US Hits Julian Assange With 17 More Charges Under Espionage Act from Collective Evolution
In Brief
- The Facts:The US Department of Justice just announced 17 more charges against Julian Assange for publishing leaks exposing government wrongdoing.
- Reflect On:Should
we be punishing journalists who help the world see who is running the
countries they live in? Should we be seeing the amount of censorship we
are seeing today?
Julian
Assange was hit with another 17 criminal charges under the espionage
act today as a federal grand jury in Virginia returned a brand new
indictment that adds 17 more charges to the original charge Assange
was handed in March 2018. These are in connection with the alleged leaks
publicly released in conspiracy with Chelsea Manning.
These new charges could land him in
prison for the 170 years, all for doing what many are arguing are
responsible and important acts of journalism. Need I remind that
WikiLeaks has never had to make a retraction on their journalistic work.
The new charges against Assange include
allegations that he published what John Demers, the head of the Justice
Department’s National Security Division, describes a “narrow subset” of
documents that identified the names of individuals who were working with
the US government, including sources in Afghanistan and Iraq.
Of course, Assange’s arrest has been
controversial since it happened. Garnering opinions from many directions
including that he is a hero and that he is a villain that must be
prosecuted for revealing government secrets. Demers responded to
supporters of Assange who feel the WikiLeaks founder was being targeted
for work as a journalist. Demers stated this information put the sources
at risk, and that no “responsible” journalist would publish it.
“The department takes seriously the role of journalists in our democracy and we thank you for it. It has not and never has been the department’s policy to target them for reporting. But Julian Assange is no journalist,” John Demers
The US Department of
Justice has just announced SEVENTEEN more charges against Julian
Assange for publishing the most substantial piece of journalism in my
lifetime.
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— Cassandra Fairbanks (@CassandraRules) May 23, 2019
Assange is currently still serving a 50-week sentence in London after a judge found that he has violated his bail conditions.
This story is breaking and will be updated as we learn more.
In the meantime, for those still thinking ‘this is all part of the Q plan,’ check out a bit of a discussion on that below. I did a segment on The Collective Evolution Show on CETV. You can become a member of CETV and support Collective Evolution here.
In the meantime, for those still thinking ‘this is all part of the Q plan,’ check out a bit of a discussion on that below. I did a segment on The Collective Evolution Show on CETV. You can become a member of CETV and support Collective Evolution here.
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