder of WikiLeaks, Assange published some of the most important and revealing information about the crimes and corruption within the US government. The 2010 Cablegate leakers revealed a multitude of US war crimes committed during the Iraq and Afghan wars.
Assange’s family and team are touting the plea agreement as a victory that came in part because of the tireless activism from his supporters.
Julian is free!!!!
Words cannot express our immense gratitude to YOU- yes YOU, who have all mobilised for years and years to make this come true. THANK YOU. tHANK YOU. THANK YOU.
Follow @WikiLeaks for more info soon…pic.twitter.com/gW4UWCKP44
— Stella Assange #FreeAssangeNOW (@Stella_Assange) June 25, 2024
Kyle Anzalone is the opinion editor of Antiwar.com, news editor of the Libertarian Institute, and co-host of Conflicts of Interest.
Now that he is out of the spotlight, he will need even more protection. Pompous still has a grudge against him.
Yeah, he may want to head for a country outside of the Imperial control and equipped with nukes, the only surefire thing to keep the Empire from misbehaving too badly.
The plea deal likely forces Assange to stay in Oz along with many years probation.
"equipped with nukes" Like North Korea.
Trump wanted the CIA to abduct him then have him murdered.
Trump wanted an option, and Pompeo gave him one. Luckily, Trump didn’t go with his option.
Pompeo was truly a psychopath
Probably still is.
Still is.
Tortured for showing the world truth, Julian Assange, the greatest journalist in decades, is going to be freed.
The Empire has made an example of Assange. The "duty" of journalists is to parrot whatever "news" and "information" they are told. Mouthpieces of the state will be rewarded with a luxurious life and those that seek the truth will be punished.
The Soviets would be jealous.
Julian Assange is a personification of a hero. I wish him peace, love and happiness.
It's a shame we don't have any heroes in our pathetic spineless government in Australia. Next the disgraceful way indigenous people are treated in Australia this is another great shame on our country. Plus the other great shame is being in a military alliance with the scumbags who had him locked up.
The biggest AH's on the planet. The US government.
Not to lump shames on Australia, but, your government's REMARKABLY RACIST "Australia for Australians Only" policy during COVID (and barring That Nice Tennis Player for related reasons)(and treatment of lockdown protesters) has sworn me never to vacation to Down Under.
Canada itself desperately needs a C-19 Truth & Reconciliation process, but not enough time or political house-cleaning has happened to allow it yet.
Some good news for a change!
This a great day! Way too long in coming, welcome home Julian, you're a hero in a time when we're in a great need of heroes.
I'm glad that he survived this hell, and I don't blame him for excepting any deal to save his life but what we have here is still a journalist tortured for over a decade into declaring his profession to be a crime. The empire got what it wanted, and I don't feel any safer. Thank God for Julian's life but pray for the next journalist who will be abused by this precedent.
Smash the state.
What they wanted was a hell of a lot more than this.
What they got was humiliation before the eyes of the world!
Pled guilty…
VICTORY for Assange.
The booby prize for the Empire!
Not really. Nor is it for journalism. By pleading guilty to charges under the Espionage Act, which does not apply to him, he may serve time in prison, and, it sets a precedent for other journalists.
Being a felony has consequences. Like travel restrictions.
He is being given credit for time served. And now he can say "I did it and I am not sorry." Which will hopefully encourage, not discourage, the journalists of the future, to keep uncovering truth. He can hold his head high. He paid the dues few in our modern age are willing to.
Can the US government be trusted to honour such arrangement?
Probably after so many are angry over the treatment of Trump.
Does the US now have a legal precedence for arresting journalists in the future if they do what Assange did. And if so will some journalist sue the US government for Constituional free speech violations?
Apparently, and thankfully, no. This was from Caitlin Johnson piece:
“Bruce Afran, a U.S. constitutional lawyer, told Consortium News that a plea deal does not create a legal precedent. Therefore Assange’s deal would not jeopardize journalists in the future of being prosecuted for accepting and publishing classified information from a source because of Assange’s agreeing to such a charge.”
They probably won’t because there probably won’t be another release anywhere nearly this bad again. But if they did it once they can do it again.
"Does the US now have a legal precedence for arresting journalists in the future" They don't need a legal precedence. If justice department thinks you have broken a law they can arrest you. Just like they order the arrest of this criminal felon.
Listening to Glenn Greenwood talk about his saga. I remember riding a bus & seeing a protester told a homemade sign supporting him. Commenter, thank you for reminding me about Trump's bias on this.
If Trump was such a threat to the establishment, he would have been killed or neutralized in some way. Coverage of him would be hidden (as they do with third party candidates), and he would never have walked his little feet into the white house. This is all theater. If you pay attention, the democrats are also campaigning for Trump.
