Massive Assange win on destroyed legal documents…
There is a judge in London. The British authorities with the Crown Prosecution Service must confirm whether or not the service holds information on how, when and why they deleted crucial documents on the Julian Assange case and, if they do hold such information, they must either supply it to us or deny it to us, identifying on what grounds the information is being withheld.
This order was just issued by the London First-tier Tribunal chaired by Judge Foss, in a ruling (read) that sides with our battle for truth based on the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA), the law that allows citizens access to government documents.
For more than nine years we have been trying to obtain the full documentation on the Julian Assange and WikiLeaks case, and after discovering that part of that documentation was destroyed in 2017, we have been trying to investigate why it was destroyed, to determine if there is some way to retrieve it, or if it is now permanently lost.
Judge Foss has ruled that if the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) authorities do not comply with her order by February 21st, their refusal could lead to contempt proceedings. Representing us in this legal battle since 2017 is a first-rate FOIA specialist, barrister Estelle Dehon, with the London chambers Cornerstone Barristers, who comments on Judge Foss’s ruling as follows: “The Tribunal concluded the CPS likely still holds some information explaining what took place. Hopefully that will, finally, be disclosed.”
Why the truth still matters, even if Julian Assange is no longer in prison
Julian Assange is now free: after a legal and judicial saga involving three U.S. administrations – those of Obama, Trump, and Biden – the WikiLeaks founder was allowed to leave the UK’s harshest prison, London’s Belmarsh prison, last June. After fourteen years no longer walking the streets a free man, the United States let Assange go. But not without demanding their last pound of flesh: an admission of guilt. The WikiLeaks founder was placed before a choice: either plead guilty, or risk spending the rest of his days in a maximum-security prison in the United States for publishing secret U.S. government documents revealing war crimes, torture and atrocities, from Afghanistan to Iraq to Guantanamo.
As the New York Times put it, “The agreement means that for the first time in American history, gathering and publishing information the government considers secret has been successfully treated as a crime. This new precedent will send a threatening message to national security journalists”.
But that plea deal is not only a sword of Damocles hanging over the heads of reporters should they, like Assange and his WikiLeaks colleagues, reveal state criminality in the future; it also places a tombstone on the truth for the WikiLeaks founder. Indeed, in accepting a plea agreement with the U.S. government, the Australian journalist was also forced to give up his right to uncover the facts behind his persecution using FOIA.
Assange is free, but the truth is still far away and must be sought before, with the passage of time, it is buried forever. Because it matters, and not just to him and his organization. The truth matters first of all because, although the Assange case is closed, there is no definitive confirmation that the U.S. government’s investigation into WikiLeaks is completely closed, and secondly because the persecution of WikiLeaks has been one of the most extensive in the history of Western journalism. Persecution riddled with grave abuses, from the arbitrary detention of Assange, established by the United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention,to the CIA plans to kill him, still under investigation by the Spanish judicial authority. If, in a democracy, a news organization and its founder can suffer abuses of this magnitude without any of the responsible authorities being held to account, other journalists will be subject to them, creating a climate of intimidation and impunity.
A wall of darkness
Since August 2015, we have been trying through FOIA to obtain the full documentation on the Assange and WikiLeaks case. Four governments have been denying it to us for almost a decade: the United Kingdom, the United States, Sweden and Australia. The wall of darkness put up by the four governments gives a measure of how inconvenient the truth about this case can be. In our effort to break it down, we have been forced to resort to a legal battle in the courts and tribunals of the United Kingdom, United States, Sweden and Australia, requiring considerable effort and tens of thousands of euros, despite the fact that the lawyers representing us have always worked at reduced fees, if not in some cases completely pro bono. Without the support of a grant for investigative journalism from the David Revaand Logan Foundation, which has paid most of these legal fees – after the initial fees were paid from our own pocket – this journalistic work would not be possible.
