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WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange expected to be freed in US plea deal

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Julian Assange has reached a plea deal with US prosecutors that would end the WikiLeaks founder’s long-running legal saga over leaked documents and ultimately allow him to walk free after years of incarceration and confinement.  

According to court filings on Monday, Assange has agreed with the US Department of Justice to plead guilty to one charge of conspiracy to obtain and disseminate classified information linked to US national defence, in connection with what prosecutors have described as one of the biggest compromises of classified material in the country’s history. 

He is scheduled to submit his plea on Wednesday morning in federal court in Saipan, which is part of the Northern Mariana Islands, a US commonwealth north of Guam. Sentencing is set to happen immediately after the plea submission. Assange has already served 62 months in a UK jail and prosecutors are not seeking additional imprisonment.

The Saipan court was chosen because Assange declined to carry out proceedings in the continental US. It is also geographically near his home country of Australia, where he is expected to travel after the proceedings conclude, according to a letter from prosecutors to the court.

The agreement aims to resolve what has been a remarkable stand-off between the DoJ and Assange, who has become one of the world’s most controversial advocates for government transparency and whose legal troubles have spanned multiple countries. 

A lawyer representing Assange did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Assange founded WikiLeaks in 2006 as a platform to share leaked materials shedding what he believed was a necessary light on secretive and powerful organisations, including governments and corporations. 

In 2010 the site published a cache of military and secret documents leaked by Chelsea Manning, the former US army intelligence analyst who, while serving in Iraq, copied hundreds of thousands of military incident logs and about 250,000 diplomatic cables.

WikiLeaks drew international praise for what it had revealed about US operations in places such as Afghanistan and Iraq. But critics, including the US government, said it violated the law and put people’s lives and safety at risk.

Sweden in 2010 issued an arrest warrant for Assange linked to a rape investigation, and he left that country for the UK. In 2012, following a ruling from the UK’s highest court to allow his extradition to Sweden, Ecuador granted Assange asylum after he entered its London embassy. In 2019, when Ecuador revoked Assange’s asylum status, London police dragged him out of the embassy to arrest him at the request of the DoJ. 

US prosecutors sought to extradite Assange to face an indictment unsealed in 2019 charging him with conspiracy to commit computer intrusion over agreeing to break a password to a classified US government computer. He was later hit with additional espionage charges, including obtaining and disclosing national defence information.

Assange has been incarcerated at Belmarsh prison, a high-security facility in south-east London. He has been fighting efforts to bring him to the US to face the charges, arguing he faces a lifetime in prison if convicted, and in May, the High Court in London gave him permission to appeal against an order allowing his extradition.    

Manning was charged and convicted of espionage in connection with the WikiLeaks materials. Her 35-year prison sentence was commuted by Barack Obama shortly before he left the White House in 2017.

Read the full article here

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