There are many reasons why the case against Julian Assange is infuriating, but 
one of the worst for me is the fact that over half of all sexual assault cases 
never reported by the victims.  This is in large part due to the treatment by 
victims by the police. When I think of all the rape kits that are gathering 
dust in police warehouses, the attention that the governments of the US, Sweden 
and Britain are giving to this "case" is worse IMHO than ludicrous.
It is criminal. If I thought many police departments cared, this "case" could 
be taken seriously, but they don't...
Anyway, both Naomi Wolf and Assange's mother's comments are excellent.

Romi

http://www.rainn.org/get-information/statistics/reporting-rates



Something Rotten in the State of Sweden: 8 Big Problems with the ‘Case’ Against 
Assange
by Naomi Wolf 
Exclusive to News from Underground

Now that Andrew Kreig, of the Justice Integrity Project, has 
confirmed Karl Rove’s role as an advisor to the Swedish government in 
its prosecution of Julian Assange on sexual misconduct charges, it is 
important that we note the many glaring aberrations in the handling of 
Assange’s case by the authorities in Sweden.
Dr. Brian Palmer, a social anthropologist at Uppsala University, 
explained on Kreig’s radio show last month that Karl Rove has been 
working directly as an advisor to the governing Moderate Party. Kreig 
also reported, in Connecticut Watchdog, that the Assange accusers’ 
lawyer is a partner in the law firm Borgström and Bodström, whose other 
name partner, Thomas Bodström, is a former Swedish Minister of Justice. 
In that office, Bodström helped approve a 2001 CIA rendition request to 
Sweden, to allow the CIA to fly two asylum-seekers from Sweden to Egypt, where 
they were tortured. This background compels us to review the case against 
Assange with extreme care.
Based  on my 23 years of reporting on global rape law, and my five 
years of supporting women at rape crisis centers and battered women’s 
shelters, I can say with certainty that this case is not being treated 
as a normal rape or sexual assault case. New details from the Swedish 
police make this quite clear. Their transcript of the complaints against 
Assange is strikingly unlike the dozens of such transcripts that I have read 
throughout the years as an advocate for victims of sex crimes.
Specifically, there are eight ways in which this transcript is unusual:
1) Police never pursue complaints in which there is no indication of lack of 
consent.
Ask Sweden to produce ANY other police report in which any action was taken in 
a situation in which there is no stated lack of consent or 
threat of force. Police simply won’t act on a complaint if there is no 
indication of a lack of consent, or of consent in the face of violence. 
The Assange transcripts, in contrast to any typical sex crime report, 
are a set of transcripts in which neither of the women has indicated a 
lack of consent. (There is one point at which Miss W asserts she was 
asleep – in which case it would indeed have been illegal to have sex 
with her – but her deleted tweets show that she was not asleep, and 
subsequent discussion indicates consent.)
The Assange transcript is therefore anomalous, as it does not 
suggest in any way that either woman was unconsenting, or felt 
threatened. On this basis alone, therefore, the Assange transcript is 
completely aberrant.
2) Police do not let two women report an accusation about one man together.
The transcripts seem to indicate that the police processed the two accusers’ 
complaints together.
This is completely unheard-of in sex crime procedures; and the burden should be 
on Clare Mongomery, QC, or Marianne Ny, to produce a single 
other example of this being permitted.
Never will two victims be allowed by police to come in and tell their stories 
together–even, or especially, if the stories are about one man.
Indeed, this is a great frustration to those who advocate for rape 
victims. You can have seven alleged victims all accusing the same guy — 
and none will be permitted to tell their stories together.
It doesn’t matter if they coordinated in advance as the Assange 
accusers did, or if they are close friends and came in together: the 
police simply will not take their complaints together or even in the 
same room. No matter how much they may wish to file a report together, 
their wishes won’t matter: the women will be separated, given separate 
interview times and even locations, and their cases will be processed 
completely separately.
The prosecutor, rather than being able to draw on both women’s 
testimony, will actually have to struggle to get the judge to allow a 
second or additional accusation or evidence from another case.
Usually other such evidence will NOT be allowed. Miss A would have 
her case processed and then Miss W — with absolutely no ability for the 
prosecutor to draw form one set of testimony to the next.
