The Biden Administration Is Bent on Setting an Alarming Precedent by Prosecuting Julian Assange
The WikiLeaks founder already has spent as much time in a London prison as DOJ lawyers say he is likely to serve if convicted in the U.S.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been imprisoned in London for nearly five years, pending extradition to the United States so he can be prosecuted for violating the Espionage Act by publishing classified information. Since that amount of time behind bars is about the same as the four-to-six-year prison term that Justice Department lawyers have said Assange would be likely to serve if convicted, you might think the Biden administration would be ready to reconsider this case, especially since it poses an alarming threat to freedom of the press. Instead, the U.S. government's lawyers are back in London for yet another hearing, which Assange's attorneys describe as a last-ditch attempt to block his extradition.
Recognizing the First Amendment implications, the Obama administration declined to prosecute Assange for obtaining and disclosing confidential State Department cables and military files leaked by former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning in 2010. After all, leading news organizations in the United States and around the world had published stories based on the same documents, and those acts of journalism likewise could be construed as felonies once this precedent was established. So could the routine practices of reporters who cover national security, which commonly involves divulging information that the government prefers to keep secret.
Despite those concerns, the Trump administration decided that Assange should be locked up for doing things that The New York Times et al. do on a regular basis. All but one of the 17 counts in Assange's latest federal indictment relate to obtaining or disclosing "national defense information," which is punishable by up to 10 years in prison. Theoretically, Assange could face 160 years in prison for those counts alone, although the government's lawyers say it probably would be more like the amount of time he already has served in the United Kingdom. Manning herself—who, unlike Assange, violated the terms of her government employment—received a 35-year sentence but was released after seven years thanks to Barack Obama's commutation.
"Some say that Assange is a journalist and that he should be immune from prosecution for these actions," John Demers, then the head of the Justice Department's National Security Division, told reporters after the Assange indictment was announced in May 2019. "The department takes seriously the role of journalists in our democracy and we thank you for it. It is not and has never been the department's policy to target them for reporting." There is no need to worry, Demers suggested, because Assange is "no journalist."
This line of argument misconstrues the "freedom…of the press" guaranteed by the First Amendment, which applies to mass communication generally, not just the speech of people whom the government deigns to recognize as journalists. Demers' assurance is similar to the reasoning that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit recently applied in counterintuitively concluding that treating journalism as a crime is not "obviously unconstitutional."
That case involved Priscilla Villarreal, a Laredo, Texas, gadfly and citizen journalist who was arrested in 2017 for violating Section 39.06(c) of the Texas Penal Code. Under that previously obscure law, a person who "solicits or receives" information that "has not been made public" from a government official "with intent to obtain a benefit" commits a third-degree felony, punishable by two to 10 years in prison.
Texas defines "benefit" as "anything reasonably regarded as economic gain or advantage." According to the arrest affidavits, the "benefit" that Villarreal sought was a boost in Facebook traffic. Section 39.06(c) defines "information that has not been made public" as "any information to which the public does not generally have access" that is also "prohibited from disclosure" under the Texas Public Information Act. The arrest affidavits did not address the latter requirement at all.
Like the Espionage Act, Section 39.06(c) purportedly criminalizes common reporting practices—in this case, obtaining information about a public suicide and a fatal car accident from a "backchannel source" at the local police department. Writing for the 5th Circuit majority in Villarreal v. Laredo, Judge Edith Jones did not try to hide her disdain for Villarreal, an independent, uncredentialed journalist who files her unfiltered reports on Facebook instead of publishing vetted and edited stories in a "mainstream, legitimate" news outlet.
"Villarreal and others portray her as a martyr for the sake of journalism," Jones wrote. "That is inappropriate. She could have followed Texas law, or challenged that law in court, before reporting nonpublic information from the backchannel source. By skirting Texas law, Villarreal revealed information that could have severely emotionally harmed the families of decedents and interfered with ongoing investigations. Mainstream, legitimate media outlets routinely withhold the identity of accident victims or those who committed suicide until public officials or family members release that information publicly. Villarreal sought to capitalize on others' tragedies to propel her reputation and career."
Although Jones implies that Villarreal's arrest was prompted by concern for "the families of decedents," Villarreal plausibly argued that it was actually punishment for her outspoken criticism of local law enforcement agencies. In any case, there is no First Amendment exception for reporting that might offend or disturb people. And Jones' characterization of Villarreal's work as "capitaliz[ing] on others' tragedies to propel her reputation and career" is an apt, if cynical, description of what many journalists do, even when they work for "mainstream, legitimate media outlets." Jones apparently is unfamiliar with the bread and butter of local news organizations and has never heard the expression, "If it bleeds, it leads."
