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The persecution and prosecution of Bradley Manning
#71

Harvard Professor Testifies Manning Disclosures are a "High Point" in Journalism History

By ADAM KLASFELD / Courthouse News ServiceJuly 11th, 2013inShare
[Image: war-obama.jpg?w=307&h=200&crop=1]



Praise for WikiLeaks as Manning Defense Rests

FT. MEADE, Md. (CN) Pfc. Bradley Manning's disclosures to WikiLeaks mark one of the "high points" in the history of journalism, a Harvard professor testified Wednesday as the last defense witness in the landmark court-martial.

Manning has freely admitted his responsibility for the largest intelligence leak in U.S. history: a more-than-700,000-file stash of battlefield reports from two war zones, diplomatic cables and footage of airstrikes on civilians.
Prosecutors claim that the 25-year-old soldier "aided the enemy" and committed espionage, theft and computer fraud through these disclosures.
Harvard professor Yochai Benkler countered that the soldier enriched the "Networked Fourth Estate," a phrase that he coined in the subtitle of his paper, "A Free Irresponsible Press."
The last witness to testify for the defense, Benkler is considered an academic authority in the evolution of media in the age of the Internet, and the most widely cited scholar on WikiLeaks.
His concept of a "networked" Fourth Estate describes not only how traditional journalism outlets use online resources, but how the Internet forced the newsgathering process to evolve.
The military judge, Col. Denise Lind, admitted him as an expert on this topic, for the first time in U.S. jurisprudence.
Benkler testified that neither Manning, nor anybody else, would have had any reason to consider WikiLeaks a terrorist-enabler before overheated rhetoric against it came from Washington.
In its early days, WikiLeaks set its sights on authoritarian regimes, publishing about the Chinese government's use of "Green Dam" software, Benkler noted. The program had been billed as anti-pornography software, but it also censored political dissent.
Other early scoops included evidence of a tax shelter scam at the Swiss bank, Julius Baer; toxic waste dumping off the Ivory Coast by Trafigura, a Dutch multinational corporation; and extrajudicial killing by the Kenyan government.
The latter expose won WikiLeaks an award by Amnesty International and solidified its reputation as a whistle-blowing website, Benkler said.
As the accolades poured in, a Pentagon counterintelligence official wrote and published a paper, "WikiLeaks.org An Online Reference to Foreign Intelligence Services, Insurgents, or Terrorist Groups?"
Prosecutors argue that Manning, who leaked this document, knew about the organization's supposedly secret nature and threat.
But Benkler said that even the paper's author, Michael Horvach, never answered that question. The paper meanwhile describes WikiLeaks and its employees in traditional journalistic terms like "staff writers," "editors" and "analysis of documents," the professor noted.
"These are the things that are at the very core of investigative journalism," Benkler said.
Horvach's concern about WikiLeaks, moreover, stemmed from the "false, simply mistaken" assertion that it does not authenticate its documents, Benkler added.
In reality, verification procedures at WikiLeaks have differentiated it from short-lived competitors like LiveLeaks, Benkler said.
Noting that WikiLeaks never issued a significant retraction, Benkler quipped: "Dan Rather, I'm sure, would like to say the same thing."
Perhaps the most prominent of the Manning's leaks is the footage of an Apache helicopter's footage of a Baghdad airstrike that killed two Reuters employees, which WikiLeaks titled "Collateral Murder."
By unveiling this at the venerable National Press Club, WikiLeaks chief Julian Assange signaled "a bridge between new media and old media," Benkler said.
The professor pointed out that The New York Times, the Guardian and Der Spiegel, a German daily, coordinated with WikiLeaks in reporting on the Afghanistan and Iraq "war logs."
This marked "a clear distinct component of what in the history of journalism we see as high points, where journalists are able to come in and say, here's a system operating in a way that is obscure to the public and now we're able to shine the light," Benkler said. "That's what WikiLeaks showed how to do for the networked public sphere."
Around this period, statements by government officials "began to shift publicly" against the website. Then-Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Mike Mullen accused WikiLeaks of having blood on its hands, and Vice President Joe Biden called Assange "a high-tech terrorist."
Newspapers that published the scoops meanwhile mostly avoided such condemnation.
"The wrath was reserved purely for WikiLeaks," Benkler said.
With "Cablegate," a compendium of more than 250,000 diplomatic cables Manning leaked, the rhetoric continued to heat up. One Fox News host called for the government to "illegally shoot" Assange, and New York Times columnist Thomas Friedman ranked "super-empowered individuals" like the WikiLeaks chief as a threat on par with China.
Some level heads remained as then-Defense Secretary Robert Gates called official reactions to the leaks "fairly significantly overwrought" in a letter to Sen. Carl Levin, D-Mich.
Benkler called the remark "an extraordinarily well-placed assessment."
Manning's lead attorney, David Coombs, said it was the bluster from Washington that put WikiLeaks on al-Qaida's radar. U.S. officials found Afghan war logs and diplomatic cables during the raid on Osama bin Laden's compound in Abbottabod, Pakistan, trial evidence showed.
With its major leaker facing the potential of life imprisonment, and its editor-in-chief holed up in the Ecuadorean embassy in London, Benkler noted that the organization's fate is uncertain.
"WikiLeaks might fail in the future because all of these events, but the model of some form of decentralized leaking that is secure technologically and allows for collaboration among different media in different countries that's going to survive, and somebody else will build it.
"But WikiLeaks played that critical role of that particular critical component of what muckraking and investigative journalism has always done," he said, ending his direct examination.
One of the prosecutors, Capt. Joe Morrow, acknowledged that Benkler was a "distinguished academic and clearly a very smart man" as he tried to undermine the methods that behind the professor's conclusions.
In his research, Benkler said that he perused "at least 700 articles" about WikiLeaks that he found on WestLaw.
When Benkler published a draft of "A Free Irresponsible Press" on his website, Assange sent him an annotated version with comments, information and requested corrections. Benkler said he followed every lead, without taking any annotation at face value.
Morrow suggested that Benkler did not apply enough skepticism to allegations of Manning's solitary confinement in a Marine brig in Quantico, Va.
Manning's nearly nine-month stay at Quantico, from July 29, 2010, to April 19, 2011, provoked international attention, as reports trickled out that he had been forced to spend more than 23 hours a day alone, ordered to strip and denied permission to exercise in his windowless, 6-by-8-foot cell.
Col. Lind found before trial that Manning had experienced "unlawful pretrial punishment," but she refused to define his isolation as "solitary confinement" because it had been intended for his protection.
Benkler declined to be drawn into that debate when asked his view of the subject today.
"That was the information that was then available," he said of Manning's isolation.
Morrow also tried to make Benkler budge from his characterization of WikiLeaks as a legitimate and effective journalistic enterprise. Traditional critics of the website and its employees tend to cast them as activist, anti-secrecy absolutists that dump documents without regard to their individual news value.
The prosecutor touched upon all of these points, which Benkler rebuffed in turn.
Though he agreed there was a difference between journalism and activism, Benkler called reporting a "behavior" rather than an identity, and said that The Nation and Fox News push points of view while also presenting the news.
When Morrow asked whether journalists encouraged anonymity with their sources, the professor pointed to "Deep Throat," who remained unknown to the Washington Post's Bob Woodward even while providing clues to the Watergate puzzle.
The reception of the Iraq war logs also showed the news value to documents leaked en masse, Benkler added, pointing to a nonprofit organization that used them to challenge official estimates of casualty counts.
Morrow pressed that Assange, unlike a traditional editor-in-chief, used the language of espionage in describing the newsgathering process by calling his outlet "The People's Intelligence Agency," and speaking of "intelligence sources" and "outing a spy" in the organization.
Taking the remarks less literally, Benkler said that individuals within organizations vary in their conduct and their rhetoric.
The prosecutor finished with an attempt to call the professor's neutrality into question. "Your views on the court-martial are very well-known," Morrow said.
Benkler co-authored a New York Times op-ed "Death to Whistle-Blowers," and wrote "The Dangerous Logic of the Bradley Manning Case" in The New Republic.
On redirect, Coombs had Benkler explain both pieces, which took issue with unique charges against Manning. The professor noted that the potential capital offense of "aiding the enemy" has not been charged for a leak to the press since the Civil War, and carries the specter of life imprisonment over the heads of future journalism sources.
The defense rested with Benkler's testimony. Proceedings resume next week with oral argument on Manning's attempt to dismiss several major charges, including aiding the enemy. Prosecutors revealed plans to present a rebuttal case before the parties move on to closing arguments.
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
Reply
#72
http://warisacrime.org/content/manning-wins-peace-prize
Reply
#73
Albert Rossi Wrote:http://warisacrime.org/content/manning-wins-peace-prize