The reason for this is sound: it is to keep testimony from 
contaminating separate trials–a source of great frustration to 
prosecutors and rape victim advocates.
Thus the dual testimonies taken in this case are utterly atypical and against 
all Western and especially Swedish rape law practice and 
policy.
3)  Police never take testimony from former boyfriends.
There’s another remarkable aberration in this transcript: the report 
of a former boyfriend of “Miss A,” testifying that she’d always used a 
condom in their relationship.
Now, as one who has supported many rape victims through the reporting process, 
I have to say that the inclusion of this utterly atypical–and, in fact, 
illegal–note will make anyone who has counselled rape victims 
through the legal process’ feel as though her head might explode.
There’s a rape shield law in Sweden (as there is throughout Europe) 
that prevents anyone not involved in the case to say anything to the 
police, whether it be positive or negative, about the prior sexual 
habits of the complainant. No matter how much a former or current 
boyfriend may want to testify about his girlfriends’ sex practices — 
even if that woman wants him to — the courts will, rightly, refused to 
hear it, or record it, or otherwise allow it in the record.
4) Prosecutors never let two alleged victims have the same lawyer.
Both women are being advised by the same high-powered, politically 
connected lawyer. That would never happen under normal circumstances 
because the prosecutor would not permit the risk of losing the case 
because of contamination of evidence and the risk of the judge objecting to 
possible coaching or shared testimony in the context of a shared 
attorney.
So why would the Swedish prosecutor, Marianne Ny, allow such a thing 
in this case? Perhaps — bearing in mind the threat that Assange will be 
extradited to the US once he is in Sweden — because she does not expect 
to have a trial, let alone have to try to win one.
5) A lawyer never typically takes on two alleged rape victims as clients.
No attorney–and certainly no high-powered attorney– would want to 
represent two women claiming to have been victimized by the same man, 
for the reasons above: the second woman’s testimony could be weaker than the 
other one’s, thus lessening the lawyer’s chances of success.
There also is a danger that the judge may well object to the potential 
cross-contamination of the women’s stories.
Again, the only reason why a lawyer would thus weaken his own 
clients’ cases us that s/he does not expect the case to come to trial.
6) A rape victim never uses a corporate attorney.
Typically, if a woman needs a lawyer in addition to the prosecutor 
who is pursuing her case (as in the Swedish system) she will be advised 
by rape victim advocates, the prosecutor and the police to use a 
criminal attorney — someone who handles rape cases or other kinds of 
assault, who is familiar with the judges and the courts in these cases. 
She will never hire a high-powered corporate attorney who does not 
specialize in these cases or work with the local court that would be 
hearing her sex crime case if it ever got to trial.  Given that a law 
firm such as this one charges about four hundred euros an hour, and a 
typical rape case takes eight months to a year to get through the courts – 
given that legal advice will cost tens of thousands of euros, which 
young women victims usually do not have access to – it is reasonable to 
ask: who is paying the legal bills?
7) A rape victim is never encouraged to make any kind of contact with her 
assailant and she may never use police to compel her alleged assailant 
to take medical tests.
The two women went to police to ask if they could get Assange to take an HIV 
test. 
Sources close to the investigation confirm that indeed Assange was 
asked by police to take an HIV test, which came back negative. This is 
utterly unheard of and against standard sex crime policy. The Police do 
not act as medical mediators for STD testing, since rapists are 
dangerous and vindictive. A victim is NEVER advised to manage, even with police 
guidance, any further communication with her assailant that is 
not through formal judicial channels. Under ordinary procedures, the 
women’s wishes for the alleged assailant to take medical tests would be 
discouraged by rape victim advocates and deterred and disregarded by 
police. 
First, the State normally has no power to compel a man who has not 
been convicted, let alone formally charged, to take any medical tests 
whatsoever. Secondly, rape victims usually fear STD’s or AIDS infection, 
naturally enough, and the normal police and prosecutorial guidance is 
for them to take their own battery of tests – you don’t need the man’s 
test results to know if you have contracted a disease. Normal rape kit 
processing–in Sweden as elsewhere–includes such tests for the alleged 
victim as a matter of course, partly to help prevent any contact between the 
victim and the assailant outside legal channels. 
8) Police and prosecutors never leak police transcripts during an active 
investigation because they face punishment for doing so.
