Julian Assange Lays Out His Case Against US Extradition
Fifteen long months have passed since Julian Assange was physically pulled out of London's Ecuadorean embassy and taken to the United Kingdom's Belmarsh prison. There, he's since awaited an even grimmer prospect: Extradition to the US to face charges of a criminal hacking conspiracy and violations of the Espionage Act. Now his lawyers have laid out a preview of their full case against that extradition—from the argument that the charges pose an unprecedented threat to press freedom to what his doctors describe as evidence that Assange is at high risk of self-harm if he ends up incarcerated in America.
Ahead of Assange's extradition hearing, which began in London today and is expected to last for several weeks, both prosecutors and the WikiLeaks founder's defense lawyers submitted "skeleton arguments" to the court that lay out in new detail the central arguments they plan to make in Assange's extradition case. The defense document in particular reveals Assange's most complete response yet to the US indictments against him, expanding on an opening statement his attorneys released in February and including snippets of still-unpublished written testimony from a long list of witnesses, from free speech advocates and media scholars to four doctors who have assessed Assange's mental health. Assange's lawyers point to what they describe as flaws in the US indictment against their client and the political nature of the prosecution. The document also includes the warnings of psychiatrists who have diagnosed Assange with Asperger's, depression, and post-traumatic stress disorder, all of which they say could lead him to harm himself if he's extradited into the American judicial system.