but see also:

[URL="http://warisacrime.org/content/manning-wins-peace-prize"]


http://dissenter.firedoglake.com/2013/07...-the-enemy[/URL]
Reply
#74
Albert Rossi Wrote:
Albert Rossi Wrote:http://warisacrime.org/content/manning-wins-peace-prize

but see also:

[URL="http://warisacrime.org/content/manning-wins-peace-prize"]


http://dissenter.firedoglake.com/2013/07...-the-enemy[/URL]

Yup! He's already been found GUILTY by the people he's blown the whistle on - and they hold all the jailer's keys and strings of power. IMO, sadly, his life is over...he will rot in prison the rest of his life, until the Revolution. Military Courts are much worst than the already horrible Civil Courts - they take orders and the order 'of the day' is whistleblowing=treason=death [life in prison, if they are forced into showing 'compassion']
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
Reply
#75
AMY GOODMAN: After nearly two months of trial, a military judge will now consider the fate of Army Private Bradley Manning, accused of being behind the biggest leak of classified information in U.S. history. Prosecutors in Manning's court-martial made their closing arguments Thursday, and the defense followed on Friday. The 25-year-old whistleblower is the first-ever defendant to face an "aiding the enemy" charge for leaking more than 700,000 documents to WikiLeaks and other news sources, which carries a potential life sentence in prison and could set a major precedent for future cases involving journalists. The judge in the case, Colonel Denise Lind, is now deliberating on the 21 charges Manning faces and has not said when she will rule.
Many of Manning's supporters are calling for the convening authority on the case, Jeffrey Buchanan, to dismiss a potential guilty finding by Lind and reduce the whistleblower's sentence. On Friday, protesters blocked the gates of Fort McNair in Washington, D.C., where Buchanan's office is located.
JOHN PEPPER: I don't think he's claimed to be naive; I think he has claimed to have done the right thing. I don't think the question is whether he was naive; I think the question is whether or not he did the right thing.
RACHEL ATWOOD: The very idea that he is being punished for coming out against war crimes and such cruelty by his fellow servicemen isit's really disturbing.
AMY GOODMAN: Over the weekend, protesters in dozens of cities around the world also held rallies to mark an international day of action calling for Manning's release. Last Thursday, the Bradley Manning Support Network published a full-page ad in The New York Times that read in part, "We are American military veterans, artists, journalists, educators, homemakers, lawyers, and citizens. We live in red states and in blue states, in communities urban and rural. We ask you to consider the facts, and join us in declaring: Enough is enough. Free Bradley Manning now," the ad read, in part.
Well, for more, we're joined from Fort Meade via Democracy Now! video stream by Alexa O'Brien, independent journalist who has been in the courtroom every day since the trial began. She is in her car in the parking lot outside the courtroom. O'Brien was the first to make transcripts of the proceedings publicly available when they weren't being made available by the court. She was shortlisted for the 2013 Martha Gellhorn Prize for Journalism in Britain.
Here in New York, we're joined by Michael Ratner, president emeritus of the Center for Constitutional Rights, a lawyer for Julian Assange and WikiLeaks. Both were brought up repeatedly during the prosecution's closing arguments. And Michael Ratner was also there for the opening and closing arguments in the Bradley Manning trial.
We welcome you both to Democracy Now! Michael, why don't you start off by describing the scene in the courtroom on Thursday and Friday, and what, first, the prosecution laid out, and then the defense.
MICHAEL RATNER: You know, it's a small courtroom. They make you wait a long time to get in. There's 25 spectators only allowed in. There's an overflow. You're very close to Bradley Manning, I mean almost as close as I am to you, Amy, here. So it's very small, compact. But it's very, very intense.
And the prosecutor spent all of Thursday on his summation, and he wasn't supposed to. And I'll tell you why in a second, but it was an awful thing to sit there and listen to him basically smear and go through a diatribe about the character of Bradley Manning as well as the reasons he claims Bradley Manning did what he did, as well as go after my client, WikiLeaks, saying they're not a journalist at all. It was a complete fantasy. But to sit there and painfully listen to these smears the entire dayyou know, everything from "he's a traitor" to "he did this for fame, he's self-interested"none of it is based on the evidence, none of it's true. And that's what David Coombs, Bradley Manning's defense lawyer, pointed out on Friday.
But when I say it took the whole daybecause here's what happened. We were supposed to get both summations on Thursday, but I think the prosecutor purposely repeated things constantlysix-hour summation, seven-hour summationso that the press that nightand it was the most press we had for a long time, 60-some presswould only put in his characterizations of Bradley Manning. It wasn't until the next day when David Coombs really, utterly destroyed the idea that Bradley Manning was doing this for anything but the highest motives, to get information out to the American public about U.S. war crimes and U.S. criminality.
AMY GOODMAN: Alexa O'Brien, you have been there every day of this trial, including Sunday, as Denise Lind, the judge, was deliberating. On the closing days and the closing arguments, can you talk about how the reporters were being treated by the military?
ALEXA O'BRIEN: We have a new public affairs officer here at Fort Meade, and we had armed guards basically roaming the aisles of the media operation center. But even more than roaming the aisles, they were actually standing behind reporters, peering into our computers, coming every five minutes behind us. It wasit was quite a shocking behavior.
AMY GOODMAN: Can you explainI was reading Charlie Savage's piece in The New York Times, who described what was happening in the media center, talking about how thelet me see if I can find the words. "While Major Fein made his arguments, reporters watched the trial on a closed-circuit feed at the media center. Two military police officers in camouflage fatigues and armed [with holstered] handguns paced behind each row there, looking over the journalists' shoulders, [which had not] happened during the trial. No explanation was given."
ALEXA O'BRIEN: You know, it's interesting because I was here yesterday while the judge deliberated, and the commander came up to meand I'm not allowed to name her, actually, or I could lose my press credentials. I can't name any staff by their surname, etc. She told me that she was actually the media person responsible for all the images of Saddam Hussein's capture and that those photographs were taken with her digital camera. So, she clearly understands how to manage the message. And that's really central to this trial, is how Fort Meade has managed the message by the lack of public access to court documents, the subject matter expert, by the Military District of Washington, which is responsible for convening a fair and impartial trial for the accused, Bradley Manning. The first subject matter expert we had was a member of the prosecution. Nobody in the press pool knew that. It's really what Mr. Ratner just spoke about, the fact that the prosecution wants to make sure that it makes the headlines, so it takes up a whole day of court and essentially squeezes any kind of press attention away from the defense. The fact of the matter is, is that if this trial were to be televised, if people could actually see Bradley Manning, see how earnest he is and how sincere a character and sympathetic a character he is, public opinion about this trial would change dramatically.