The seven dissenting judges saw the situation differently. "If the First Amendment means anything," Judge James C. Ho wrote in a dissent joined by five of his colleagues, "surely it means that citizens have the right to question or criticize public officials without fear of imprisonment." Judge James E. Graves Jr. likewise complained that "the majority opinion will permit government officials to retaliate against speech while hiding behind cherry-picked state statutes."
Judge Stephen A. Higginson noted that Thomas Paine, who wrote "the pro-independence pamphlet that historian Gordon Wood describes as 'the most incendiary and popular pamphlet of the entire revolutionary era,'" was, like Villarreal, a "citizen-journalist." Upholding "the text of the Constitution, as well as the values and history that it reflects," he said, "the Supreme Court guarantees the First Amendment right of engaged citizen-journalists, like Paine, to interrogate the government." Jones, by contrast, presumably would view Paine as disreputable, since he did not work for a "mainstream, legitimate media outlet."
Assange's critics, including some professional journalists, have proposed a similar distinction, arguing that he does not deserve the First Amendment's protection because he is not a "real" journalist. But whatever you might think of Assange's opinions, his tactics, or the care he exercised in publishing classified material, that distinction is not grounded in the Constitution and will not hold in practice.
The editors and publishers of The New York Times, The Guardian, Le Monde, Der Spiegel, and El País recognized as much in 2022, when they urged the Justice Department to drop the case against Assange. In ignoring that advice, the Biden administration seems bent on establishing a dangerous precedent that replaces the First Amendment's guarantee with the whims of prosecutors.
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One of Trump's biggest fuckups. Not that Biden is any better.
A lot of what we call Trumps fuckups are more likely actions taken on advise of advisors the GOP pushed into his cabinet. This has vengeance of the war hawks written all over it.
There was a period in the first year when he took all that bad advise. He eventually got rid of the worst of his advisors but he demonstrated his blind spot on taking advise from supposed professionals all the way through up to and including advise from the CDC. Which was when the swamp really took advantage of him.
We have to remember while Trump is likely the closest thing to a Libertarian we've seen in the office in recent history he still isn't a Libertarian.
He had a handful of points he was strong on in the election but unfortunately his lack of knowing the ins and outs of the swamp made him easy to sway toward a bad decision. He was born and raised in New York City, no matter how much he rails about the denizens of the swamp deep down like most left leaning east coasters he trusts experts too much.
I hope he has learned his lesson and if he wins this time he will be a lot more firm on who he chooses to advise him and be far less trusting of the mass of Washington DC experts.
Nonsense re: Assange. Craig Murray of the UK sat in on every day of the previous trial and recorded the prosecution stating on record and under oath that President Trump himself took a direct and keen interest in seeing Assange indicted. Sorry, but sometimes Orange Man actually is bad.
Yeah, because prosecutors never ever lie under oath.
Unless Trump said in in a public place where it was recorded my money remains on the Swamp trying to use him every time they could.
You remind me of those Communists who on being shipped off to the camps thought that if only Stalin knew what was being done in his name, etc. etc. not realising that it was all done in his name,
Of course, what's happening is the cogdiss that arises when Biden continues a Trump policy. Biden bad, Trump good, so hoe can...? answer, it can't really have been Trump.
You remind of propagandist collaborators in every murderous authoritarian regime in modern history.
Likewise.
But only one of these is likely true.
I actually agree and he got rolled on covid for the same reasons. Hopefully he will be a lot more cynical about experts if he gets elected this year.
He didn't get rolled he constantly interfered with the scientists, even firing the one who was in charge of the vaccine efforts. Ss s result, a half million Americans died unnecessarily. Maybe more.
Indeed, until Trump's miraculous conversion just before the 2016 election, Trump was a loyal Democrat. An very well-connected Democrat, in fact, as his father had been for many years. NY real estate development during the previous Century seems to have required a certain level of corruption which necessitated such "connections".
Trump always picks the "best people". We know that not from his record of constant losing (which is quite impressive), but because he repeatedly tells us so. So for you to question his superior abilities in this area seems rather presumptions if not disloyal.
Why was Trump the only President who was so easily "rolled", but certainly won't be next time if he is somehow re-elected? You guys are big on second chances, eh?
Trump ran with the GOP and he got saddled with every GOP loyal stooge they could push on him. He chose very few of his cabinet as evinced by his constant battles with them leaking and undermining his administration. He spent a lot of his time trying to get rid of those GOP traitors.
Next time, we shall see. Running with a major party has its costs, one of them is getting saddled with a lot of party loyalists. The GOP was angry that Trump beat their system so they wanted to get even. They did by saddling him with all those loyalists who stabbed him in the back.
