Sweden drops rape allegation against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange
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"My client is shocked," accuser's attorney says.
David Kravets
Julian Assange
Swedish prosecutors said Friday that they were dropping the
long-running rape investigation into Julian Assange. The embattled
founder of document-spilling site WikiLeaks has been living in Ecuador's
embassy in London since 2012 in a bid to avoid prosecution on those
allegations and to shield himself from a potential US espionage
prosecution.
The Swedish Prosecution Authority chief Marianne Ny said that the agency has "decided to discontinue the investigation" because neither Assange nor Ecuador would cooperate.
Almost 5 years ago Julian Assange was permitted refuge at
the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where he has resided ever since. In
doing so, he has escaped all attempts by the Swedish and British
authorities to execute the decision to surrender him to Sweden in
accordance with the EU rules concerning the European Arrest Warrant. My
assessment is that the surrender cannot be executed in the foreseeable
future.
According to Swedish legislation, a criminal investigation is to be
conducted as quickly as possible. At the point when a prosecutor has
exhausted the possibilities to continue the investigation, the
prosecutor is obliged to discontinue the investigation.
Assange, 45, has always maintained his innocence. His attorney, Per
Samuelsson, said, "An innocent man proved he was not guilty." The
authorities, however, said that they were not declaring Assange's
innocence but instead conceding that they could not leap the legal
hurdles presented by Assange's diplomatic protection.
Elisabeth
Massi Fritz, the attorney for Assange's accuser, said, "My client is
shocked, and no closure decision can get her to change that Assange has
exposed her to a rape."
Still, Assange isn't expected to walk out on his diplomatic
protection any time soon. While potential US espionage charges loom, the
British Metropolitan Police Service still has an arrest warrant dating
to 2012. He is accused of jumping bail when he failed to surrender to
the Westminster Magistrates' Court in connection to Swedish extradition
proceedings involving the rape allegations.
"The Metropolitan Police Service is obliged to execute that warrant should he leave the Embassy," the agency said. The alleged bail offense carries a maximum year in prison.
Nye, meanwhile, said the statute of limitations expires in 2020 over
the rape allegations. But she said that because of the law, the
investigation cannot be reopened unless Assange returns to Sweden.
WikiLeaks and Assange became almost household names after the site disclosed the "collateral murder"
video and thousands of other Iraq and Afghanistan war documents it
received from Chelsea Manning, an Army intelligence officer convicted
for that leak. Manning's 35-year sentence was commuted by President
Barack Obama in January, and she left the military brig at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas on Wednesday.
Just
days before Obama commuted Manning's sentence, Assange announced that
he would surrender to US authorities if Obama showed Manning mercy.
Assange backed out
of that pledge, however, and said he meant he would surrender only if
Obama allowed Manning to leave the brig immediately, not on May 17.
Assange fears he could be charged in the US for exposing the secrets
Manning leaked, in addition to a host of other leaks such as those
disclosing hacking tools held by US spies. It is not clear, however, why
le
aks from Assange's site would have fewer constitutional
protections than other leaks of classified data that appear in US news
publications.
That constitutional conundrum hasn't stopped a top US official from
beating his chest at WikiLeaks. Despite President Donald Trump's claim
to "love WikiLeaks" during the election when the site was exposing Democratic National Committee secrets, CIA Director Michael Pompeo has threatened
the document-spilling site. He called WikiLeaks a "non-state hostile
intelligence service often abetted by state actors like Russia." That
comment was in reaction to WikiLeaks' recent release of all types of CIA
espionage documents, including leaks about the agency's hacking tools.
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