AMY GOODMAN: I mean, the fact that you're at the headquarters of the National Security Agency, rightit's right there at Fort Meadeand a military base, and talk about just the trouble you have with the Internet. And what is your ability to work? Describe what happens in the courtroom, in the media center. And can you go online at all there?
ALEXA O'BRIEN: We can no longer go online. The militarysorry, the Public Affairs Office here says it's because of commercial Internet issues with Comcast. However, the fact of the matter is, is that we'rewe have to go outside in order to file. Let's say something dramatic happens in the courtroom. We can't tweet or publish anything, even send an email. We have to leave the media operations center, stand on the steps, open up our phone, which we've gotten out of our car, and then tweet something or, you know, email something or file something.
You know, we have to also look back. There was a period of almost eight months when it was just simply a small cadre of independent journalists, where we didn't have a media operations center, where transcripts were pen and paper, and where we were trying to get out as much information as possible about a trial and motions related to aiding the enemy, whether or not the government was trying to craft an Official Secrets Act in this trial. It has been a completely surreal experience.
AMY GOODMAN: One of the court artists, you know, self-appointed, who drives a WikiLeaks truck, he was banned in these last few days from coming onto Fort Meade?
ALEXA O'BRIEN: Yeah, that had to do with his conduct. He did actually send an apology letter. I'll let him speak more specifically, because I'm not completely briefed on exactly what specific conduct it was. It was related to his tweets about the prosecutionthat, I know. He has been banned. The judge said she would reconsider it, because he sent this apology letter and explained himself. However, because he's possibly banned from the base itself and not just the court-martial proceedings, it has yet to be determined what the garrison commander will do, whether or not he will actually sign the document banning Clark from the base itself, which would make the court-martial ruling sort of moot.
AMY GOODMAN: The artistartist is named Clark Stoeckley.
I wanted to ask you, Alexa, during closing arguments Thursday, military prosecutor Major Ashden Fein accused Bradley Manning of betraying the nation, concluding: "He was not a whistleblower. He was a traitor," Fein said. He went on to say, "His mission, as an all intelligence analyst, was a special trust. But within weeks of arriving at Iraq, he abused and destroyed [this] trust with the wholesale, indiscriminate compromise of hundreds of thousands of classified documents. He delivered these documents ready made for use by an enemy via a platform he had long researched and come to know, WikiLeaks. He delivered these documents for notoriety."
Fein goes on to say that leaking to, quote, "established journalistic enterprise like The New York Times or Washington Post would be a crime," but that this did not happen. Major Fein argued that, quote, "[Pfc] Manning deliberately and intentionally disclosed his compromised information through WikiLeaks to the world knowing that WikiLeaks would release the information in the form they received it and that is ... exactly what happened in this case," so Fein said.
Alexa O'Brien, talk about the actual charges that Bradley Manning faces.
ALEXA O'BRIEN: Manning is charged with 22 charges. In the trial portion, or the merits trial, which was related to these offenses, he has pled to lesser included, and so the government accepted one of his pleas for the transmission of Reykjavik 13, a diplomatic cable related to the, basically, bankingbanking corruption and ineptitude in Iceland. And so, he was only really tried on 21 charges in that portion. But the whole trial is 22 charges. If he's convicted on the government's case, he faces life plus 154 years. He has pled to 10 lesser included offenses of the Espionage Act and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. And so, he already is exposed to 20 years. The defense strategy has really been to offset any greater offense, to try to keep it to his plea to 10 lesser included, so that when they get into the sentencing phase of the trial, which is imminent, they can really actually try to mitigate his sentence down as much as possible.
AMY GOODMAN: Michael Ratner, you were there for the opening arguments. You went back a number of times and then were there for the closing arguments. Making the point that the prosecution used up a lot of time on Thursday, and so the big reports were on Friday, when the defense had not made its arguments, and thenisn't really the prosecution's problem, it's the reporters whohalf of them didn't come back, and so they don't have the defense's view of things. Now, the prosecution called him an anarchist who was seeking to make a splash; he betrayed the U.S. trust. Could Bradley Manning face the death penalty, even if the prosecutors don't ask for it from Denise Lind?
MICHAEL RATNER: Right, aiding the enemy does carry the death penalty. The judge, even though the prosecutors said they're only going to go for life, or they won't give him more than life, the judge can do what she wants, and she could give him the death penalty for that. That's correct.
I mean, you know, the courtroom was reallyit's hard to describe how horrible that day of Thursday was, in some of the statements that you're saying the judge saidthat the prosecutor said, because there was no evidence of any of that. The idea that he was a traitor came from a witness who never wrote anything down, who clearly made it up after the fact, about something about his attitude toward the flag. The idea that he was doing it for fame was ridiculous, because, as David Coombs, the lawyer for Bradley Manning, pointed out, he tried to be anonymous the whole time. He tried to, quote, "cover his tracks." So how is he becoming famous from doing this?
And then, the defense went through three different times in which it was clear that Bradley Manning had the highest motives: before he even went to Iraq, that he wanted to save people, that he wanted to save fellow soldiers; when he's there and talking to Lamo, Lamo is quoted as saying Bradley Manning is idealistic; and Manning is also quoted in that saying, "If you had seen the horrible things, horrible things that I've seen, would you just leave them on the Internet?"
Then, of course, after, he gives this incredible day of testimony as to why he leaked each of these sets of documents, from the Iraq War Logs to the "Collateral Murder" video. One of the most moving moments in the courtroom was on Friday, when they played excerpts of the "Collateral Murder" video. That's the video in which you see the Apache helicopter people killing the Reuters journalists and then firing on the van that's going to pick up the wounded people, and then firing again and again, and using language of basically saying, "We just got another target." And
AMY GOODMAN: This was the attack in New Baghdad, Iraq, by a U.S. Apache helicopter on July 12th, 2007.
MICHAEL RATNER: Right, and you've shown it here a number of times. It's one of the most moving things. And what David Coombs asked the judge to do is said, "Put yourself in the position of a 21-year-old soldier watching that video, and try and not remove yourself from what's going on there." Nine people are killed in that video, nine people, that the implication was clear, unjustifiably killed, with incredible