The full transcripts of the women’s complaints have been leaked to 
the US media. The only people who have access to those documents are 
police, prosecutors and the attorneys. Often, frustratingly, rape 
victims themselves cannot get their own full set of records related to 
their cases. In normal circumstances, the leaking of those transcripts 
would be grounds for an immediate investigation of the police and 
prosecutors who had access to them. Any official who leaks such 
confidential papers faces serious penalties; lawyers who do so can be 
disbarred. And yet no one in this case is being investigated or facing 
any consequences. It seems quite likely that the Assange documents were 
leaked by the police or prosecutors because they got a signal from 
higher-ups that they could do so with impunity.
Indeed, these are all major aberrations–suggesting that somebody at the top has 
interfered.
And who is at the very top in Sweden? Players working with Karl 
Rove, who was a party to the Swedish government’s collusion in the Bush 
regime’s rendition/torture program. As Britain holds its hearings into 
Julian Assange’s fate, we must take careful note of that connection.

http://markcrispinmiller.com/2011/02/eight-big-problems-with-the-case-against-assange-must-read-by-naomi-wolf/comment-page-1/#comment-19975


Comments to “Eight BIG PROBLEMS with the “case” against Assange (MUST-READ by 
Naomi Wolf)”


        * 
        *  August 20, 2012 at 8:46 am 
Jettatura says:
Christine Assange, mother of WikiLeaks 
founder and Editor-in-Chief Julian Assange, has spent many long months 
reaching out to supporters and urging them to contact their local 
political representatives. Recognising that many politicians still do 
not know the true story behind WikiLeaks and her son’s legal battles, 
she asks supporters to give them the facts and request their assistance.
Christine has been using her @AssangeC Twitter account and the 
#fact4mp hashtag to post the following important talking points for 
supporters to disseminate:
1. WikiLeaks and Julian Assange have not been charged with any crime in any 
country in the world. See http://justice4assange.com
2. WikiLeaks and Julian Assange have been recognized for quality 
investigative journalism with many prestigious awards, including:
- Julian was unanimously given the Sam Adams Award in 2010, for 
Integrity in Intelligence (Iraq War Logs) by a panel of retired senior 
U.S. military and intelligence officers.
- Julian won the Amnesty UK Media Award in 2009 for the “Cry of 
Blood” report into extra-judicial killings and disappearances in Kenya.
- Julian won The Economist magazine’s Freedom of Expression Award in 2008.
- Julian won the Sydney Peace Foundation’s Gold Medal in 2011 “For 
exceptional courage and initiative in pursuit of human rights”. The 
Sydney Peace Foundation has only awarded 4 Gold Medals in 16 years, with Nelson 
Mandela and the Dalai Lama being 2 of the other 3 recipients.
- Julian won the Martha Gellhorn Prize For Journalism in 2011: “He is brave, 
determined and independent and a true agent of people not power… [WikiLeaks'] 
goal of justice through transparency is in the oldest and 
finest tradition of journalism.”
- Julian won a Walkley Award for Most Outstanding Contribution to Journalism in 
2011.
See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Julian_Assange for more.
3. WikiLeaks has a perfect record regarding information reliability. No 
government has denied the authenticity of any documents.
4. WikiLeaks redacts its documents, so to date not one person has been 
physically harmed by its publications.
5. WikiLeaks exposes government and corporate corruption, fraud, 
shady deals, war crimes, torture, and kidnapping. It is in the public 
interest to know these things.
6. WikiLeaks partnered with The Guardian, New York Times, Der 
Spiegel, Le Monde, and El Pais to publish Cablegate. Why target only 
WikiLeaks?
7. WikiLeaks acts in accordance with traditional journalism. It publishes 
information given by various sources.
8. WikiLeaks acts like traditional media but protects its sources with a secure 
anonymous Drop Box.
9. WikiLeaks is a legal, legitimate, online news publisher, 
recognized as such by other journalist organizations worldwide. In 2012, 
WikiLeaks is partnered with nearly 100 media organisations around the 
world.
10. WikiLeaks is a non-profit independent publisher funded by 
donations from ordinary citizens from around the world. Because 
WikiLeaks believes in transparency its financial records are publicly 
accountable.
