Major Media Outlets Condemn Continued Prosecution of Julian Assange
The open letter warns the indictment “threatens to undermine America’s First Amendment and the freedom of the press.”

The editors and publishers of The New York Times and several major European media outlets have released an open letter condemning America's prosecution of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
Assange faces 19 federal charges of espionage and hacking for his alleged role in helping Chelsea Manning get access to classified military reports from the Iraq and Afghan wars. Those charges were filed in 2019, but a superseding indictment from the Justice Department filed in June 2020 added more details and accusations (but not new charges), claiming Assange recruited hackers and directed them to targets. The Department of Justice's position is that Assange is a hacker, not a journalist.
Assange is currently in jail in England awaiting extradition to the United States for prosecution. He's been fighting the extradition but has been losing.
The New York Times and several other media outlets have published some of the information that WikiLeaks has uncovered, and today's letter provides a somewhat qualified defense that Assange is a journalist and that his publishing of leaked classified information is not a crime: "This indictment sets a dangerous precedent, and threatens to undermine America's First Amendment and the freedom of the press."
The Times is joined in the letter by The Guardian in England, Le Monde in France, Der Spiegel in Germany, and El País in Spain. They were the five media outlets that in 2010 published many details of the hundreds of thousands of confidential cables from the U.S. Department of State about hidden corruption and diplomatic scandals.
The letter includes a paragraph critiquing Assange's judgment in releasing unredacted copies of these cables in 2011. It says "some of [the outlets] are concerned about the allegations in the indictment that he attempted to aid in computer intrusion of a classified database." This is in reference to Assange allegedly helping Manning attempt to crack encryption on classified military files, according to the Justice Department indictment.
In other words, the editors and publishers are willing to acknowledge that Assange might not be just a passive recipient of classified information but deliberately sought it out. But many major media outlets (particularly the five that signed the document) have recognized the public value and public concern of the information that Assange illegally obtained and published it.
Leaders at The New York Times and The Washington Post have long opposed Assange's indictment for the potential chilling effect. If Assange can be imprisoned for publishing classified documents, then couldn't the editors of the Times or the Post or any other media outlet who also published these documents face the same fate?
In order to get around these First Amendment concerns, the justification for Assange's prosecution is that he doesn't qualify as a journalist. He is not a "legitimate" journalist. The problem with that argument is that it gives the government the authority to define who does and does not qualify as a journalist, which itself would seem like a violation of the First Amendment's protections. There is no "legitimacy" distinction in the First Amendment. Journalism is an activity, not just a career. Many, many people have engaged in various forms of journalistic activities without being credentialed reporters for media outlets.
These media outlets grasp this truth, even as the U.S. government is trying to insist that Assange is somehow different from the rest of the press. They know full well that Assange's prosecution, if successful, will eventually be used to try to prosecute other journalists for publishing classified information. Some lawmakers have recognized this as a problem and have introduced legislation that attempts to clarify that the Espionage Act doesn't apply to journalists and whistleblowers.
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That’s what he gets for insulting our Intelligence.
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"You take on the intelligence community? They have six ways from Sunday of getting back at you"
- Chuck Schumer
Sure Astrange is being persecuted and ought to be left alone.
But there’s something mighty rich about the NYT, WaPo, and “several major European media outlets” pretending to defend press freedom after all they’ve done to undermine the entirety of the First Amendment. Their ire would be better redirected against themselves, the UN, and (in the case of the "several major European media outlets"), their own governments, including the unrepresentative EU.
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State law or laws that corner journalism must be opposed because journalists have the right and freedom to publish a story that actually happened, whatever it is, so that it cannot be disputed from the contents of a news story News Media
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how is Assange liable for the security shortfalls of our intelligence agencies?
Isn't that a bit like tunneling into a bank and insisting you can't be held responsible because of how cheap the concrete floor was?
No, it isn’t. He didn’t do the tunneling.
If the accusation isn't bullshit, in this analogy, he just provided the plan and rented the equipment. If he went from depository and disseminator of information to helping acquire information he went into a very different business.
Everybody has their job. The intel agencies have to maintain secrets and prevent people with access from leaking it. That's their job, they take it seriously, and if someone with access does misuse it they can and should be punished. The job of the press is to publish information. The stuff that Assange published was most certainly in the public interest, very straightforward journalism. In the Assange case the government is trying to hang the failure of DoD security to do their job on the head of Assange. The fact that Assange may have openly requested classified intel should not be illegal. It is not illegal to provide general instructions on hacking techniques, security educators do it every day. The combination of these two activities should also not be illegal. Manning didn't sneak Assange inside to help him leak stuff, and Assange didn't hack in to anything. I don't even think the Biden admin wants to prosecute Assange, but they don't mind punishing him by being party to his indefinite detention in the UK.
A government determination of "the public interest" should not be part of a First Amendment analysis any more than the government's determination of who is or is not a "journalist" should be. The press (whoever that may be) is equally free to publish information not in the public interest.
However, you raise some interesting factual questions about exactly what Assange did during the course of his clearly journalistic activities. Did he simply "request" Manning to steal confidential information from the government (a la Trump's request to Russia re Hillary's emails), or did he actively take part in the hacking himself? Certainly, a person can be both a journalist and a hacker at the same time. One activity is constitutionally protected, but the other is not--and the former cannot be used as a shield against the former. These questions should be answered.
Assange should not be denied his day in court.
"If Assange can be imprisoned for publishing classified documents, then couldn't the editors of the Times or the Post or any other media outlet who also published these documents face the same fate?"
Only if they don't pay the proper "tribute."
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It's interesting these people pretend to be principled, but said nothing when the Biden DOJ raided and threatened Project Veritas even though PV didn't publish the diary contents they were given. The left doesn't believe any rule applies to people they hate.
That’s different because PV are icky conservatives. Do you even Reason bro?
The FBI being in the business of tracking down lost diaries and all.
Agreed.
It is about time. I wondered why the beneficiaries and active participants in the leaks had been silent for so long, hanging Assange out to dry. His prosecution is totalitarian and the details are a horrifying story, especially following his great efforts to redact and protect individuals.
Assange's only fortune in all this is that he has not been assassinated yet, though apparently not for lack of trying, according to his wife.
His "great efforts" seem to have gone unnoticed by his beneficiaries:
"WikiLeaks has published its full archive of 251,000 secret US diplomatic cables, without redactions, potentially exposing thousands of individuals named in the documents to detention, harm or putting their lives in danger.
The move has been strongly condemned by the five previous media partners – the Guardian, New York Times, El Pais, Der Spiegel and Le Monde – who have worked with WikiLeaks publishing carefully selected and redacted documents.
"We deplore the decision of WikiLeaks to publish the unredacted state department cables, which may put sources at risk," the organisations said in a joint statement.
"Our previous dealings with WikiLeaks were on the clear basis that we would only publish cables which had been subjected to a thorough joint editing and clearance process. We will continue to defend our previous collaborative publishing endeavour. We cannot defend the needless publication of the complete data – indeed, we are united in condemning it.
"The decision to publish by Julian Assange was his, and his alone.""
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2011/sep/02/wikileaks-publishes-cache-unredacted-cables
I'd love to hear the take at the NYT as to what's different about the Assange case now vs when the indictment was launched years ago.
Was it just that nobody on "team Russiagate" could draw attention to the Trump administration prosecuting one of the key players in the "interference" with the 2016 election? Hardly appropriate treatement for a key ally if there really was the kind of elaborate conspiracy for the purpose of putting a "puppet regime" into power (unless they thought they'd figured out the other side's playbook for how to have people die from "medical conditions/accidents/suicides" at the most convenient times).