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    K Gosztola: Three Stories That Further Illustrate Why US Government Can't Be Trusted In Assange Case Archived Message

    Posted by sashimi on December 2, 2021, 4:12 pm

    1st December 2021

    (quote)
    Three requests for information related to spying on WikiLeaks founder Julian
    Assange were sent by Spanish judges to the United States Justice Department. The
    first request occurred in June 2020, but according to Yahoo! News,
    U.S. officials still refuse to cooperate with Spanish authorities.

    Santiago Pedraz, who is the "investigating judge in charge of the case," told
    Yahoo! News he is "not so pleased about it." Justice Department lawyers have not
    abided by their obligations under a mutual legal assistance treaty between the
    U.S. and Spain.

    A criminal case against Undercover Global director David Morales is pending in
    the Spanish courts. He faces allegations of privacy violations as well as counts
    of bribery, money laundering, and criminal possession of a weapon that stem from
    a complaint filed by Assange.

    According to U.C. Global employees, U.S. intelligence agencies had access to
    video and audio surveillance from hidden microphones that were installed while
    Assange was living under political asylum at the Ecuador embassy. Yahoo! News
    confirmed through one source that U.S. intelligence had access to audio and
    video feeds.

    Yahoo! News obtained copies of requests for information that show the judges
    primarily are interested in "information about the ownership of IP addresses
    believed to be in the United States that had access to files documenting
    Assange's activities while he was holed up in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London."

    But U.S. officials demanded another judge, Judge José de la Mata, reveal the
    identities of whistleblowers from U.C. Global. If Spain's High Court chooses to
    protect their identities, U.S. officials will not provide information to assist
    the court.

    Assange is detained at Her Majesty's Prison Belmarsh in London, a high-security
    prison where he has been held since he was expelled from the Ecuador Embassy on
    April 11, 2019. He faces 18 charges - 17 of which are charges under the
    Espionage Act.

    District Judge Vanessa Baraitser ruled on January 4 that Assange's mental health
    was such that it would be "oppressive to extradite him" to the U.S. However,
    Baraitser kept Assange in detention and the U.S. government immediately
    appealed.

    The prosecution against Assange has been strongly condemned by the vast majority
    of global press freedom organizations, and the High Court of Justice is expected
    to issue a decision on the appeal in December.

    Another report from John McEvoy and Pablo Navarrete for MintPress News set the
    record straight on false claims that Assange sought to obtain protection by
    accepting a diplomatic post in Russia so he could leave the Ecuador embassy.

    Aitor Martinez, an Assange attorney who was involved in "Ecuador's effort to
    grant Assange diplomatic protection," said the countries considered were
    Bolivia, China, Cuba, Serbia, and Venezuela.

    "Of course, they were the countries that don't have good relations with the
    U.S. and could accept the appointment. Russia was never, ever on that
    list. There was a huge conspiracy theory in the U.S. with Russiagate; it didn't
    make sense," Martinez declared.

    But the Ministry of Foreign Affairs appointed Assange to Russia against the
    wishes of his legal team.

    According to Martinez, "Foreign Minister María Fernanda Espinosa's cousin worked
    at the Ecuadorian Embassy in Moscow and, through this cousin, she concocted a
    plan to appoint Assange to the one country that was the subject of mass media
    hysteria."

    Rommy Vallejo, head of Senain, Ecuador's main intelligence agency, came to the
    embassy on December 21, 2017, to discuss plans for leaving the embassy and hand
    him a passport to replace the one that assigned him to a post in Russia.

    U.C. Global opened Vallejo's mobile phone, which he left at the embassy's
    security checkpoint. They took the IMEI code and sim card. Senain hired
    U.C. Global, and they turned around and spied on the agency's chief.

    A chat from U.C. Global shows "they were listening through the door and
    everything," Martinez stated. "They knew everything about the operation, and we
    didn't know they were spying on us, and reporting everything to the Americans,
    according to the witness declarations before the Spanish court."

    Soon, as Martinez recalled, the U.S. ambassador in Quito came to Martinez's
    office and indicated he knew of the Assange legal team's plan to leave the
    embassy. "

    "We know that Julian Assange is about to leave the embassy using a diplomatic
    passport, and we will never allow it," the ambassador reportedly t

    "Now we can assume that it was because UC Global sent information about the
    plan. So, she [the foreign minister] said we have to stop everything because the
    Americans know," Martinez added.

    At the time, they had no idea how the U.S. could possibly know about the plan.

    U.C. Global was also drafting "exaggerated reports" to feed to U.S. intelligence
    agents so they could link Assange to Russian operatives.
    (/quote)
    -- Cont'd at https://thedissenter.org/three-stories-that-further-demonstrate-why-us-government-cant-be-trusted-in-assange-case/

    Message Thread:

    • K Gosztola: Three Stories That Further Illustrate Why US Government Can't Be Trusted In Assange Case - sashimi December 2, 2021, 4:12 pm