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Government Privacy

To Protect Secrets, US Won't Charge Assange Over Exposing CIA Tools, Reports Politico (politico.com) 87

Some interesting news from Politico. America's Justice Department will still prosecute Julian Assange for allegedly assisting Chelsea Manning, and for 17 counts of violating the Espionage Act -- but "has decided not to charge Julian Assange for his role in exposing some of the CIA's most secret spying tools, according to a U.S. official and two other people familiar with the case." It's a move that has surprised national security experts and some former officials, given prosecutors' recent decision to aggressively go after the WikiLeaks founder on more controversial Espionage Act charges that some legal experts said would not hold up in court. The decision also means that Assange will not face punishment for publishing one of the CIA's most potent arsenals of digital code used to hack devices, dubbed Vault 7. The leak -- one of the most devastating in CIA history -- not only essentially rendered those tools useless for the CIA, it gave foreign spies and rogue hackers access to them...

[P]rosecutors were worried about the sensitivity of the Vault 7 materials, according to an official familiar with the deliberations over whether to charge Assange. Broaching such a classified subject in court risks exposing even more CIA secrets, legal experts said.

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To Protect Secrets, US Won't Charge Assange Over Exposing CIA Tools, Reports Politico

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    In societies dominated by surveillance capitalism, computing presents itself as immense accumulation of apps.

    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

      How do you explain the fact that it's the exact same thing in PRC but to a much greater degree?

  • by 3seas ( 184403 ) on Sunday June 02, 2019 @06:08PM (#58697200) Homepage Journal

    bust the guy who leaked them.... go figure. Truth be known they are probably respecting the journalist side of Wikileaks in this.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday June 02, 2019 @06:10PM (#58697212)

    So, a foreign national violated the U.S. Espionage Act. How many U.S. women have violated the laws of Saudi Arabia by driving and working? Are the laws of one country binding on the citizens of the world?

    • by DamnOregonian ( 963763 ) on Sunday June 02, 2019 @07:53PM (#58697640)
      Well, that's a legitimate question of course.
      The answer to it is: If a U.S. woman were to violate a law in Saudi Arabia, or a place where its rules had jurisdiction, then she would be culpable (in their eyes) to the consequences. Most countries work this way.

      Back to Assange- what has he done to violate U.S. law in a place where the U.S. has jurisdiction? I too was curious about this, so of course I tried to figure it out.
      Initially, they were hitting him with Conspiracy to Commit Computer Intrusion, under the accusation that he materially assisted Manning with intrusion into US government/military computers/networks. The jurisdiction here is quite obvious. If they can get their hands on him, they have good grounds to charge him with a crime, as the U.S. was the direct victim of his crime. I.e, if you stand in Mexico, and shoot an American across the border, you don't get to say "I'm not beholden to US Law, neener neener" when they attempt to indict you. Well, you can try of course, but you'll lose. And anyone who claims you should win that fight can go step into fucking traffic.

      However, now there are Espionage Act charges, and those are pretty fucking questionable.
      Charging a foreign national with receiving classified information is... scary. Frankly, charging anyone with receiving classified information is fucking scary.
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Didn't the border patrol do exactly that?

        I.e, if you stand in Mexico, and shoot an American across the border, you don't get to say "I'm not beholden to US Law, neener neener" when they attempt to indict you. Well, you can try of course, but you'll lose. And anyone who claims you should win that fight can go step into fucking traffic.

        Kid throws rocks from Mexico into the USA, Border Patrolman in the USA pulls a gun and shoots him (dead). Patrolman not charged because the victim wasn't in the USA at the tim

      • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        The problem is that Assange has been receiving information from the Russians via people such as Nigel Farage acting as couriers (https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2018/jan/19/trump-russia-inquiry-is-told-nigel-farage-may-have-given-julian-assange-data). It's no coincidence that both Farage and Assange keep receiving money from Russia, be it as "fees" for appearing on or hosting shows on RT, or be it via outright payouts through Russian proxies such as Arron Banks.

        So Assange isn't simply a journalist, or

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Maelwryth ( 982896 )

        And here I am jumping in the traffic. I don't agree. At all. For starters, you example

        "if you stand in Mexico, and shoot an American across the border, you don't get to say "I'm not beholden to US Law, neener neener" when they attempt to indict you."

        Would seem wrong to me. Shouldn't it be....