One of the authorities that has played a crucial role in the case from the beginning is the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), which prosecutes criminal cases in England and Wales. The CPS is the public authority that handled the requests for Julian Assange’s extradition from both the U.S. authorities and the Swedish Prosecution Authority when, in 2010 – not even four weeks after WikiLeaks began publishing secret files on the war in Afghanistan – he ended up in a rape investigation in Sweden. Today, of course, all investigations against Assange are closed.
Our investigation with FOIA uncovered crucial information, including the fact that, from the very early stages of the Swedish case, it was the Crown Prosecution Service that advised the magistrates with the Swedish Prosecution Authority (SPA) against the only legal strategy that could have brought the case to a rapid resolution, i.e. questioning Julian Assange in London, rather than insisting on his extradition. This legal advice was provided to the Swedish magistrates by Mr. Paul Close, a lawyer with the Special Crime Division – the division of the Crown Prosecution Service that prosecutes high-profile cases. Mr. Close’s advice helped create the legal and diplomatic quagmire that kept Assange arbitrarily detained in London from 2010. Some of the key decisions on the case, such as advising the Swedish prosecutors not to question Assange in London, were made by the Crown Prosecution Service between 2010 and 2013, when the CPS was headed by Keir Starmer, then Director of Public Prosecutions and now prime minister of the British Labour government. What role, if any, did Starmer play in the Assange case?
The highly anomalous handling of the Swedish case by both the Swedish prosecutors and the Crown Prosecution Service resulted in justice for no one, contributed to the devastation of Assange’s health, cost British taxpayers at least 13.2 million pounds to keep Assange under surveillance from 2012 to 2015, resulted in the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention decision that Sweden and Britain had arbitrarily detained Assange from 2010 and, finally, led the UN Special Rapporteur on torture, Nils Melzer, to claim 50 perceived due process violations and to denounce that Assange was being psychologically tortured.
US-UK conversation on Julian Assange and WikiLeaks? Shrouded in secrecy
To unearth what happened behind the scenes, access to correspondence between the Crown Prosecution Service and authorities in the United States, Sweden, and Ecuador is essential. Yet every attempt we have made to obtain the exchange between the British and American authorities on the case has failed. That exchange remains completely shrouded in secrecy. In nearly a decade of our battle, neither Washington nor London has ever released a single page to us of their relative emails or document exchanges. And no judge has ever ordered them to do so.
As regards the correspondence on the case between Britain and Sweden, on the other hand, after years of legal battle in London and Stockholm we did obtain a few hundred pages, but those pages contain gaps related to crucial stages, such as the period when a warrant for Mr. Assange’s arrest was issued, or when Mr. Assange took refuge in the Ecuadorian Embassy, or when Ecuador granted him asylum. It is simply not credible that the Swedish and British authorities did not communicate during those times. When, in November 2017, we asked for copies of documents related to those stages, the Crown Prosecution Service replied: “All the data associated with Paul Close’s account was deleted when he retired and cannot be recovered”.
Since that admission, we have been trying to obtain explanations from CPS authorities on how, when and why the account was deleted. The Crown Prosecution Service has always maintained that the destruction was carried out in accordance with standard procedures, when attorney Paul Close had retired, and in November 2017 Judge Andrew Bartlett of the First-tier Tribunal ruled that there was “nothing untoward” about its destruction.
To British Labour Party MP John McDonnell’s request to know if there is a backup system to retrieve deleted accounts, the Crown Prosecution Service replied that there is not, and that one “cannot ‘know’ that all relevant emails were transferred to the case file” before Close’s account was destroyed, though that was “standard practise”. Last May, a cross-party group of Members of Parliament, which included Labour MP John McDonnell, Green MP Caroline Lucas, Jeremy Corbyn and Conservative MP David Davis, submitted a request for an inquiry in a letter to the chair of the Justice Select Committee of the British Parliament. A few days later the parliament was dissolved, however, and new elections were held, so the initiative did not move forward.