AMY GOODMAN: I think the total was 12, right? Including two Reuters employees, Namir Noor-Eldeen, the videographer, and his driver, Saeed Chmagh.
MICHAEL RATNER: It may be. They mentioned nine, but I think that's certainly a numberI think he even said nine or more in that video. And he asked the judge to say, "Look at Bradley Manning and what he did with that video and why he did it. Don't talk about it the way the government talks about it"this is somehow releasing, you know, information about the angle of the helicopter or something, which was absurd, because most of the information, if not almost all of it, had come out about that helicopter attack, and it wasn't even classified. But that was an incredibly stirring moment in which the judgein which the prosecutor is trying to say these are Bradley Manning's motives in doing it.
Now, one interesting aspect of this, of course, is the aiding the enemy charge. I just want to go to one point of it, because one of the reasonsand you mentioned it, in sayingthey're painting WikiLeaks in a certain way, because they want to say that Bradley Manning, by giving this to WikiLeaks, knew it would go up on the Internet, and WikiLeaks is a bad organization, it's not a journalistic organization, and thereforeit's nefarious, and therefore, when Bradley Manning did it, he did it with a motive, by giving it to WikiLeaks, that might have been different had he given it to The New York Times. Well, that was just smashed to bits by the prosecutionby the defendant, defense, first by a witness they had, Benkler from Harvard, who said WikiLeaks is a legitimate journalistic organization, there's a role for organizations like WikiLeaks in doing this, and thatand that WikiLeaks doesn't put out everything it gets. It actually hasis discreet about what it puts out. It's had less than 1 percent of its documents put up have been somewhat, possibly, less inaccurateless than 1 percent. That's probably a better record than The New York Times. But the prosecution is trying to show Bradley Manning in a certain way and WikiLeaks in a certain way, as these two organizations that essentially want to undermine the United States, rather than the whistleblowing journalists they are.
AMY GOODMAN: We have to break and come back, and then I want to ask you, Alexa, about the witnesses that were called, and then talk about the implications of this for journalists, overall, in releasing information, and particularly look at this aiding the enemy charge. Alexa O'Brien is with us in her car outside the courtroom, because no other accommodation could be made to talk to her right now as the judge deliberates the verdict of Bradley Manning. Alexa O'Brien has been in that courtroom every day since the trial began, the first to make transcripts publicly available. And we're joined by Michael Ratner, who is the attorney for Julian Assange and WikiLeaks. We'll be back in a minute.
AMY GOODMAN: "Almost Gone," by Graham Nash, about Bradley Manning, a special song for the young man on trial right now. His fate is in the hands of the military judge. This is not a jury trial. I'm Amy Goodman. This is Democracy Now! We're talking about Bradley Manning, the trial that just wrapped in closing arguments Thursday and Friday, now in the hands of Colonel Denise Lind at Fort Meade, which is the headquarters of the National Security Agency in Maryland. Our guests are journalist Alexa O'Brien, who spent every day in the courtroom from the beginning of the trial to the endshe's sitting outside in her car now in order to be able to speak to uswe are also joined by Michael Ratner, attorney for Julian Assange and WikiLeaks, president emeritus of the Center for Constitutional Rights. He, too, has been attending the Bradley Manning trial, not every single day. But we also want to talk about the significance of how often WikiLeaks and Julian Assange were raised in this trial. Is this trial a preparation for a next stage? But, Alexa, talk about the list of witnesses and the significance of them, what you found most interesting.
ALEXA O'BRIEN: Are you talking about on the trial and the merits that we've just finished?
AMY GOODMAN: Yes.
ALEXA O'BRIEN: You know, here we have the government bringing out their original classification authorities, and these are government witnesses who will testify that the information Manning allegedly or admittedly leaked was national security information and that it was closely held. But what was really, really interesting is that, fundamentally, as defense has pointed out, these original classification authorities that are oftentimes the commanders of CENTCOM, Central Command, or Pacific Command or Patrick Kennedy, who's the undersecretary for management at the Department of State, they willthey have a vested interest in essentially saying that their classification determinations of the information was actually accurate. So, this is an important point, because we have to understand: Manning is not on trial for actual harm; he's on trial for probable harm. So the government brought out witnesses that essentially testified to those two criminal elements.
But they also tried to bring out witnesses that were going to say that Bradley Manning was a bad soldier or that he was, you know, as Mr. Ratner had said, a traitor. But really, except for Showman, who the defense impeached her credibility of her testimony when she said that Manning, you know, said he didn't have any loyalty to the flag when she tapped her shoulder and the flag on her uniform. They've all said that Manning was one of the best analysts, that he was the go-to analyst, that he was a hard worker. Something that was interesting in defense closing arguments is they said that the government can't have it both ways. They can't say that Manning was lazy because he was, you know, working all night trying to exfiltrate information and that he was also the go-to analyst, using disjointed logic depending on which charge or which aspect they were trying to essentially assert in court.
In terms of the defense, we had one of the mostreally, a historic elocution by a law professor, Yochai Benkler, who was the defense expert on WikiLeaks, who talked to the judge in a very candid manner about the threat to the delicate balance between the national security reporting and the First Amendment, if she found Manning guilty of aiding the enemy. One of the important things that we have to remember is aiding the enemy, Article 104, is one of the two violations under the Uniform Code of Military Justice that applies to any person. So it's beyond Manning's duty as a soldier. This is about really every citizen in the United States.
AMY GOODMAN: And, Alexa, the ability to get information outI mean, what you started doing in this trial, for people to understand how closely held the information was, that you were the one providing the public with transcripts at the beginning. Explain why the court wasn't doing this.
ALEXA O'BRIEN: The courtthis is a military court-martial. And Judge Colonel Denise Lind believedit was her contentionand Mr. Ratner and CCR, you know, filed suit in respect to thisshe felt that there was no legalFirst Amendment legal precedent for public access to the court documents. So what she would do is read these really long, mile-a-minute recitations of the motions into the court record and then deprive us of a media operations center, so that we had to actually scribble these things down in our notebooks.