I keep saying this. They prefer to have someone like Obama or Bush. But Trump gives them 99.9% of everything they want while also providing a release valve for populist anger. His enormous ego makes him very easy to manipulate and sets him up to be the fall guy when they pull the plug on the economy. That’s what they’re going to do in the next four years. And in his weakness he’ll sign away the last of our freedoms and usher in CBDC along with whatever other evils they have planned for us.
I think you are right, and it seems the proxy wars will expand into an even wider world war where martial law may occur. Will his supporters turn on him then, or will they follow their favorite Messiah? Will this demigod pretend it's all a "Marxist plot" that he is trying to fight, while actually obeying his bankster masters? (Many on the right think he was chosen by GOD to be president- haha).
Either way, we are screwed, it seems.
Most people get buffed while locked up. Looks like Julian but on some fat. Well, good that he is finally out. Should of never been locked up in the first place.
Belmarsh is a notorious torture chamber. Has been known for decades.
I don’t know about the UK, but US prisons often serve starchy crap devoid of real nutrition.
Adding: who knows what meds he has had to be on too.
Something on a shingle… Ahem. Been there, done that sh-t! But survived it and indeed I was innocent.
At Last Assange is Victoriously Free…! The plea bargain doesn't mean a damn thing at this point…! Most of the world knows he was illegally imprisoned for telling the truth…! And lastly, he is a father now and life priority comes to play…!
At least half the US population either doesn’t know who he is or thinks he’s the most evil man who ever lived. 😒
The dumb remains dumb throughout their lives even with internet-based third party news agencies and famous social media platforms…
I am happy for Assange. In his place I would have taken the plea deal. But the victory for Assange is a setback for free speech. The guilty plea will be the first time the government succeeded in convicting a journalist under the Espionage Act for publishing leaked documents. More prosecutions of other journalists are likely to follow.. Assange will probably have to give up his right to appeal the constitutionality of the government's use of the Expionage Act against him in exchange for the plea deal. After his ordeal, other journalists will be reluctant to publish secret documents. The conviction of Assange takes us further down the road to dictatorship. It means that the First Amendment only protects corporate media, evangelical Christians and supporters of Israel. Assange suffered enough. I am glad he is free. I just wish the government didn't get a conviction out of this case.
I agree but Christians aren’t protected either. They hate us because we’re independent from the state and oppose their plan to take the place of God.
It's abundantly unclear WITAS you mean with this Comment.
Are you suggesting Christianity is "hated" by the USA or its government ?
Because if you are, that is a) not evidently true, b) evidently NOT true, and c) a F**KING STUPID assertion.
The US government does a damn good many Un-Christian things.
Yes, the main problem with the US government is the lack of religious fervor. There are just way too many atheists deciding things.
I'm thinking sarcasm? If not, disregard my upvote.
Actually the Roberts and Rehnquist Supreme Courts have been very protective of the free speech rights of evangelical Christians. Most of the leading first amendment public forum cases for the past 30 years upheld the rights of evangelical Christians to speak in public forums, like after school programs. See, e.g. Lamb’s Chapel v. Center Moriches Union Free School Dist., 508 U.S. 384 (1993);
Rosenberger v. Rector and Visitors of the University of Virginia, 515 US 819 (1995); Good News Club v. Milford Central School Dist., 533 US 98 (2001).
What would the world be like if "Christians" actually walked-the-walk and practiced the tenets of Jesus Christ?
… and his wife, Stella, is right … his freedom is due to his supporters, emphatically not to Washington/London/etc respect for their own law and constitution/institutions, much less, Truth, Justice, Mercy, …
“……Assange will probably have to give up his right to appeal the constitutionality of the government's use of the Expionage Act against him in exchange for the plea deal.….”
Indeed.
Plus Assange also likely gives up all rights to a trial if he “violates” the plea agreement. He’ll also likely be on some sort of probation for years. Typically, these plea deals are a trap for the accused.
Most of those deals have probation period. If one violates the deal during the probation period, than one can be sent to prison. Given this guy history and his disrespect for the law, I will give him a 50 % chance that he will indeed break the agreeme.t
You are a f*cking disgrace to humankind. Your comments are the only ones that side with the tormentors. Be proud a$$hole.
Should the Washington Post and NYTs reporters who published Wikileaks related articles also do hard time ?
According to Assange's supporters the deal will be for time served, not a suspended sentence. If that is correct, there will be no probation. Assange will be free of the criminal justice system with no conditions. That is good news. But who will be the next independent journalist to risk 62 months in prison to publish government secrets? Probably not me.
Until the Supreme Court rules that the use of the Espionage Act against independent journalists is unconstitutional, the only way to publish leaks safely will be through the corporate MSM media.