11. WikiLeaks goal is altruistic: “Justice Through Transparency.” 
WikiLeaks is a catalyst for democracy movements around the world.
12. WikiLeaks launched in 2006 to provide safety for whistleblowers 
in Third World regimes and dictatorships, and to inform the world of 
their plight.
13. For the first four years, WikiLeaks published government and corporate 
wrong-doings from many countries.
14. In 2010 WikiLeaks received files for the U.S. Collateral Murder 
video, Afghan War Diaries, Iraq War logs, and U.S. Embassy cables.
15. The U.S. war videos and documents revealed war crimes and lying 
by the U.S. government, regarding civilian casualties and war progress.
16. U.S. cables revealed government and corporate exploitation, 
bullying, and manipulation of other governments (as well as good actions by 
U.S. officials).
17. The cables revealed and confirmed to people WHO in their own 
governments and corporations was involved in shady wrong-doings.
18. WikiLeaks exposed the attempted ALP “Clean Feed” internet censorship plan 
for Australia.
19. The Australian government promoted “Clean Feed” as a way to 
filter child porn. The police opposed this as the images were 
peer-to-peer (not websites).
20. WikiLeaks published the “Clean Feed” blacklist, which included 
politically contentious sites, anti-abortion sites, and euthanasia sites as 
well as WikiLeaks.
21. “Clean Feed” was abandoned as a direct result of WikiLeaks’ exposure of its 
fundamentally undemocratic political nature.
22. WikiLeaks exposed ALP Senator Mark Arbib as a protected source 
for the U.S. government for 4 years. Arbib was involved in an ALP coup 
that overthrew an elected Australian Prime Minister.
23. A 2007 WikiLeaks cable showed that the Australian government was 
risking the Great Barrier Reef, and secretly wavering penalties for U.S. 
tankers breaching laws in Torres Strait.
24. In line with WikiLeaks’ harm-minimization procedures, WikiLeaks 
asked the U.S. State Department to help with cable redactions. They 
refused.
25. Note the timing:
5/4/10 Collateral Murder video released
24/6/10 Gillard coup
25/7/10 Afghan Diaries released
20/8/10 Sex allegations surface
22/10/10 Iraq War logs released
28/11/10 Cablegate released
18 August 2010 (two days before the sex allegations) Anders Hellner, a senior 
policy adviser to the Swedish Foreign Policy Institute, told 
Swedish TV News Rapport: “The situation is escalating because an 
official Swedish party which is represented at the European Parliament 
(the Pirate Party, which had announced it would host WikiLeaks servers) 
is taking up what the U.S views is a very controversial role. The 
Americans are looking to stop this somehow.”
26. After the Afghan War Diary release, Julian visited Sweden to 
obtain residency and base WikiLeaks there (because they have good 
whistleblower laws).
27. The U.S. was aware of more WikiLeaks releases to come and wrote threatening 
letters. Julian warned of entrapment plans.
28. Woman AA invited Julian to speak in Sweden at a seminar about Afghanistan 
in mid August 2010
29. Woman AA offered Julian her flat to stay in as she was going to be away but 
returned early.
30. Woman SW stated she went to seminar to meet Julian & invited him to stay at 
her place.
31. Both women have stated to police and media that sex was consensual and 
non-violent.
32. Exculpatory evidence (txts 2 friends) show women had no complaints re sex 
till finding out about each other.
33. Evidence (100+ txts btwn AA and SW) speak of revenge, making money, and 
ruining Julian’s reputation by going to press.
34. AA takes SW to visit a police station, not close by, but where her friend 
Officer Irmeli Krans works.
35. Officer Krans stayed back hours after shift ended to interview SW.
36. Swedish police breach all their own procedures interviewing women AA & SW.
37. Police interviews with women AA & SW were not recorded (against procedure).
38. SW was so upset that police were going to allege rape, she does not sign 
her interview statement.
39. SW has stated she felt “railroaded” into making the complaint.
40. In Sweden, consensual, non-violent sex can be legally defined as “rape”.
41. On the same day, 1st prosecutor Maria Haljebo Kjellstrand unlawfully told 
the press Julian was wanted for rape.
42. Julian was not interviewed or informed. He found out in the 
tabloid newspaper “Expressen” that he was wanted for double rape.