Judge Foss: the Crown Prosecution Service has not undertaken adequate searches
The British authorities at the Crown Prosecution Service are not the only ones who destroyed the documents: in February 2023, we learned that the Swedish Prosecution Authority had done so as well. And we learned this only because their English colleagues at the CPS affirmed this during a hearing in our legal battle. For years, the Swedes too had put up a brick wall to our requests and appeals in the Stockholm courts to obtain the documents the Swedish Prosecution Authority stated did not exist. They did not exist because they had destroyed them.
As for the Crown Prosecution Service, it was not until June 2023 that the first crack in the wall of secrecy appeared, when the First-tier Tribunal chaired by Judge O’Connor ordered the CPS authorities to confirm whether they hold information about the destruction of documents.
After this order, for the first time the authorities with the Crown Prosecution Service brought out a document which, going by their version of events, justified having destroyed the documents: it stated that email accounts would be deleted thirty days after a staff member had left their post. Thirty days? And yet they had always claimed that Paul Close’s account was deleted three months after he retired. And if that document really did show the documents had been destroyed in keeping with the rules, then why had no one ever mentioned this in six years, and why had no one ever thought of giving me a copy, despite my repeated requests and appeals in the British Tribunals?
In order to understand when that document was created, it is important to have the associated metadata, but the CPS refused to release it to us, because we did not ask for it when we submitted our request.
While judge Foss ruled against us when it comes to the metadata, her ruling is a full victory when it comes to the destruction of documents: “Overall, based on the evidence before us”, writes judge Foss in her ruling, “our concern is that over a number of years the CPS has not properly addressed itself at least to recording, if not undertaking, adequate searches in relation to the CPS lawyer’s emails”.
This time, will the Crown Prosecution Service finally shed light on that crucial documentation in the Julian Assange case?
…if you believe in the Fourth Estate holding the powerful to account then the manner in which Assange has been tortured, abused and smeared should anger you and concern you.
The entire case against Assange was punishment for highlighting the war crimes of powerful countries and he was smeared as a rapist by woke activists wanting another male scalp.
Assange has stood for the values of journalism from day 1 and the manner in which he has been abused for this is an obscenity.
While we are looking for justice for Assange, isn’t it time we should Kim Dotcom some mercy…
Kim Dotcom reveals wheelchair use and memory loss following life-threatening stroke
…Kim was caught up in the same attempt to silence Snowden and Assange but became more important to capture because Corporate Hollywood threatened Obama with a drop in donations if Biden and Obama didn’t make him into a symbolic Kangaroo Court scalp.
Assange has been let go, Snowden fled to Russia, shouldn’t we grant Kim clemency and refuse to hand him over to the Americans?
Since when did NZ become America’s bitch?
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We are Americas bitch. We will do as we are told.
As with Australia, where Mark Dreyfus, the attorney general of their occupational regime, is deporting Australian citizen Daniel Duggan to the US for allegedly violating American law by training Chinese pilots to land on short airstrips. A HORRIFYING crime.
Of course KDC will be extradited to America, and the Attorney General will gleefully ensure it happens. Forget the fact that America commits war crimes in its own wars, as highlighted by Assange. Forget that more Gazan’s have been killed by bombs made in America, than made anywhere else.
But remember, that KDC hasn’t broken any NZ laws, otherwise he would have been charged for this by NZ Police. The same Police who have yet to start investigating those 250000 children who are now adults, who were subjected to the most depraved crimes. But because the children were in State care, their perpetrators are given a get out of jail free card by our boys in blue. No enforcing the law, without fear or favor, in sight.
So a broken NZ system, that a Royal Commission found protected child abusers, is extraditing someone that although not perfect, hasn’t broken any NZ laws, to another country’s broken system headed by a felon. When both the broken systems blatantly turn a blind eye to far worse crimes continuously.
Our own Attorney General, steeped it dirty politics history, conveniently summarized in Hager’s book, will send KDC to a jail cell for 85 years. In a country getting a marmalade Mussolini President, who’s so law abiding, that he preferred to encourage a coup-de-tart, than admit losing a “rigged” “stolen” election 4 years ago. If he thought it was so rigged, then why run again.. oh that’s right, he didn’t want to go to jail, which is as good a reason as any these days.
