His indictment is worrying,
say press freedom advocates
https://www.commondreams.org/views/2019/04/13/why-prosecution-julian-assange-troubling-press-freedom
After a seven-year standoff at
the Ecuadoran embassy in London, British police on Thursday arrested WikiLeaks
founder Julian Assange--a development press freedom advocates had long feared.
For years, journalists and
press freedom advocates worried the U.S. would prosecute
Assange under the Espionage Act for the publication of classified
information, a scenario that potentially would have set a devastating legal
precedent for U.S. news organizations that regularly publish such material.
During the Obama
administration, officials ultimately said they would not prosecute because of
the possible consequences for press freedom.
It was unclear whether the
Trump administration would have the same compunction: while Trump praised
WikiLeaks, then-CIA Director Mike Pompeo labeled it a "non-state hostile
intelligence service." Trump has shown
little concern for freedom of the press, once allegedly urging then-FBI
Director James Comey to jail journalists. (In response to news of Assange's
arrest, Trump said he would leave it to the Justice Department).
In this context, the charge on
which Assange was arrested seemed modest: A single count of conspiracy (with
former Army Pfc. Chelsea Manning) to
"commit computer intrusion" under the U.S. Computer Fraud
and Abuse Act, with a maximum penalty of five years.
Unlike the publication of
classified information, hacking computers is not a tool for reporters. Some
journalists were quick to point this out. "[The] charge here is attempting
to help crack a password to steal classified material. Didn't work but would
news orgs do that? (Not in my experience.)," Greg Miller, a national
security reporter at The Washington Post, said on Twitter.
But press freedom advocates,
and some journalists, have not expressed relief based on the indictment.
A host of organizations, including CPJ,
spoke out against the prosecution. Here's why:
(1) The indictment is
flimsy and could simply be a pretext to punish Assange for publishing
classified information.
The diplomatic time and
resources expended between three countries to detain Assange strikes some
observers as disproportionate to the single computer misuse charge. The
indictment is vague about the exact nature of the aid Assange allegedly
provided Manning in the course of their interaction, but it does
not appear that Assange
successfully hacked any password. Even if his attempts were successful, they
would have helped Manning cover her tracks, but not let her break into a system
to which she didn't already have access.
Prosecutors have wide range of
latitude; it's worth remembering that the Obama administration likely had all
the same information, but declined to pursue an indictment. Matthew Miller, a
former Justice Department spokesperson in the Obama administration, told The
New York Times that he thought the charge was justified but "This
is not the world's strongest case."
So is it just a pretext on the
part of the U.S. government to punish Assange for the publication of classified
information -- a practice that should be constitutionally protected? The issue
comes in a time of heightened concern for investigative journalists and
national security reporters. Since the September 11 attacks, the government has
increasingly classified large amounts of material and punished those who share
it with the press. CPJ has written extensively about the chilling
effect of this crackdown on reporting in the public interest.
"Given the nature of the
charge -- a discussion 9 years ago about an unsuccessful attempt to figure out
a password -- I think it's fair to debate whether this is a figleaf for the
government punishing someone for publishing stuff it doesn't want
published," tweeted Scott
Shane, a national security reporter for The New York Times.
"If it wasn't Julian
Assange, it would be very unlikely you'd see this prosecution," Cindy
Cohn, executive director of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, told CPJ.
"This is what over-broad discretion in prosecution does, it gives them a pretext
for going after people they don't like."
(2) The charge could be a
placeholder, with more to come.
Another reason why the charge
may seem so modest: It could be the first of several. Yesterday, CNN cited U.S.
officials promising additional charges against Assange. The press freedom
implications of any future charges could be significant--especially if they
involve the Espionage Act.
"It may be part of a
larger case," Ben Wizner the director of the American Civil Liberties
Union, told CPJ. The current indictment already cites the Espionage Act and
describes the cracking of a password as part of a conspiracy to violate it.
The DOJ's legal strategy could
be to pile on more charges after Assange is extradited. The extradition
treaty between the U.S. and the U.K. says an individual can only be
charged for the "offense for which extradition was granted" or
similar offenses, but it also stipulates how governments can waive this rule.
Assange has an extradition hearing on May 2, which gives the U.S. government
time to develop new charges.
(3) The language of the case
seems to criminalize normal journalistic activities.
While the charge against
Assange relates to the alleged conspiracy to hack a password, the language of
the indictment sweeps in a broad range of legally protected and common
journalistic activity.
Count 20 of the indictment
states, "It was part of the conspiracy that Assange encouraged Manning to
provide information and records from departments and agencies of the United
States." The indictment goes on to characterize a number of journalistic
practices as part of a criminal conspiracy, including use of a secure message
service, use of a cloud-based drop box, and efforts to cover Manning's tracks.
The cultivation of sources and
the use of encryption and other means to protect those sources are essential to
investigative journalism. While the government may include these details to
show intent or to describe the means and context for the alleged criminal
action, they seem to go beyond what is necessary. Barton Gellman, who led The
Washington Post's Pulitzer Prize-winning reporting on the Snowden documents,
told CPJ, "If asking questions and protecting a source are cast as
circumstantial evidence of guilt, we'll be crossing a dangerous line."
"A lot of the way the
crime is described here could be applied to other journalists," Wizner, at
the ACLU, told CPJ. "If the government wanted to just target the attempted
intrusion, they could have written a very different complaint."
(4) The Computer Fraud and
Abuse Act is incredibly broad.
In all of the concern over the
Espionage Act, journalists may not have sufficiently raised alarm over the law
under which the U.S. charged Assange: the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act (CFAA).
"Thinking we should breathe a sigh of relief because it was the CFAA
instead of the Espionage act is premature." Cohn, of Electronic Frontier
Foundation, told CPJ.
The CFAA carries its own set
of free expression issues. While it encompasses clearly illegal behavior like
hacking, it also criminalizes "unauthorized access to a computer."
Manning was prosecuted under the CFAA in addition to the Espionage Act, but
prosecuting a publisher under the CFAA for conspiracy in obtaining the
classified information could potentially create a dangerous legal model.
While reporters do not
conspire to decrypt passwords, they are often aware of, and might actively
discuss with sources, activities that could fall under the broad frame of
"unauthorized access." As the Cato Institute's Julian Sanchez wrote
on Twitter,
"The way 'helping to hack' is being charged is as a conspiracy to violate
18 USC §1030 (a)(1) [of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act]. And good reporters
conspire with their sources to do that constantly."
"For almost every
reporter working with a source, the source is providing information in digital
form. Anyone who is working with a source who obtained that info in a way that
they weren't supposed to has a CFAA risk," Cohn said. She added that any
journalists who don't think there are broader press freedom implications to the
Assange prosecution are "whistling past the graveyard."
(5) Ecuador's withdrawal of
asylum raises questions.
Assange's arrest came after
Ecuador withdrew his asylum protection. In a tweet on
April 11, Ecuadoran President Lenin Moreno said the decision came after
Assange's "repeated violations to international conventions and daily-life
protocols." In a video statement accompanying the tweet, he cited
Assange's repeated "intervening in the internal affairs of other
states" via WikiLeaks publications.
Ecuador had previously restricted Assange's
access to the internet based on allegations that he was interfering in U.S.
elections and in the referendum for Catalan independence from Spain. While
Assange's unusual presence in a diplomatic mission created tensions--both
inside the embassy and in Ecuador's broader international
relations--withdrawing asylum is an extreme measure, and one that could have
troubling implications if it was done in response to publishing.
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