The best way for publishing leaks safely is to migrate to a safe place before starting anything.
If Assange wants to continue his journalistic activity, he should think about migrating to Russia.
For the last 20 years, Russia has led Europe in the number of journalists murdered.
But I'd bet Assange would be safe. They'd love to rub the US' nose in dog poo any chance they get.
No one single journalist was killed by Russian state, at least, in the last 35 years.
By the Russian state or by other non-state actors (e.g. organized crime)? What point are you trying to convey here Thomas?
The point that Russia is one of the least safe places in the world for journalists.
You are living in a fantasy world.
Why, because I consider Reporters Without Borders a more credible source than some pseudonymous comments section troll?
According to fake news of the corporate media,
He will migrate and he will publish again…! This time UK atrocities…!
Good point – time served MIGHT eliminate probation. But….TBD
A plea deal does not establish legal precedent.
A plea deal is not a binding precedent. But it is a persuasive precedent. How many journalists would be willing to risk five years imprisonment to publish leaked documents? I probably wouldn’t. Would you?
Until an appellate court rules the government’s use of the Espionage Act against independent journalists is unconstitutional, Assange’s conviction will be a powerful deterrent to independent journalists and whistleblowers who can’t get their documents published in the corporate MSM.
Well it’s not a legal precedent. As for its role as an example to intimidate the press, get in line. Over 200 journalists have been massacred in Gaza, American media have been beaten, tased, arrested and lost their jobs for covering the BLM movement and many other protests. Read the records of the Committee to Protect Journalists. Also, in case you haven’t noticed, there is a massive effort to suppress social media, a form of citizen journalism. So this is a matter of power, of which law is the dutiful handmaiden. Believe me, this empire of censorship and repression is not going to hang on a plea deal.
Good news, this is one of the biggest injustices of modern times. Unexpected though, it would be interesting to know the back story about the timing of this development. Hope he has good security, I can see an "accident" or sudden illness in his future.
Now Biden can blame Trump for never allowing Assange out of prison.
"The plea bargain allows the Wikileaks founder to return to Australia after a court date in the Mariana Islands" From Wikipedia: "…are politically divided into two jurisdictions of the United States: the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands and, at the southern end of the chain, the territory of Guam. " Are you kidding?
I wonder if they’ll arrest him there and bring him to the U.S. anyway. Or even assassinate him. I wouldn’t put anything past these monsters. Although I’m guessing this whole thing was an attempt by the Biden administration to throw a bone to the left-wing base of the party that isn’t happy with his support for Israel. If that’s the case, they may truly let go of this. Of course, he could still suffer an “accident” or “sudden heart attack” once he gets home and no one would be able to prove anything.
I am so VERY HAPPY that Assange is free! FINALLY.
This man suffered so much for so many years, as they made an example out of him.
”A cell is isolation in a crowded room.”
Freedom is the cure.
What to say as those who should never have held him release him but after they have tortured him & browbeat him to the edge of sanity to make this fraudlent plea. It will fun to see some of those responsible for his ordeal end up in the Hague facing the world & a capital charge of genocide. It will come, though when & how remain elusive.
I just don’t see that happening. They will not escape the judgment day that is coming, however. What is going to happen to them for all eternity is far worse than what they did to Assange.
"It will come" Want to bet on that?
14 years he was imprisoned
Free Mumia.
Who's Mumia?
Check this out.
http://www.youtube DOT com/watch?v=KoEH24UF5DQ
Given his history of run in with the law in four different countries, I give him 4 to 5 years before he is arrested again. But this time it will be Australia problem since felons are restricted from traveling to something like 34 countries.
All were bogus charges.
I hope Assange can recover from the trauma he has been put through for being a journalist of truth. The US “just-us”system often pushes people into pleas, where otherwise they gamble their lives with a weighted system that favors prosecution and the state.
An honorable country would have dropped charges with prejudice or given a pardon.
Hopefully he has some time to enjoy life. I understand the choice he has had to make.
Well said, well said.
Now he can say "Yeah I did it, and I'm not sorry."
If Biden was an actual “decent man”, he would still pardon Assange.
Lowkey @LowkeyOnline
One of the many things Julian Assange was persecuted for was revealing that the US military held children as young as 13 in Guantanamo Bay.
6h
One of the teenagers the US held there, Talal Zahrani, was later found dead in his cell.
The US Military does the same thing the Israeli Military does, charge children with crimes and keep them in prison separated from their families.
The US sends people including kids in war zones to Guantanamo Bay and Israel sends Palestinian kids to Israeli Military prisons.
France is closer to the US than it was when W was the POTUS. It wishes it kept Devil's Island open. If it were still open, some of the Guantanamo Bay detainees would be sent there and be tortured like they are in Guantanamo Bay.