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    Espionage Act Presents Challenges for WikiLeaks Indictment

    Email-ID 1084229

    Date 2010-12-15 17:40:26

    From [email protected]

    To [email protected]

    List-Name [email protected]

    Comments from the experts. As I said before, I still don't think the

    Supreme Court has set a clear line on this issue. Note Holder's statement

    too--suggests Fred's info is true that they may try to prosecute Assange

    under other laws.

    Espionage Act Presents Challenges for WikiLeaks Indictment

    Sweeping Anti-Spying Law 'Makes Felons of Us All,' Legal Expert Says

    http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/wikileaks-indictment-us-charge-julian-assange-espionage-act/story?id=12369173

    29 comments

    By DEVIN DWYER

    Dec. 13, 2010

    As the U.S. Justice Department crafts a legal case against WikiLeaks'

    Julian Assange for the publication of thousands of secret government

    cables, legal experts are warning that any indictment under the Espionage

    Act may also implicate the news media -- and Americans who've read the

    cables or shared them with their friends.

    The World War I-era law is broadly written and criminalizes anyone who

    possesses or transmits any "information relating to the national defense"

    which an individual has "reason to believe could be used to the injury of

    the United States or to the advantage of any foreign nation."

    If WikiLeaks, which allegedly did not steal the documents, is guilty of

    espionage for printing them, so too might be the New York Times, U.K.'sThe Guardian, and Germany's Der Spiegel, which have replicated and

    disseminated the materials worldwide, some experts say.

    Individual users of Twitter and Facebook and other social media who spread

    links to the documents far and wide, or even discussed the contents in

    public, could also technically be liable.

    "One of the flaws in the Espionage Act is that it draws no distinction

    between the leaker or the spy and the recipient of the information, no

    matter how far downstream the recipient is," said American University law

    professor Stephen Vladeck, an expert in national security law.

    "There's no difference in the statute between Assange and someone at home

    who opens up something that Assange has posted on his website knowing that

    it's classified," he said.

    The sweeping and vague nature of the law may explain why the federal

    government recently warned all employees not to read WikiLeaks' cables or

    any news reports pertaining to them because the information is still

    classified.

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    Several universities around the country have also warned students who

    might seek careers with the federal government not to post links to

    WikiLeaks content or discuss the cables publicly through social media.

    " [The Espionage Act] criminalizes all casual discussions of such

    disclosures by persons not authorized to receive them to other persons not

    authorized to receive them... in other words, all tweets sending aroundthose countless news stories, all blogging on them, and all dinner party

    conversations about their contents," wrote Benjamin Wittes, a legal

    analyst with the Brookings Institution, on the blog LawFare.

    "Taken at its word, the Espionage Act makes felons of us all," he said.

    Feds Weigh Approaches to Charging Assange

    Vladeck said the complexity of the situation may explain why the U.S.

    government and Attorney General Eric Holder have not yet charged Assange

    with a crime.

    Still, Jennifer Robinson, one of Assange's attorneys, told ABC News lastweek that she's hearing an indictment under the Espionage Act could be

    imminent.

    "Our position of course is that we don't believe it applies to Mr. Assange

    and that in any event he's entitled to First Amendment protection as

    publisher of Wikileaks and any prosecution under the Espionage Act would

    in my view be unconstitutional and puts at risk all media organizations in

    the U.S.," Robinson said.

    Only once in the history of the Espionage Act has the U.S. government

    brought a case against someone other than the thief of secret information.

    That prosecution failed, Vladeck said.

    But Holder cautioned reporters last week that the Espionage Act isn't the

    only law under which the Justice Department might charge Assange.

    "I don't want to get into specifics here, but people would have a

    misimpression if the only statute you think that we are looking at is the

    Espionage Act," he said. "That is certainly something that might play a

    role, but there are other statutes, other tools that we have at our

    disposal."

    Experts say Assange could also be charged with trafficking in stolen

    government property or conspiracy, if investigators can demonstrate a link

    between Assange and the alleged source of the leak, Army Private Bradley

    Manning.

    Manning, who is believed to have stolen the documents in his role as a

    military intelligence analyst, is being held in a U.S. military prison in

    Quantico, Va. He likely faces charges for espionage.

    As for liability of the news media, a recent report from the Congressional

    Research Service suggests there may be sufficient legal precedent to keep

    them off the hook.

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    "Leaks of classified information to the press have only rarely been

    punished as crimes, and we are aware of no case in which a publisher of

    information obtained through unauthorized disclosure by a government

    employee has been prosecuted for publishing it," the report reads.

    "There may be First Amendment implications that would make such aprosecution difficult, not to mention political ramifications based on

    concerns about government censorship."

    --

    Sean Noonan

    Tactical Analyst

    Office: +1 512-279-9479

    Mobile: +1 512-758-5967

    Strategic Forecasting, Inc.

    www.stratfor.com