'Real' Journalists Recognize That Prosecuting Julian Assange Poses a Grave Threat to Freedom of the Press
The Justice Department’s discretion is the only thing that protects them from a similar fate.

"Publishing is not a crime," the editors and publishers of The New York Times and four leading European news outlets say in an open letter released on Monday. While that statement might seem uncontroversial, the U.S. Department of Justice disagrees, as evidenced by its prosecution of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange for obtaining and disseminating classified material.
In urging the Justice Department to drop that case, the Times, The Guardian, Le Monde, Der Spiegel, and El País implicitly acknowledge that freedom of the press is meaningless when the government decides who is allowed to exercise it. Although that point also might seem obvious, journalists who take a dim view of Assange have long argued that attempting to imprison him for divulging government secrets poses no threat to their work because he does not qualify as a member of their profession.
That position is profoundly ahistorical. As scholars such as UCLA law professor Eugene Volokh have shown, the "freedom…of the press" guaranteed by the First Amendment protects your right to communicate with the public through the printed word and other tools of mass communication, regardless of whether you do that for a living or work for a mainstream news organization.
The Assange exception to the First Amendment is also dangerously shortsighted. As the Times et al. emphasize, the conduct at the center of the case against him is indistinguishable from what professional journalists do every day when they reveal information that the government wants to conceal.
Twelve years ago, those newspapers published a series of startling stories based on confidential State Department cables and military files that Assange had obtained from former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning. Those documents, the open letter notes, "disclosed corruption, diplomatic scandals and spy affairs on an international scale."
As the Times put it at the time, the records told "the unvarnished story of how the government makes its biggest decisions, the decisions that cost the country most heavily in lives and money." The revelations, Times reporter Charlie Savage notes, included "dossiers about Guantánamo Bay detainees being held without trial" and "logs of significant events in the Afghanistan and Iraq wars" that showed "civilian casualties were higher than official estimates."
All but one of the 17 counts in the latest federal indictment of Assange relate to obtaining or disclosing such "national defense information," a felony punishable by up to 10 years in prison under the Espionage Act of 1917. Once the U.S. has completed his extradition from the United Kingdom, Assange will face a maximum sentence of 160 years on those counts alone.
Journalists who reported the information that Assange obtained are guilty of the same crimes, a daunting fact that poses an obvious threat to freedom of the press. Largely for that reason, no publisher of previously secret government information has ever been prosecuted under the Espionage Act until now, and the Obama administration, which hardly looked kindly on Assange, declined to establish that chilling precedent.
The Trump administration took a different view. John Demers, then head of the Justice Department's National Security Division, assured reporters there was no cause for alarm, because Assange is "no journalist," and it "has never been the department's policy to target" officially recognized journalists "for reporting."
The Times et al. are not blind to Assange's deviations from journalistic norms, which included his alleged involvement in Manning's unauthorized use of government computers and his publication of unredacted documents that may have endangered intelligence sources. But they recognize that the Justice Department's position means prosecutorial discretion is the only thing that protects "real" journalists, however that category is defined, from a similar fate.
So do Reps. Ro Khanna (D‒Calif.) and Thomas Massie (R‒Ky.), who last summer introduced a bill that would amend the Espionage Act to protect journalists and whistleblowers. "The ongoing attempts to prosecute journalists like Julian Assange under the Espionage Act," Massie said, "should be opposed by all who wish to safeguard our constitutional rights."
© Copyright 2022 by Creators Syndicate Inc.
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If Assange had popped up on the scene after ~2015, nearly everything he would have shared online would have been labeled as "misinformation", a Russian Op, he'd have been deplatformed everywhere, and then slowly toodled off into internet obscurity like so much Alex Jones and Milo Yininininininopolous.
Oh, and "Real" journalists would have demanded it be so.
Especially if government asks them to.
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Fuck off, rape-defending scum. Assange has admitted to multiple violent rapes. His defence was only ever that he found a legal loophole meaning his rapes weren't criminal, not that he disputed the facts. He held down crying, struggling women while they begged him to stop, and forced his penis inside of him. That's what he admitted under oath. Of course, the rapes were criminal, which is why he went on the lam.