And we're not talking about just merely the trial of Bradley Manning, as important as it is. We're talking about setting legal precedent for the future of national security reporting and also whistleblowersand also, really, even beyond that, just simply people using the Internet, communicating in legally protected speech, First Amendment rights, because the government is asserting in this case that, essentially, the enemy uses the Internet, and so if you publish intelligence or you aid the enemy with whatever is classified as intelligence, which in this case only has to be true and useful to the enemythat's the definition; it doesn't have anything to do with classified informationthat you could be brought up on the charge of aiding the enemy. So, it's very important that wewe should have had access to these public records. And I think it tells youit leans more towards a long record of Colonel Denise Lind being deferential to the government, the prosecution, and doing whatever she can to help them manage this trial and the public perception about it.
AMY GOODMAN: Michael Ratner, actually, Denise Lind, the judge, is going to move out of her position after this, isn't she?
MICHAEL RATNER: Yeah, she's been given, apparently, from a Washington Post report, a appellate judge job, the higher court, which I found pretty extraordinary. I don't know whether it'sI don't think it's necessarily illegal, but it doesit's interesting to me that she's going upstairs during the very trial that's going on, and given that promotion. And it reminded me when the Ellsberg judge, the judge in Daniel Ellsberg's case, the federal judge, during Ellsberg's trial on espionage was offered to be the head of the FBI, secretly, by the Nixon administration. And, of course, there was a huge stink. I don't see any stink so far in any of the media about the fact that Denise Lind, the judge, is being offered to a higher position. And then, think about the higher position. She's sitting up there on the court when the Bradley Manning conviction is going to be, assuming there'swell, there's a conviction because he's already pleaded to 10 countsis going to be reviewed. She won't sit on it, but her fellow judges are going to be sitting there, and are they going to want to reverse one of their fellow judges? So, itbasically, it stinks, Amy.
AMY GOODMAN: On the issue of aiding the enemy, what would you like to add to what Alexa said?
MICHAEL RATNER: Well, you know, in some way it's the most serious charge, because it's life, if not even death. But the government's theory is what really is awful here. It's basically saying you can aid the enemy by putting information up on the Internet that's intelligence, doesn't classified, and because the enemy reads the Internet, you can be accused of aiding the enemy. So thatwhich is a death penalty. That ends whistleblowing. What person is going to actually start whistleblowing and giving information to the media if they can get the death penalty?
But it also puts the journalist or publisher in the middle, indirectly, according to the government, of aiding the enemy. Now, they claim, well, WikiLeaks is different. But thatbut they also understand, and the government understands, that WikiLeaks, The New York Times, The Washington Post, anybody in the middle there indirectly could be accused of aiding the enemy. And it's part and parcel, of course, of the war on whistleblowers and publishers that's going on. And the two that are really relevant to aiding the enemy are what happened with James Risen recentlyhe was the reporter who was trying to say he doesn't have to testify because of reporter's privilege in the case ofin the Sterling case having to do with
AMY GOODMAN: Well, explain. James Risen is a well-known New York Times reporter who wrote a book, and this has to do with Iran. And explain what the court's decision was recently.
MICHAEL RATNER: Right. And the court's decision is he has no First Amendment right not to testify, no reporter's privilege not to testify.
AMY GOODMAN: In implicating Sterling in the trial as being the whistleblower.
MICHAEL RATNER: That'sand the language of the court should be a warning to every single publisher and journalist out there. It says Risen is the only eyewitness; he's inextricably involved in the crime; without him, the crime would not have occurred. So this is saying that the journalist who is reporting on a whistleblower is actually inextricably involved with the crime. Think about what message that sends every publisher in the country about using sources for their stories. It's a terribly serious problem. It's one that, you know, makes me very upset that people aren't now seeing that and coming to the defense of WikiLeaks, which is being put into thatinto that position.
AMY GOODMAN: WikiLeaks, for a moment, let's just talk about that. I was reading that quote of the prosecutor saying that Bradley Manning deliberately and intentionally disclosed compromised information through WikiLeaks to the world, knowing WikiLeaks would release the information in the form they receive it, and that's exactly what happened in this case. What about the emphasis on Julian Assange and WikiLeaks in the court-martial of Bradley Manning?
MICHAEL RATNER: You know, I've sat there stunned every day I've gone to the courtroom. Julian Assange was mentioned 10 times in the morning of the prosecution's opening, WikiLeaks 20, 30 times. I don't even know. So, there's two things going on here. One is they want to use WikiLeaks as a nefarious organization to paint Bradley Manning as somehow having a bad intent by the two coming together. But secondly, they're obviously trying to paint in the public mind, and obviously what they've been doing at the Justice Department is tois the next stone that will be unturned here or uncovered here is probably the prosecution of WikiLeaks and Julian Assange. We think it's very likely. There's already an indictment of Julian Assange and WikiLeaks. And you could look at this trial as the setup, really, for getting Julian Assange andJulian Assange indicted on this indirect aiding the enemy, etc.
AMY GOODMAN: Alexa O'Brien, before we leave you right there in the parking lot of the headquarters of the National Security Agency, where you are awaiting the verdict, explain what the schedule is, what will happen now with the judge, and why this is even a judge trial, not a jury trial.
ALEXA O'BRIEN: Manning opted to be tried by the military judge alone. He had the option of a panel of officers and enlisted personnel. If you look at the pretrial record, typicallyalso, first, if you look at just the history andjury trials tend to be more partial to the accused. But here we have an accused who is gay in the military, and there is evidence of a struggle with gender identity while he's in Iraq. The defense was concerned that Bradley Manning couldn't get a fair trial with a panel of officers and enlisted personnel, firstly.
And secondly, I think that the defense strategy has really been to have the same judge that they could educate over the course of 18 months about very important ideas, like access as it relates to exceeding authorized access under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act. Also, while the statement that Bradley Manning made in February isn't admissible at trial, where he pled to 10 lesser included offenses, she's aware that he made this statement. A jury would not have been aware of that. So there are very important, strategic aspects to choosing Judge Lind alone.
MICHAEL RATNER: On that one issueAlexa is right, those are the reasons. But also, the jury in a military case is appointed by the convening authority, who is the general in charge of the proceedings, and it's not taken randomly by choice from a pool.
AMY GOODMAN: Alexa O'Brien, the best place where people can go to get your reports, the transcripts, alexaobrien.com?
ALEXA O'BRIEN: Yes.
"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
Reply
#76
I've been getting most of the best coverage of Manning trial by Alexa O'Brien. She has been a dedicated observer and recorder of history unfolding and a staunch supporter of Manning and whistle-blowers. She has attended the proceedings every day and kept us all up to date. The judge will announce the verdict at 1pm.