Most of the time the candidate is a party loyalist and having a cabinet of party loyalists isn't a big deal. They all pretty much agree on the direction the party wants to go. So when we say "The Biden Administration" we are referring to a relatively cohesive group of like minded individuals working on the same plan.
When we speak of the Trump administration we are talking about a group of backstabbing weasels who wanted to see their boss crash and burn. Major difference.
By 2020, Trump had gotten rid of the Republicans and replaced them with the kind of people who told him it was ok to stage a coup if you lose an election.
Trump is simultaneously the Alpha Male and the Alpha Victim.
Anything that goes wrong? Not his fault! Anything that goes well? The Greatest President in History!
Trump should have pardoned him.
He would have been impeached for that too though.
Undoubtedly, the Wat Hawk Neocons would have joined in on that in a heart beat.
A President cannot be "impeached" for issuing a pardon--it's specifically listed in the Constitution as one of the President's powers.
Congress can run an impeachment on a president for how he parts his hair. That's exactly what was said by legal experts when Clinton was being impeached for abuse of power and getting a blow job.
You have already proven you will believe anything. There's really no need to wallow in it.
They just impeached Mayorkis for committing no crime at all.
Justice department good/justice department bad oscillation wave goin' brrrrrrrrrr.
FFS:
former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning in 2010
Facts. shmacts. Titles. Schmitles.
"Former East German American Rocket scientist Maria von Braun became the Father of Modern Rocketry in 1944." - Jacob Sullum
lol, you new here? to earth i mean
T's unilateral decisions were so unilateral.
>>you might think the Biden administration would be ready to reconsider this case, especially since it poses an alarming threat to freedom of the press.
the fuck do you think B or any of the tyrant Left gives a shit about your press freedom?
As long as the press reports what they're told to report it's all good.
Obama and Biden have both used the IC to go after journalists. Not sure why they think Joe cares about the press.
What are a few prison sentences for wrong think when compared to MEAN TWEETS against goodthink journolists.
You think Biden and his crew are "the left"? LMAO
Are you a "Doctor" like Dr. Jill?
Biden’s a vegetable, but the people running this administration are absolutely of the left.
You mean his caregivers?
Does Bidens crew include Corn Pop and the other colorful charachters of Biden's imaginary past?
Thanks for reading Sullum so I don’t have to.
I’m not the least bit surprised at this stupid take. Which is why I don’t bother reading his drivel.
Maybe they’ll replace him with AI.
A replacement would be artificial stupidity or perhaps idiocy.
The Biden administration is going after Elon Musk in clear retaliation of him buying twitter and exposing government chicanery.
Navalny's wife, likely a tailor-of-Panama type of figure, getting the princess treatment in the press today.
Yet this kind of flew under the radar.
it didn't happen and it's a good thing.
Timing was really convenient too. She was in Munich with her new boyfriend at the "security" conference where she got a round of applause. All smiles and no tears.
This isn't a slippery slope, and this doesn't pose a threat to the freedom of the press. Have you actually read the indictment? There was an ongoing conspiracy between Assange and Manning, and Assange helped Manning to steal the files.
This is absolutely nothing like Villareal v. Laredo.
Oh no, not a conspiracy!
An agreement to commit crimes together is called a "conspiracy." It's been illegal for hundreds of years. There are thoughtful arguments about whether conspiracies should be illegal in and of themselves and whether they should be punished as harshly as they are, but my point was simply that this conduct was very obviously illegal, and there's no risk that anyone with a brain cell should be worried that they might accidentally be doing what Assange did.
You put a lot of faith in a government face-saving indictment.
A Trump DoJ indictment, FWIW...
Cog dis for the MAGA cult.
Wow in the indictment you say? Well a government indictment is absolutely guaranteed factual. I think we should eliminate this whole trial thing altogether. Just have prosecutors indict people and send them immediately to the gulag.
Nobody knows what they can prove; that's why we have trials. The indictment tells us if there's prosecutorial overreach, though, because it tells us what conduct they think is criminal.
Remind me what happened to Manning?
This is absolutely nothing like Villareal v. Laredo.
Right. Villarreal is yet another "not too local" story that Jacob "TDS" Sullum and Reason are trying to make a thing by shouting "MUH 1A!" while Assange and his media org have been getting deplatformed by various governments since 2008, and had anyone and everyone from advisers to informants jailed and held since 2006.
Assange has been hounded across several continents over the course of over a decade after years of breaking stories of international importance, Villarreal spent a hot minute in jail for being an anti-social Facebook Live retard and who didn't get to raid public coffers because the cops screwed up.