KDC is the bad guy, because he owned an internet company that facilitated file sharing, just like a myriad of other internet companies such as Facebook and YouTube etc. And KDC’s gangster part in this, was legally embellished to to round off the edges of the square legal peg, to fit the round hole of NZ’s extradition criteria.
This is probably all hunky dory to Jagose, who’s hardly the NZ legal brains trust, when she’s supposed to be a legal brains trust. It’s the opposite of how the law is meant to work, in that you investigate unlawful occurrence, and not pick someone whose actions you don’t agree with, and act against them unilaterally. As America did all last century in Latin America, without justification
Imagine if NZ had a spine, and had given the Americans the finger in the first place, so that Mega would have continued, and would be bringing $millions into NZ, instead of the $millions being sucked out by the likes of Facebook and YouTube etc. Who gain advertising revenue from NZ, but pay tax elsewhere, and stifle advertising dollars to local broadcast media, that is now in a terminal tailspin.
How can you smell something is off, when everything is getting rank. Though most cops and lawyers would have known the truth, D-Day for many of us was when the Royal Commission into abuse in care delivered its findings, and just like Neo, the rest of us could suddenly see the entire matrix.
Will NZ acquiesce to America so completely, that we will even support their ideas on taking over Canada, Greenland and Panama? Luxonberger may never say it, but you know he’ll dream it.
NZ has gained nothing from this situation, except confirming to America that we really don’t have an independent foreign policy, and no NZ resident can be safe from the clutches of the American legal system, for if NZ resident KDC can be extradited for so called crimes that are not even crimes in this country, then any of us can. Unless we seek refuge in Moscow ironically. (please support Renee Schuttes reforms)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JTtqGSwTLO0
To say “KDC is the bad guy, because he owned an internet company that facilitated file sharing, just like a myriad of other internet companies such as Facebook and YouTube etc” is weapons’ grade misrepresentation of things. FB and YT did not facilitate file sharing. In fact, neither are file-sharing sites with hosting/downloading functions.
The fact is KDC and his crew specifically designed a site for sharing files in a way which specifically encouraged and facilitated pirating of movies, music and software. They engineered it to obscure what people were doing and to make it nearly impossible for the owners of media/software to get their property removed. It would have been easier for them to design a platform that made takedown requests easier but than didn’t suit the purely for-profit motives of KDC and his partners.
Every dollar he made during that period was the result of a huge, planned fraud.
There is no real comparison between Assange and KDC here.
As the original commenter said, there are many online filesharing sites, such as the bittorent ones etc, and I’ve even downloaded from Facebook and Youtube, though they’re not actual fileshare sites. No misrepresentation. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File_sharing
In 2000, James Woolsey (CIA) acknowledged that the USA steals economic secrets from foreign firms “using espionage, communications, satellites”. This was also acknowledged in a report issued by James Clapper (National Intelligence Director).
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_espionage
I guess when offshore intellectual property gets acquired by government agencies for the commercial gain of that countrys business sector then everythings in the national interest, but for govt to then go after individuals for this, seems hypocritical. This hypocrisy is a good comparison with Assange, whose highlighting of war crimes would have been lauded, if perpetrated by enemy soldiers, which is the hypocrisy.
The world bar the so-called regimes + Putin and Xi, the world is America’s bitch but will we learn from this and show skepticism towards our foreign policy actions, at the very least, or will we continue to ignore this reality? Otherwise many people I know, still view both Assange and DotCom in a negative light, unfortunately.
‘Isn’t Dot Com a criminal?’
What has he done to us? Come to live here and brought his money with him?
Has he killed anyone? Hurt anyone? Robbed anyone of their life savings? Driven while under the influence of alcohol or drugs? Parked on the footpath? Is he a rapist or pedophile? A shop lifter? A burglar? A pickpocket?
Oh he annoyed the United States by letting people read and watch stuff other people had created.
Well may I go forth and multiply. Libraries do that all the time.
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