http://www.alexaobrien.com/secondsight/w...rditc.html


Quote: US v. Pfc. Manning | Breakdown on the imminent Verdict

By Alexa O'Brien on July 29, 2013 5:53 PM | Tweet

Pfc. Bradley Manning is charged with 22 offenses under the Uniform Code of Military Justice. He pled to 10 lesser included offenses and currently faces up to 20 years. Manning will face life plus 154 years in a military prison if convicted on the prosecution's case.
The presiding military judge, Col. Denise Lind, will announce her findings on Manning's guilt or innocence at 1:00 p.m. EST on Tuesday, July 31. Below is a breakdown on how the judge could rule on the verdict.
Unlike a federal criminal trial, where sentencing occurs after the creation of a pre-sentencing report, if Manning is convicted of any of the charges, a sentencing case will commence immediately. During the sentencing case, both defense and the prosecution will present evidence, call witnesses, and make arguments about appropriate punishment.
The maximum sentences for the charged offenses are outlined in the Manual for Courts-Martial and Lind's previous court rulings.
Since the court ruled that motive and actual damage (or 'lack of damage') evidence was not relevant at trial (except to prove circumstantially that Manning was cognizant of the fact that the enemy used the WikiLeaks website), evidence of Manning's intent and the impact of the leaks will finally be heard by the court at sentencing.
It remains to be seen, however, how much of the sentencing phase of this trial will be open to the public, since the government is expected to elicit testimony from these 13 classified sentencing witnesses in closed sessions or in classified stipulations.
For more information on 13 closed sentencing witnesses go, here. For more information on the three classified damage assessments that will be used during sentencing, go here.
[B]The Charges
[/B] Military prosecutors charged Private First Class Bradley Manning on March 1, 2011 with violating three Articles of the Uniform Code of Military Justice (U.C.M.J):
  • Charge I: 'Aiding the Enemy' under Article 104
  • Charge II: 16 separate offenses under General Article 134
  • Charge III: 5 offenses of Article 92 'Failure to obey order or regulation'
The 16 separate offenses under Charge II General Article 134 include:
  • 1 specification for 'Wanton Publication of Intelligence on the Internet'
  • 8 specification of the Espionage Act-- 18 U.S.C. 793(e)
  • 2 specification of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act-- 18 U.S.C. 1030(a)(1)
  • 5 specification of 'Stealing U.S. Government Property'-- 18 U.S.C. 641
The five separate offenses of Charge III Article 92 or a 'failure to obey order or regulation' include:
  • attempting to bypass a network of information security system mechanism
  • adding unauthorized software to a Secret Internet Protocol Router Network on two separate occasions
  • using an information system in a manner other than its intended purpose
  • wrongfully storing classified information
Guilty or Innocent
Aiding the Enemy
Manning could be found guilty or innocent of aiding the enemy.
If he is found guilty he faces life in prison.
Wanton Publication
Manning could be found guilty or innocent of "Wanton Publication of Intelligence".
If he is found guilty, he faces up to two years in prison.
Espionage
Manning pled guilty to seven lesser included offenses of the Espionage Act for "unauthorized possession" and "willful communication" of:
  • an unclassified video of a 7 July 2007 Apache air strike known as Collateral Murder
  • 2 classified CIA Red Cell Memos
  • more than 25 classified records from the Iraq War Logs
  • more than 25 classified records from the Afghan War Diary
  • more than three classified records from the GTMO Files
  • 5 classified records pertaining to the Garani air strike in May 2009, and
  • a United States Army Counterintelligence Center 2008 Report on WikiLeaks
Manning pled not guilty to an eighth violation of the Espionage Act for an unclassified video of a May 2009 U.S. bombing in the Farah Province of Afghanistan, known as the Garani video.
Manning could be found guilty of the greater offense for the eight Espionage Act charges. If convicted on the greater offense, the maximum punishment of 10 years each.
Manning is not likely to be found innocent for the seven offenses that he pled to a lesser included offense for. NB Despite Manning's plea, Lind must still "find" Manning guilty for each crime.
The maximum punishment for each lesser included offense for "unauthorized possession" and "willful communication" is 2 years. So, he is already exposed to 14 years for his LIO plea for seven Espionage Act charges.
Manning pled not guilty to the eighth offense under the Espionage Act for the Garani video. So, Manning still could be found innocent, guilty of the greater offense, or guilty of the lesser included offense for the "unauthorized possession" and "willful communication" of the Garani video. See more on the Garani airstrike, here.
Manning could also be found guilty to a lesser included offense for each of the eight Espionage Act offenses for 'attempt'.
Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
Manning also pled guilty to the lesser included offense of two charges under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act for 'knowingly accessing' and 'willfully communicating' 117 U.S. Department of State Cables. He is exposed to four year on that plea to the LIO.
TMilitary prosecutors accepted Manning's plea to the lesser included offense for "knowingly accessing" and "willfully communicating" a State Department cable known as Reykjavik 13.
Military prosecutors moved forward on the greater offense, despite Manning's plea, for "exceeding authorized access" for 116 diplomatic cables. Manning could be found guilty of the greater offense or guilty on his plea to the lesser included offense.
He will not likely be found innocent for the two charges under the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, because of his plea to LIO.
If convicted of the greater offense for the 117 diplomatic cables, he faces up to 10 years in prison. If found guilty of his plea to the lesser included offense, he could face up to two years in prison. He can also be found guilty of the lesser included offense of attempt for the 117 diplomatic cables.
Stealing USG Property
Manning pled not guilty to "stealing, purloining, or knowingly converting" five government databases containing records for the Iraq War Logs, the Afghan War Diary, the GTMO Files, Cablegate, and the Global Email Address List from the U.S. Forces- Iraq SharePoint Exchange Server.
Manning could be found innocent or guilty of each of the five offense as charged. He would face up to ten years if convicted on the greater offense for each databases (Iraq War Logs, the Afghan War Diary, the GTMO Files, NetCentric Diplomacy, and the Global email Address List).
Manning could also be found guilty on a lesser included offense for attempt or if military prosecutors fail to establish the value of each of the five databases at more than $1000.
NB If convicted of the lesser included offense for "stealing, purloining, or knowingly converting" the Department of State NetCentric Diplomacy database, Manning faces five years maximum punishment, because it is a non-military database.
Amended Charge Sheet
In a recent controversial legal maneuver, Lind ruled military prosecutors could change the charge sheet after both defense and the prosecution had rested their cases-- nineteen months into the proceedings, on July 24.
Military prosecutors conceded after the close of evidence at trial that Manning did not steal the entire database for three charge offenses of stealing the CIDNE-Iraq (Iraq War Logs) and the CIDNE-Afghanistan (Afghan War Diary) databases and the US Forces-Iraq Microsoft Outlook Global Address List. The Court ruled the databases were equivalent to the records contained within them. Defense has moved the Court to reconsider its ruling. The judge is expected to rule on the defense motion for reconsideration prior to announcing her verdict.
Failure to Obey a Lawful General Regulation
Manning pled guilty to one of five offenses charged under Article 92 for a failure to obey a lawful general regulation" for wrongfully storing classified information. He is not likely to be found innocent on his plea to that offense, and faces up to two years.
Manning could also be found innocent or guilty of four other offenses under Article 92, and could be convicted of up to two years for each offense he is found guilty of.
The Charges, Manning's Plea, and Maximum Punishment (Sortable)
Go here for a sortable list of the charges and Manning's plea and their maximum punishments.
[Image: pic-sort-charges.jpg]

