U.K. Approves Extradition of Julian Assange to the U.S.
The WikiLeaks founder faces espionage charges for publishing classified U.S. information, a prosecution with serious implications for all our First Amendment protections.

Today a top British government official signed orders to send WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to the U.S. to face espionage and computer fraud charges for his role in publishing top-secret documents sent by military whistleblower Chelsea Manning.
U.K. Home Secretary Priti Patel (essentially their attorney general) approved the extradition orders, issued by a London court back in April, to permit the United States to take custody of Assange and put him on trial for 18 separate charges that have a maximum potential penalty of 175 years in federal prison.
In a statement from WikiLeaks, the organization said, "This is a dark day for Press freedom and for British democracy. Anyone in this country who cares about freedom of expression should be deeply ashamed."
If the Department of Justice actually follows through and puts Assange on trial, it will be the first time the federal government has attempted to jail an independent publisher rather than a leaker for making classified information available to the public.
Assange has been fighting extradition from London since 2012, initially attempting to evade a Swedish warrant alleging sexual assault (an investigation that subsequently closed). Assange was indicted by the Department of Justice in 2018, and then superseding charges were filed in 2019 accusing him of conspiring with Manning to disclose "national defense information."
Manning herself served seven years in federal prison for the leaks. She was sentenced to 35 years, but her sentence was commuted by then-President Barack Obama in 2017, and she was released. She was then temporarily imprisoned again in 2019 for contempt because she refused to cooperate with a federal grand jury investigating Assange.
This prosecution is and continues to serve as a stark threat to all of our First Amendment free press protections. I say "all" here because journalism is an action, not just an occupation claimed by people who call themselves "reporters" or "journalists." The distinction matters because part of the effort to justify prosecuting Assange is to insist he's not a "real" journalist and that WikiLeaks is not a "real" media outlet. But in reality, anybody who provides information to the public about what is happening is engaging in some form of journalism. There's no test for "legitimacy" for anybody engaging in journalism to be able to call on the First Amendment's press protections.
The First Amendment protects the act of journalism. That means the federal government and the Department of Justice should not have the authority to decide who does and does not count as a journalist. We are getting very close to finding out whether the United States will continue respecting such an important (and often misunderstood) component of the First Amendment the further this attempt to imprison Assange goes.
Assange gets another chance to appeal this extradition order within the next 14 days. His attorney has already said the appeal is coming. But the British government and its judges have been pretty clear that they (like the Department of Justice) don't see Assange's behavior as legitimate journalism. The only delays in the extradition so far have been because the courts were concerned that he might suffer when locked up in America's absolutely terrible federal prisons. Once they were assured that Assange would be well-treated, they expressed absolutely no concerns about sending him over.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
I'm not a big fan of Assange - I just don't like him personally, and think he's a smarmy little shit - but, I don't think he should be extradited for this. (I DO think he should have been extradited to Sweden)
If he was overseas at the time the Manning 'leak' occurred, whether he participated in it directly or not, if he didn't break any of the laws of the country he was in, how is it our jurisdiction? If he did break laws of the country he was in, shouldn't they be the ones to try and / or punish him?
We can't just claim global jurisdiction of the entire internet, can we? What would stop the EU, Russia or China or anyone else from doing the same?
I wouldn't even be surprised if the Swedish case wasn't a ruse by the Obama administration to get him in their control. We know today that the only reason Snowden is in Russia was that the US State Department deliberately stranded him there so that they could paint him as a spy.
In any case, Extradition works because of treaty law. If an American in Boston is financing the IRA, we agree to ship him to Britain for prosecution in return for them shipping us Assange. The idea that you have to be physically in a country to be committing a crime there doesn't seem to hold water. Conspiracy especially is a crime that can cross borders, which is why these sorts of extradition treaties exist in the first place.
But all that said, it is an anathema to the First Amendment that we are prosecuting this guy.
Is financing any different than merely publishing information?
I even have made $30,030 just in five weeks straightforwardly working part-time from my apartment. (res-32) Immediately when I've lost my last business, I was exhausted and luckily I found this top online task & with this I am in a position to obtain thousands directly through my home. Everybody is able to get this best career & can gain more dollars on-line going this article..> https://Www.Profit97.Com
I even have made $30,030 just in five weeks straightforwardly working part-time from my apartment. (keb_11) Immediately when I've lost my last business, I was exhausted and luckily I found this top online task & with this I am in a position to obtain thousands directly through my home. Everybody is able to get this best career &
can gain more dollars online going this article.......... http://getjobs49.tk
I wouldn't even be surprised if the Swedish case wasn't a ruse by the Obama administration to get him in their control.