43. Within hours there were millions of website hits for “Assange” + “rape” 
causing irreparable harm to Julian’s reputation.
44. Next day, after reviewing the file, Stockholm’s Chief Prosecutor Eva Finne 
threw out the rape allegation.
45. “I consider there are no grounds 4 suspecting he has committed rape,” said 
Eva Finne, the Chief Prosecutor.
46. The investigation into the lesser allegations of harassment only continued.
47. Julian offered himself for interview on 30/8/10. Police promised not to 
unlawfully leak interview to the media again.
48. Julian’s police interview unlawfully turned up in the tabloid Expressen 
again the next day.
49. Julian and his witnesses’ interviews are videotaped while the women and 
their witnesses are not.
50. The witness list becomes unbalanced against Julian as police do not follow 
up interviews with his witnesses.
51. Police continue to leak file to tabloid media redacting sections favourable 
to Julian or unfavourable to women.
52. The interpreter in police interrogation Gun Von Krusenstjerna was not 
authorized by relevant authority.
53. Swedish Social Democrat politician Claus Borgstrum is appointed as lawyer 
for AA & SW.
54. Claus Borgstrum and partner Thomas Bodstrum run a thriving legal practice 
around rape cases.
55. Officer Krans, Borgstrum, Bodstrum and AA are all members of the Swedish 
Social Democrats Party.
56. One month after the Assange sex allegations, they all stood for election on 
a sexual offences reform platform.
57. Swedish judge Brita Sundberg-Weitman (retired) says: “Mr 
Borgstrum is a politician whose platform is associated with radical 
feminist activism, and he has developed a legal practice around acting 
for complainants in rape cases. In recent years, elements of the Social 
Democrats Party, including one of the complainants (AA) who is a 
well-known and aspiring social democrat politician, and her lawyer Mr 
Borgstrum and some public officials like Ms Ny, have taken the lead 
amending Swedish law, so as to try to make it more favourable to women. 
It is a fact that people like Marianne Ny and Claes Borgstrum have 
worked in co-operation to produce our new, more stringent sexual 
offences laws.”
58. Borgstrum appealed the decision to dismiss the rape investigation to 
prosecutor Marianne Ny.
59. Julian Assange was not informed about the appeal, so he had no opportunity 
to make submissions.
60. On the 1st of September 2010, Marianne Ny granted the appeal and reinstated 
the rape investigation.
61. “It is completely false that we are afraid of Assange and 
therefore didn’t want to file a complaint… He is not violent and I do 
not feel threatened by him,” woman AA told Swedish tabloid Aftonbladet 
on 21st August 2010.
62. The alleged “deliberately torn” condom (submitted as evidence by AA) 
contained NO DNA from either AA or JA.
63. There are significant differences between the SW’s original statement and 
the one that was released to the media.
64. Swedish tabloid Aftonbladet’s application for access to police 
file was granted on Sept 1st 2010. Julian’s Swedish lawyer Mr Hurtig’s 
applications for access to the police file (in September-November) were 
denied.
65. Julian remained in Sweden for 5 weeks to answer the allegations 
against him. Through his lawyer, Mr Hurtig, Julian made proactive 
attempts to arrange an interview with the Swedish prosecutor. Prosecutor Ny 
refused all Julian’s offers for interview before giving him 
permission to leave Sweden on September 15th 2010.
66. In September 22nd 2010, an interview was finally agreed to by 
Swedish prosecutor Marianne Ny for September 29th 2010. The US Pentagon 
announced a 120 man team dedicated to “taking action” against WikiLeaks, ahead 
of the release of the Iraq War Logs and Cablegate. Julian was 
maintaining a low profile regarding threats to his security and could 
not be contacted and informed of the September 29th interview date. 
Julian left Sweden on September 27th 2010 for a pre-arranged business 
meeting with Cablegate media partner Der Spiegel. Julian didn’t “flee” 
Sweden. He stayed in Sweden a total of 37 days, after these allegations 
delayed his business overseas. He left with official Swedish permission.
67. On September 29th 2010, Julian phoned his lawyer to report that 
his luggage (including three laptops) had disappeared on the 
Stolkholm-Berlin flight. His Swedish lawyer Mr Hurtig then informed 
Julian (for the first time) of the 28th September interview. Julian 
offered to return to Sweden for an interview on the 9th or 10th of 
October. This was rejected because it was the weekend. Julian then 
offered to return to Sweden on October 11th 2010. This was rejected as 
“too far away”.