The real problem is that Manning got off so lightly. Releasing military files during a conflict should be treason and it should have been shot as a spy.
Traitors in the government who spy on their own citizens should be shot too.
(After a fair trial, of course.)
Politicians who foment insurrection was well. Like DJT.
Yeah letting the proles know what their government is doing should be a capital offense.
The only way to beat Russia is to become them.
Manning didn't let people know dick.
The "Collateral Murder" video had already been disclosed in the media before Manning set foot on Middle Eastern soil. The idea that Reuters lost two journalists and just said, "Meh." until Manning developed a conscience for them is just retarded.
I hadn't heard that the video had previously been released, but the video itself didn't portray half of what it was being promoted as showing. It was no smoking gun (so to speak).
Well, the government did pay for his castration.
I guess I’ll be the first to mention J6.
And Fvck you sarc
Assange is a hero and is being railroaded.
Manning is a man, Sullum. Refer to him as such.
Especially in the past when referencing things done by and as Bradley. Maybe whether Sullum chooses to respect the wishes of a person he's probably never met is a matter of personal choice, but ascribing actions done by Manning as Bradley to Chelsea is just Sullum forsaking journalistic integrity to indicate his desire to suck Manning's dick while punching birthing persons (nee women) in the cunt. Especially given all the "X (formerly known as Twitter)" bullshit.
Even by their own standards Chelsea Manning being born Bradley Manning is a fact, otherwise they aren't trans, just stuck between plain stupid and insane.
Our Nazi-Regime out marking everything "classified" and then prosecuting, censoring and indoctrinating the press.
Exactly what part of what Manning and Assange released (or have every published) was of National Security concern? As far as I know it was just exposing government incompetence. Is that really what needs to be prosecuted? Don't 'trash talk' the KING?
you might think the Biden administration would be ready to reconsider this case, especially since it poses an alarming threat to freedom of the press
I would think the Biden administration relishes trampling on the 1A with jackboots. Why would you think anything different?
Assange is not being prosecuted for journalism. Holding him accountable for his crimes isn't a dangerous precedent. He chose to delay his trial.
Julian Assange has already served more time that he deserves and should simply be pardoned.
I think the Espionage Act charges (17x) should be dropped, and he should only face trial on the remaining computer hacking charge, and even if convicted, there may be no reason for him to spend any more time in prison.
But he has to face court. It's a bad precedent to allow people to avoid justice by jumping bail and self-imprisoning themselves in foreign embassies of their choice.
Correct
It would be in the best interests of all Americans if Democrats would view issues like this from an American “Oath of Office” (loyalty oath) vantage point.
Trump and Biden’s former cabinet member - General Mark Milley - gave one of the best retirement speeches in 30 years accurately explaining the Oath of Office. Assange is on the Pro-Mark Milley side of this issue.
Milley said:
“We don’t take an oath to a country. We don’t take an oath to a tribe. We don’t take an oath to a religion. We don’t take an oath to a king or a queen or a tyrant or a dictator. And we don’t take an oath to a wannabe dictator (apparently directed at Trump). We don’t take an oath to an individual. We take an oath to the Constitution.
The American oath of office benefits every issue Democrats support from marriage equality, outlawing warrantless Stop & Frisk searches of mostly African-Americans to Bush’s illegal torture practiced (banned by Ronald Reagan’s treaty and federal law).
Biden means well but is wrong. Biden should pardon and make whole all the whistleblowers loyal to their oath of office. This is the employment contract of all government officials from presidents, to intel agencies, the military to the local police chief. Biden and Democrats are on the wrong side of these issues.
I agree. Assange should only be prosecuted for the original computer hacking charge, rather than the 17 flimsy Espionage Act charges Trump tacked on later.
But everything that Trump does is good! Don't you know that?
Ironically, Milley committed undeniable insubordination by working with a foreign power in opposition to his commander-in-chief.
His trial should be an early thing done by Trump.
Working against the Commander in Chief who was commiting treason himself.
The DoJ should offer Assange a plea deal. Plead guilty to hacking, sentence is time served, all other charges dropped, and deported from the US.
I have never understood how someone can commit espionage against a country to which one owes no allegiance.
The UK sentenced Eamon de Valera to death for treason after the Easter Rising. Under UK law at the time he was a US citizen not a UK subject because he was born in the US to a UK subject mother but not a UK subject father. De Valera owed no allegiance to the UK. The clueless UK government eventually realized that hanging Irish Nationalists when they needed then to support the war effort was a bad idea. And they also realized that hanging a US Citizen for treason against the UK wasn't going to win friends in the US. So De Valera lived and the rest is history. Assange is no De Valera -- I think he is pure scum -- but it isn't a crime to be a scumbag.