I'm rather convinced that it was. Between the lack of accusations/evidence of rape-rape, the opening and closing of the investigation, the release and then call for extradition... it's pretty clear it was largely politics/legal theater. I absolutely agree that the guy's a smarmy bastard, but extraditing smarmy bastards because their girlfriends need him to take an STD test is like the worst of Title IX and red flag laws combined.
I even have made $30,030 just in five weeks straightforwardly working part-time from my apartment. (res-32) Immediately when I've lost my last business, I was exhausted and luckily I found this top online task & with this I am in a position to obtain thousands directly through my home. Everybody is able to get this best career & can gain more dollars on-line going this article..>> https://Www.Profit97.Com
"I wouldn't even be surprised if the Swedish case wasn't a ruse by the Obama administration to get him in their control"
Assange has admitted to committing a string of violent rapes. How did the US get him to do that, exactly?
He never claimed he didn't do what was alleged, his sole defence was only and ever that he found a loophole in the law that meant his rapes weren't criminal.
"We know today that the only reason Snowden is in Russia was that the US State Department deliberately stranded him there"
Get a grip. We know with absolute certainty that Snowden was a paid traitor working for China and Russia. There is, again, absolutely no doubt about that whatsoever because, again, the scrote you are defending has _publicly confessed_.
Sources (for this obvious bullshit) , please.
Assange did nothing wrong and he's not even a US citizen. This is all a sham
^ This.
A scary sham at that.
Then why did he admit to a string of violent rapes?
"Violent"?????!!!???!!???
Sources (for this obvious bullshit), please.
Not good
Assange is not an American citizen. He is an Australian Citizen and he was an overseas publisher. It would be a fairly extraordinary assertion of the reach of our law if we were to say that foreign publishers were bound by U.S. secrecy laws and it would set a very different kind of precedent. You know, the New York Times, The Washington Post they have bureaus in foreign countries. And one of the things that those reporters do is they try to pry out secrets that the Chinese might not want us to publish about their government. How would we react if China prosecuted the New York Times or one of its employees for violating Chinese secrecy laws? I think we would be apoplectic and we would say that law shouldn't apply to the New York Times and I don't think this issue has been discussed enough in the context of Assange. The hubris that it would entail for the United States to say that someone like Assange is bound by American secrecy laws.
https://constitutioncenter.org/interactive-constitution/podcast/the-julian-assange-indictment-and-the-first-amendment
From the WSJ:
“The U.K. courts have not found that it would be oppressive, unjust or an abuse of process to extradite Mr. Assange. Nor have they found that extradition would be incompatible with his human rights,” the U.K. government said Friday.
Good thing extradition would not be oppressive or unjust--don't want to violate the Global Woke Court. Perhaps if Julian came out as transgender or black...
Trying Assange for publishing things the US Government is doing, and which the government would rather you didn't know about, just might be one of the most "chilling" things to happen to the First Amendment in the history of this nation. Even if it doesn't result in a conviction,very few folks are going to risk it.
Today's Bureaucratic Dictatorship would probably jail Tom Paine.
Assange Extradited to America. Claims "I'm not from there!"
At least he is getting due process, in the open.
More than a lot of journalists get from social media.
(and the constitution guarantees our natural rights, and applies to everyone, so stuff your 'private company' bullshit)
And just for the record, Bradley Manning is a man.
well, male anyway ...
The Constitution applies to everyone, but it doesn't constrain everyone; it only constrains the government.
"She's" got some huuuuuuuuuge brass balls.
I’m a former intel officer and even I recognize that charging Assange with violating US espionage laws is like giving Jude law a ticket for exceeding California’s speed limit while driving to Scotland. This is bull s***. US law does not apply to foreigners in foreign lands.
Yup
And, per Longtobefree's post, Manning's who is and was subject to US authority when the law was broken has been pardoned.
At this point it's pretty obviously "I got better... burn her anyway!"
But if he chooses to visit either the US, or a country with an extradition agreement with the US, because he is too busy fleeing justice for his self-confessed rape spree, then he's fair game.
I even have made $30,030 just in five weeks straightforwardly working part-time from my apartment. (res-32) Immediately when I've lost my last business, I was exhausted and luckily I found this top online task & with this I am in a position to obtain thousands directly through my home. Everybody is able to get this best career & can gain more dollars on-line going this article.
.
That's what i do..>> http://oldprofits.blogspot.com
GOP majority led Senate Intel Comm Report of August 2020 on the 2016 election:
"WikiLeaks actively sought, and played, a key role in the Russian campaign, knew it was assisting a Russian intelligence influence effort. The Committee found ... that Julian Assange and WikiLeaks have benefited from Russian gov support"
"There's no test for "legitimacy" for anybody engaging in journalism to be able to call on the First Amendment's press protections."
If there were, being prosecuted by the US government for publishing something would be it.