68. In October-November 2010, Julian was in London working on the 
Iraq War Logs release and preparing for Cablegate with media partners 
The Guardian, Der Spiegel, Le Monde, El Pais, and the New York Times. 
The WikLeaks Iraq War Logs were released on October 23rd 2010. On 
October 27th, the CIA refused to either confirm or deny suggestions of 
plans to assassinate Julian. Julian had been staying at the Frontline 
Club (a London club for journalists) during much of October and November 2010. 
He conducted several talks during this period, including an 
address at the UN in Geneva.
69. In October-November 2010 Julian’s UK lawyers offered him for 
interview under the Mutual Legal Assistance (MLA) Scheme between the UK 
and Sweden. Swedish prosecutor Ny refused all Julian’s offers for 
interview by the usual MLA protocol.
70. On November 2nd 2010, Julian’s lawyers informed U.K police that he could be 
contacted through them for the legal process.
71. Despite refusing to interview Julian for seven weeks, Sweden was 
granted a European Arrest Warrant (EAW) to question him (November 18th, 
2010).
72. Swedish prosecutor Marianne Ny also sought to have Julian held 
incommunicado pending a future trial.
73. An EAW is used for prosecution, not questioning. Julian’s EAW is 
highly irregular. “An EAW should not be used for the purposes of 
investigation.” – UK Parliament Joint Committee on Human Rights, June 
2011.
74. November 20th 2010 Despite being informed of Julian Assange’s 
whereabouts, Sweden authorized Interpol to make a PUBLIC Red Notice for 
him.
75. “I consider it inappropriate and disproportionate that Ms Ny 
sought an Interpol Arrest Warrant and EAW for Mr Assange” said expert 
witness (retired) Swedish judge Britta Sundberg-Weitman. The only recent 
example of Sweden issuing an Interpol Red Notice and an EAW for a sex 
offence involved a repeat offending paedophile.
76. November 26th 2010 Sweden issued an EAW for Julian (2 days before WikiLeaks 
started publishing Cablegate). This would have lead to 
Julian’s arrest within 10 days but the warrant was invalid and had to be 
re-issued on December 2nd 2010.
77. November 27th 2010 The U.S State Department sent an intimidating 
letter in reply to a letter from Julian requesting input regarding 
harm-minimization from Cablegate.
78. November 28th 2010 WikiLeaks commenced ppublishing the U.S. diplomatic 
cables (a.k.a. Cablegate).
79. WikiLeaks US cables revealed secret dealings between U.S. and 
Swedish officials to bypass the democratic process in Sweden. Sweden 
secretly agreed to allow U.S. access to large amounts of data on Swedish 
citizens. Swedish MP Camilla Lindberg resigned in protest, declaring: 
“By selling out its own people, the government has sought to curry the 
favour of the U.S. Little by little we continue to dismantle democracy.”
80. Karl Rove, former political adviser to U.S. President George 
Bush, is a political adviser to Swedish Prime Minister Fredrick 
Reinfeldt. Rove quit U.S. politics in disgrace after orchestrating 
vicious smear campaigns against political opponents. Karl Rove is also 
good friends with Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt.
81. November 29th 2010: U.S. politicians ‘declared war’ on Wikieaks:
“Assange is an anti-American operative with blood on his hands. Why 
was he not pursued with the same urgency as Al Qaeda?” – Sarah Palin.
“I would look at this as a military issue, with potentially military 
action against him and his organization.” – Tom Shaffer, former Defence 
Intelligence Agency official, Fox News.
“Anything less than execution is too kind a penalty.” – Mike Huckabee, 
Republican Presidential candidate.
82. November 30th 2010: Interpol issued a Red Notice for Julian Paul Assange to 
188 countries.
83. More threats from politicians:
“Well, I think Assange should be assassinated, actually. I think 
Obama should put out a contract and maybe use a drone or something. … I 
would not feel unhappy if Assange ‘disappeared’.” – Tom Flannagan, 
former senior adviser to Canadian PM, November 30th 2010.
“We’re at war. I hope (US Attorney General) Eric Holder… will… get 
our laws in line with being at war.” – Republican Senator Lindsey 
Graham, November 30th 2010.