Categories:





"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
Reply
#77
Bradley Manning trial judge increased press security "because of repeat violations of the rules of court"

Xeni Jardin at 6:02 pm Thu, Jul 25, 2013


Col. Denise Lind, the Judge in the Bradley Manning military trial. Pic by Clark Stoeckley (twitter: @wikileakstruck).

Huffington Post reporter Matt Sledge read my Boing Boing post earlier today about reports from the Bradley Manning trial of dramatically-increased security measures for press. Those measures including armed military police standing behind journalists at their laptops, snooping on their screens.
He reports that the new, oppressive security measures were ordered directly by the judge because reporters were violating court rules (which no one can find a copy of), and carrying "prohibited electronics." For this, the government needs armed military police standing right behind reporters as they type, in the media room.
Matt says:
I've covered civil and criminal cases in federal and state courts (including a terrorism trial), and the Manning court martial for eight months, and I haven't run into an atmosphere quite as tense as today. Here's the latest: the Military District of Washington told me in a statement that the new security measures are coming straight from the judge, and in response to "repeat violations of the rules of the court both in the courtroom and the media operations center." No elaboration on what those were.
A snip from Matt's HuffPo item:
Col. Denise Lind, the judge overseeing the case, ordered the increased security measures "because of the repeat violations of the rules of the court both in the courtroom and the media operations center with regard to broadcasting and electronics," the Military District of Washington said in a emailed, unsigned statement. "The Military Police are to screen personnel to ensure no one is bringing prohibited electronics into the building and to ensure compliance with the rules of the court."
I presume Col. Lind is referring in part to the leaked audio of Bradley Manning's statement before the court, which Freedom of the Press Foundation received from an anonymous source and published online.
Armed military police peering over journalists' shoulders, no Internet access in the remote media room, Army staff frisking everyone for phones -- those weren't the only obstacles for reporters covering the trial today. The military also refused to publish key documents the government used to build its closing argument.
Read the rest at Huffpo: "Army Ramps Up Security For Bradley Manning Trial's Closing Arguments"
Related Boing Boing posts:
"Journalists at Bradley Manning trial report hostile conditions for press"
"Closing arguments in Bradley Manning court-martial paint Wikileaks source as glory-seeking traitor"
Creepy having armed MPs in camo patrolling behind each row of reporters & looking over shoulders as we take notes on Manning trial today
Charlie Savage (@charlie_savage) July 25, 2013

http://boingboing.net/2013/07/25/bradley...ge-in.html

POLICIES

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"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
Reply
#78
Quote:Huffington Post reporter Matt Sledge read my Boing Boing post earlier today about reports from the Bradley Manning trial of dramatically-increased security measures for press. Those measures including armed military police standing behind journalists at their laptops, snooping on their screens.


I'm sure Faux News will be rooting for a uniformed Volkland Security goon to fizz some pepper spray in the faces of any journalist displaying the tiniest fragment of independent thought.

They've probably got the orange jumpsuit and unmarked plane on standby too...
"It means this War was never political at all, the politics was all theatre, all just to keep the people distracted...."
"Proverbs for Paranoids 4: You hide, They seek."
"They are in Love. Fuck the War."

Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon

"Ccollanan Pachacamac ricuy auccacunac yahuarniy hichascancuta."
The last words of the last Inka, Tupac Amaru, led to the gallows by men of god & dogs of war
Reply
#79
Bradley Manning verdict: guilty of most charges but not 'aiding enemy'

Bradley Manning faces maximum 130-year sentence
Convicted of most charges against him at Fort Meade
Not guilty of most serious 'aiding the enemy' charge

[Image: d4e47eff-79de-4e6d-a693-272776fa1c70-620x372.jpeg]Bradley Manning is escorted to a security vehicle outside a courthouse in Fort Meade, Maryland, on Monday 29 July 2013. The judge will rule on Manning's case on Tuesday.
[B]7m ago[/B]
[B]Manning family issue statement[/B]

[B]The family of Bradley Manning has issued a statement to the Guardian giving their reaction to today's verdict. The statement is written by Manning's US-based aunt, who has asked to remain anonymous, speaking on behalf of the soldier's family:[/B]
While we are obviously disappointed in today's verdicts, we are happy that Judge Lind agreed with us that Brad never intended to help America's enemies in any way. Brad loves his country and was proud to wear its uniform.
We want to express our deep thanks to David Coombs, who has dedicated three years of his life to serving as lead counsel in Brad's case. We also want to thank Brad's Army defense team, Major Thomas Hurley and Captain Joshua Tooman, for their tireless efforts on Brad's behalf, and Brad's first defense counsel, Captain Paul Bouchard, who was so helpful to all of us in those early confusing days and first suggested David Coombs as Brad's counsel. Most of all, we would like to thank the thousands of people who rallied to Brad's cause, providing financial and emotional support throughout this long and difficult time, especially Jeff Paterson and Courage to Resist and the Bradley Manning Support Network. Their support has allowed a young Army private to defend himself against the full might of not only the US Army but also the US Government.

[B]14m ago[/B]
Colonel Denise Lind, the military judge presiding over the court
martial of the US soldier, delivered her verdict in curt and pointed
language, writes Ed Pilkington from Fort Meade:

"Guilty, guilty, guilty, guilty," she repeated over and over, as the reality of a prolonged prison sentence for Manning on top of the three years he has already spent in detention dawned.
The one ray of light in an otherwise bleak outcome for the Army private was that he was found not guilty of the single most serious charge against him - that he knowingly "aided the enemy", in practice al-Qaida, by disclosing information to the WikiLeaks website that in turn made it accessible to all users including enemy groups. Lind's decision to avoid setting a precedent by applying the swingeing "aiding the enemy" charge to an official leaker will invoke a sigh of relief from news organisations and civil liberties groups who had feared a guilty verdict would send a chill across public interest journalism.
Lind also found Manning not guilty of having leaked an encrypted copy of a video of a US airstrike in the Farah province of Aghanistan in which many civilians died. Manning's defence team had argued vociferously that he was not the source of this video, though the soldier did admit to later disclosure of an unencrypted version of the video and related documents.
The judge also accepted Manning's version of several of the key dates in the WikiLeaks disclosures, and took off some of the edge from other less serious charges. But the overriding toughness of the verdict remains: the soldier was found guilty in their entirety of 17 out of the 22 counts against him, and of an amended version of four more.
Once the counts are cumulatively added up, the prospects for the Army private are bleak. Barring reduction of sentence for mitigation, which becomes the subject of another mini-trial dedicated to sentencing that starts tomorrow, he will face a substantial chunk of his adult life in military custody.
The consequences for Manning, and for the wider world of whistleblowing and official leaking in the digital age, will take time to sink in.
[Image: c9ed3fa6-6c59-4824-b8ff-4259de35f9c4-460x276.jpeg]Bradley Manning's defense attorney David Coombs and Coomb's wife Tanya Monestier arrive at court for the verdict in Manning's military trial at Fort Meade, Maryland. Photograph: Gary Cameron/Reuters
Updated 10m ago

[B]20m ago[/B]
[B]Summary[/B]

[B]Bradley Manning has been found not guilty of aiding the enemy but still faces up to 130 years in prison after being found guilty on several counts of theft and espionage.[/B]
The military judge hearing the case, Army Col Denise Lind, gave her verdict at 1pm on Tuesday. The aiding the enemy charge was the most serious, as it carried a maximum sentence of life in prison without the possibility of parole.
However Manning could still face an effective life sentence after being convicted on numerous other counts. He was found guilty of five charges of theft and five charges of espionage as well as other offenses. His convictions carry a maximum sentence of up to 130 years in prison.
Manning's sentencing hearing will begin tomorrow.





"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
Reply
#80
CCR Condemns Manning Verdict, Questions Future of First Amendment


NEW YORK - July 30 - Today, the Center for Constitutional Rights (CCR) released the following statement in response to the verdict in the trial of Bradley Manning:
While the "aiding the enemy" charges (on which Manning was rightly acquitted) received the most attention from the mainstream media, the Espionage Act itself is a discredited relic of the WWI era, created as a tool to suppress political dissent and antiwar activism, and it is outrageous that the government chose to invoke it in the first place against Manning. Government employees who blow the whistle on war crimes, other abuses and government incompetence should be protected under the First Amendment.

We now live in a country where someone who exposes war crimes can be sentenced to life even if not found guilty of aiding the enemy, while those responsible for the war crimes remain free. If the government equates being a whistleblower with espionage or aiding the enemy, what is the future of journalism in this country? What is the future of the First Amendment?

Manning's treatment, prosecution, and sentencing have one purpose: to silence potential whistleblowers and the media as well. One of the main targets has been our clients, WikiLeaks and Julian Assange, for publishing the leaks. Given the U.S. government's treatment of Manning, Assange should be granted asylum in his home country of Australia and given the protections all journalists and publishers deserve.

We stand in solidarity with Bradley Manning and call for the government to take heed and end its assault on the First Amendment.
The Center for Constitutional Rights represents WikiLeaks and Julian Assange in the U.S. and filed a case challenging the lack of transparency around the Manning trial on behalf of itself and a diverse group of media figures: Glenn Greenwald, Amy Goodman of Democracy Now!, The Nation and its national security correspondent Jeremy Scahill, and Wikileaks and its publisher, Julian Assange. Also included are Kevin Gosztola, co-author of Truth and Consequences: The U.S. vs. Bradley Manning and a civil liberties blogger covering the Manning court martial, and Chase Madar, author of The Passion of Bradley Manning and a contributing editor to The American Conservative. Jonathan Hafetz of Seton Hall Law School is co-counsel with CCR in that case, along with Bill Murphy and John J. Connolly of Zuckerman Spaeder LLP's Baltimore office.


"Let me issue and control a nation's money and I care not who writes the laws. - Mayer Rothschild
"Civil disobedience is not our problem. Our problem is civil obedience! People are obedient in the face of poverty, starvation, stupidity, war, and cruelty. Our problem is that grand thieves are running the country. That's our problem!" - Howard Zinn
"If there is no struggle there is no progress. Power concedes nothing without a demand. It never did and never will" - Frederick Douglass
Reply


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