The reality is that Assange is a racist rapist who fled from justice to the fucking Ecuadorian embassy, and then made himself so unpleasant to host that even they kicked him out. He is complete and utter scum. If the US was not pursuing the charges against him that they are, he would currently be serving multiple life sentences in a Swedish prison.
The prosecution of Assange for suborning the theft of state secrets is a grave threat to journalism.
The prosecution of Project Veritas for exposing Planned Parenthood is...what?
Let alone the prosecution of PV for not reporting on Ashley Biden's diary. Funny how the progressive leftist writers of Reason haven't spilled a drop of ink on that "grave injury to journalism". Almost like they're not journalists but leftist propagandists.
How did you manage to write this article and frame it as a Trump issue .... the dude has been in hiding in the Equidorian embassy since 2012, 4 years before Trump.... and still fail to mention Project Veritas who have been targeted by the FBI for straight journalism that does not involve any state secrets, only political corruption. It seems much more on-point than vague "other publications reported on the information Assange obtained".
TDS never goes away. The only question I have is "Are there any real journalist at Reason.com?" The answer seems to be no, only politically partisan writers.
Sullum and Reason would be a lot more credible on this topic if they spoke up for Project Veritas. But they didn't and so we understand they will always find justifications to exempt conservatives from their supposed principles. They do get chutzpah bonus points for lecturing people about partisanship and patting themselves on the back for not engaging in it.
Fuck you, Reason. In an article about Assange you mention Obama exactly once in order to effectively exonerate him from having committed a TrumpCrime. Obama worked with the Brits to keep him locked up in an consulate in London, dickheads.
You people are shills and mouthpieces for certain kinds of Deep Pockets, and liberty is much lower on your corporate list of policies than enforcing the gleichshaltung. Fuckfaces.
Assange locked himself up in the Ecuadorian embassy, actually. For longer than he ever would have served in prison in Sweden (had he been convicted). Hilarious.
What, he locked himself in an embassy for charges that were never actually pursued by the Swedish cops, as a vacation? Those cops were under a Swedish court order to travel to London and interview Assange, who had offered to cooperate. Within weeks of that court order, the police dropped the charges.
Obama did prosecute more whistleblowers than anyone else. ALL people in power hate them.
Why aren't the walls closing in Sullum? You assured us that Trump was guilty of treason many times over. HE HAD CLASSIFIED NUCLEAR SECRETS!
How come he's not in jail man? Where are the walls that were surely closing in?
Why has the justice department changed the story and the document lists multiple times? The police tell us that is exactly what liars do.
If any wannbe "journalists" are wondering where the line is between journalism and computer hacking, here's a hint:
"iii. ASSANGE Agrees to Help Manning Crack a Pass-word
19. On March 8, 2010, ASSANGE told Manning that ASSANGE would have someone try to crack a password hash to enable Manning to hack into a U.S. government computer. Specifically, ASSANGE agreed to assist Manning in cracking a password hash stored on United States Department of Defense computers connected to the Secret Internet Protocol Network.
20. The encrypted password hash that Manning gave to ASSANGE to crack -- following ASSANGE's "curious eyes never run dry" comment -- was stored as a "hash value" in a computer file that was accessible only by users with administrative-level privileges. Manning did not have-administrative-level privileges, and used special software, namely a Linux operating system, to access the coinputer file and obtain the encrypted password hash that Manning then provided to ASSANGE.
21. On March 10, 2010, ASSANGE requested more information from Manning related to the encrypted password hash, because he had so far been unable to crack it. Had ASSANGE and Manning successfully cracked the encrypted password hash, Manning may have been able to log onto computers under a usemame that did not belong to Manning. Such a measure would have made it more difficult for investigators to identify Manning as the source of
unauthorized disclosures of classified information."
https://www.justice.gov/opa/press-release/file/1289641/download
So we should believe what the government says? In a press release no less...
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All the statues that get "torn down" should be replaced with Assange and Snowden statues.
Assange is not a journalist, he's an anarchist and to that I say more power to him and all the Snowden's of the world - but like they say, '...As always, should you or any of your fellow Anarchists be caught or killed, everyone will disavow any knowledge of your actions and see to it you receive fair trial before a jury of your peers...'
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