Julian Assange should be “prosecuted as a terrorist.” – Senator Rick Santorum, 
GOP presidential candidate, November 30th 2010.
“He should be treated as an enemy combatant. WikiLeaks should be closed down.” 
– Newt Gingrich, 5 December 2010.
“A dead man can’t leak stuff… Illegally shoot the son of a bitch.” – Bob 
Beckel, Fox News, December 6th 2010.
84. December 7th 2010: Obama administration pressures Paypal, Visa 
and Mastercard to block donations to WikiLeaks, shutting off 95% of 
their funds. Western Union and Bank of America followed soon afterwards. In 
early December 2010 Paypal also froze 60,000 euros of WikiLeaks 
donations held by the German charity Wau Holland Foundation.
On December 6th 2010 Julian’s Defence Fund (containing 31,000 euros) 
was frozen by Swiss Bank Post Finance. The UN High Commissioner for 
Human Rights and UN Rapporteur for Freedom of Opinion and Expression 
condemned the WikiLeaks blockade.
“The financial blockade is a free speech issue,” said Trevor Timm, 
activist for the Electronic Frontier Foundation. “The government, 
realizing they couldn’t charge WikiLeaks with a crime for publishing 
classified information – because all newspapers do that – decided to 
pressure private companies like Amazon, Visa, and MasterCard into 
banning WikiLeaks.”
The suppression of donations is essentially an end-run around the 
First Amendment, asserted Timm. “The government is not technically doing the 
censoring – they’re leaving the dirty work to private corporations. Mainstream 
newspapers like The New York Times or the Wall Street 
Journal print classified information all the time. It’s been happening 
for decades, and no one has ever been prosecuted for it.”
On January 14th 2011 the U.S.Treasury declined Senator Peter King’s 
request to blacklist WikiLeaks or Assange as there were no grounds to do so.
In July 2011 WikiLeaks lodged a complaint about the financial 
blockade with the European Commissioner for infringement of EU 
Anti-Trust Laws. They are still awaiting an answer.
It is estimated that since the blockade WikiLeaks has been prevented from 
receiving over $20 million in donations.
85. The U.S government also pressured Internet providers to terminate services 
to WikiLeaks. For example, on December 1st 2010, Amazon 
removed WikiLeaks from their storage servers. On December 2nd the DNS 
register serving WikiLeaks.org stopped pointing to the domain. On 
December 20th Apple removed an app that allowed iPhone users to search 
WikiLeaks cables.
86. December 5th 2010 Prosecutor Ny mislead the public by stating: 
“Both British and Swedish law prevent me from questioning Assange in 
London.” She made the same allegation in a December 3rd interview with 
TIME magazine.
The use of a video link is an established protocol per Swedish ruling (SC-NJA 
(2007) 337), which also states that it is disproportionate to 
issue EAW’s for questioning when a person is co-operating. The proper, 
proportionate, and legal means of requesting a person for questioning in UK is 
through the Mutual Legal Assistance Scheme. Since Julian’s UK 
house arrest in 2010, Swedish prosecutor Ny has rejected ALL his offers 
to be interviewed at Scotland Yard or the Swedish Embassy.
87. On December 7th 2010 Julian went voluntarily with his lawyer to 
the Kentish Town police station in London to answer the EAW. The EAW was the 
first document Julian received from Swedish Prosecutors in English 
(a translation was provided by UK police). This was also the first time 
Julian had been informed in writing of the specific allegations and 
potential charges against him.
88. The EAW and Interpol Red Notice were issued just before and 
executed just after Cablegate began publishing. Had Julian returned to 
Sweden in October/November he would have been held incommunicado in 
prison and we may not have seen Cablegate.
89. On December 7th 2010 Julian went into voluntary custody in the 
UK. He spent ten days in solitary confinement in the maximum security 
Wandsworth Prison. Bail of £180,000 was put up for Julian, but Sweden 
opposed bail and Judge Riddle refused it.
90. December 8th 2010 The Independent newspaper cited “diplomatic 
sources” confirming informal talks between Sweden and the US about 
extraditing Julian.
Michael Mukasey, a former U.S. Attorney General stated: “When one is 
accused of a very serious crime, it is common to hold him in respect of a 
lesser crime, while you assemble evidence of a second crime.” (The 
Guardian 7/12/10)
91. On December 14th 2010 Julian was granted bail of $374,000 (cash 
and sureties) and surrendered his passport. He was placed under house 
arrest with a nightly curfew, fitted with an electronic ankle tracking 
device, and ordered to report daily to the local police station. The 
Swedish government opposed bail and filed an appeal, so Julian went back to 
prison for 48 hrs till the appeal hearing on December 16th 2010. 
Sweden lost the appeal and Julian was released on bail till the EAW 
hearing, set down for January 11th 2011.
*
UK Supreme Court Agreed Statement of Facts (i.e. facts agreed by Swedish 
authorities): http://t.co/x62F9ah2
Former Australian diplomat Tony Kevin’s brief to Australian MPs on political 
agenda, U.S and Sweden, entrapment: http://wlcentral.org/node/1414
Lawyer Jen Robinson brief to Australian MPs on facts, timeline, players, 
concerns re Sweden fit up re WikiLeaks: http://wlcentral.org/node/1418
Lawyer Peter Kemp brief to Australian MPs 2/3/11 re breaches of legal and human 
rights, political agendas, extradition: http://wlcentral.org/node/1414
Comprehensive verifiable facts and media resources on Swedish extradition and 
US Extradition: http://www.justice4assange.com
OzWikiWatch, a site to help Australians contact their MPs and 
Senators and build a register of political support of Julian Assange and 
WikiLeaks: http://ozwikiwatch.blogspot.com
2012-06-20 Swedish extradition facts from Christine Assange
Julian Assange’s mother Christine recently tweeted the following 
facts about extraditions involving the US, the UK, Sweden, and 
Australia.
1. Australian PM Julia Gillard and Opposition leader Tony Abbot 
backed new Extradition Act Amendments making it easier for U.S.A to 
extradite Aussies. The Greens fought it.
2. For the FIRST TIME Aussies can be now be extradited for minor offences.
3. The protection of “political” motives has been weakened. If the 
charge is “terrorism” then “political” cannot apply to prevent 
extradition.
4. The U.S.A. recently expanded its definition of “terrorist” to include 
peaceful protesters – “Low level terrorism”.
5. Under the new NDAA legislation, the U.S became a police state – 
citizens and foreigners can be arrested without warrant and indefinite 
detention applies.
6. In 1971 the U.S. Supreme Court ruled it legal to publish 
classified documents. Obama is now trying to label media who do so as 
terrorists.
7. Modifications to the act included changing “protection from death 
penalty” to “likelihood the death penalty would be carried out”.
8. Note that the U.S.A is in the top 5 countries for killing its own citizens, 
and the only Western country in that top 5.
9. Even Minor Offences under the new Extradition Amendments are punished with 
up to 12 months imprisonment.
10. The UK/US Bilateral Treaty allows the U.S.A to extradite from the UK 
without any prima facie case (i.e. evidence).
11. The Swedish/US Bilateral Treaty gets around safeguards of normal 
extradition with a fast-track “Temporary Surrender” clause.
12. The US Grand Jury convenes in secret. There are 4 prosecutors, no defence, 
and no judge. It can issue indictments for Extradition with no proper legal 
process.
13. Sweden has NEVER refused an Extradition request from the U.S.A.
14. In 2001 Sweden gave two innocent Egyptian refugees to the CIA for rendition 
to Egypt, where they were tortured.
15. The Swedish Justice Minister who signed off on the CIA rendition torture 
flight was Thomas Bodström.
16. Thomas Bodström is now the business partner of Claes Borgström, 
the politician/lawyer of the two Swedish women in the Assange case.
17. The Australian Greens supported a motion by Senator Scott Ludlam 
to protect Julian from “Temporary Surrender” to the U.S.A via Sweden. 
Both Labor and the Coalition opposed it.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



------------------------------------

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
LAAMN: Los Angeles Alternative Media Network
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Unsubscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Subscribe: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Digest: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Help: <mailto:[email protected]?subject=laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Post: <mailto:[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive1: <http://www.egroups.com/messages/laamn>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Archive2: <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]>
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/laamn/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    [email protected] 
    [email protected]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [email protected]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/

Reply via email to