        If you stand in Mexico and shout,"Passwords are often based on birthdays!" across the border and the other person figures out the password then you don't get to say "I'm not beholden to US Law, neener neener" when they

        • You're claiming the analogy is broken because you don't like the statute. That's silly.
          The shooting example was made so that you could easily identify what the crime was in the analogy, and easily trace the criminal and victim (shooter, target)

          So, following your vein of logic, it's more like:
          If you stand in Mexico, and coordinate with a hitman across the border to kill someone, you're fucked, and the US will come after you.
          Obviously, shouting "Passwords are often based on birthdays!" is not illegal.
          So
      • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 )

        If they can get their hands on him, they have good grounds to charge him with a crime, as the U.S. was the direct victim of his crime. I.e, if you stand in Mexico, and shoot an American across the border, you don't get to say "I'm not beholden to US Law, neener neener" when they attempt to indict you. Well, you can try of course, but you'll lose. And anyone who claims you should win that fight can go step into fucking traffic.

        Ironic you should use that as an example. A few years back, a Border Patrol agent on the US side of the border shot a teenager on the Mexican side. The family sued for violation of constitutional rights. The Supreme Court just agreed to examine the case. So in that example, is the crime (if there is one) committed on the side where the bullet is fired, or is it on the side where the bullet lands?

        • That's not ironic. It's the reverse direction.
          It's well known that the US doesn't accept any jurisdiction other than its own over its service people, regardless of where the fuck they are.
          Now, as I said, if a Mexican shot an American, we would tell the Mexican government we wanted this person, and they would give them to us.
    • We have a political system that allows any abuse to the individual, as long as they're not republican.

      It's pretty obvious by now that the Russians were involved in the Republican party back when Gingerich was in charge; look at what they did.

      They prosecuted Clinton for a blowjob; Cheeto says "Grab 'em by the Pussy", and gets elected by the religious right.

      Trump has Broken at least 3 commandments, but gay people are evil because of one line speaking about Sodom.

      It all makes sense when you look at Mitch Mconn

  • by acroyear ( 5882 ) <jws-slashdot@javaclientcookbook.net> on Sunday June 02, 2019 @06:29PM (#58697274) Homepage Journal

    ...and this why. This is the very situation that caused Obama to not choose to charge any Bush officials over the approval and actions of torture signed off by Woo and carried out by the CIA and the military. To do so would have had to connect all the dots between the senior Bush officials and the perpetrators of the waterboarding etc. EVERY dot.

    That would have exposed multiple CIA agents and multiple CIA 'cover' companies throughout the world, and basically put a halt to the CIA's operations for years, possibly forever.

    Now you can, of course, decide for yourself if that would be a good thing, but clearly to the US Government under Obama, it was considered a risk not worth taking.

  • Trump just wanted to meet the guy, shake his hand and say “thank you”.

  • Imbeciles in charge. (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Sunday June 02, 2019 @07:12PM (#58697464)

    Honestly, this has been the most foolish endeavor. First, they oust Assange from his own self-imprisonment to extradite him and now that they can... they won't. Regardless of how your feel about Assange, I believe we can agree that the US government inadvertently went through a lot of effort to free Assange from his own indefinite detention. He'll do a brief stint in prison in the UK and the case in Sweden is likely to unravel. However, they just confirmed he has nothing to fear from the US government. What a fuck up.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      That's not what the article says, it says they will still prosecute him for 17 counts of spying (leaking various secret information) and assisting Manning in discovering the computer password but they simply won't proceed on the charges for the specific case of leaking the CIA/NSA tools that we all know and love (I'm being sarcastic here, given that they've been used in several cases of "public" malware/ransomware) and my guess is they're doing this to simply let that specific news die down (not that it has

  • Motive (Score:2, Insightful)

    by Livius ( 318358 )

    I think this means that when Assange is assassinated, the US will just say, "Of course we didn't do it! We weren't even going to charge him with anything all that serious, so we clearly didn't care that much!"

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Assange assisted Bradley Manning. In 2013 there was no Chelsea Manning. Bradley Manning struggles with mental illness, indulging him does him no favors.

  • This has absolutely nothing to do with manning's refusal to testify [washingtonpost.com]. Nothing at all. And of course this means the US is dropping the dozens of other charges. Right?
  • He was given these. He was off-shore, not on American soil. He is not an American. He did not steal the data, others did. Our laws do not extend beyond our borders. It esp does not extend to foreigners on foreign soil.
    So, what right do we Americans have to prosecute him? I am not a fan of Assange (or any of the traitors such as Snowden), but Assange should NOT be prosecuted by America. Now, if Australia wants to prosecute him ( he is Australian) or better yet, UK ( it took place on UK soil ), then they sh
    • He was off-shore, not on American soil.

      So if I shoot you from Canada, you won't mind. You're government won't care either? I just don't come back to America, that's it?

      • Your government...
      • wow. that Brit has it right. You must have had your head bounced too many times on the wall or headboard. Personally, I think that one day you will commit suicide once you realize how stupid you really are and how worthless your life is.
        Look, to do a decent analogy, they have to be similar. You are way off in Timbuktu.
        If somebody kills me while standing right next me, then calls you in Canada to tell you, is the correct analogy. Assange did NOT fucking crack the systems or steal anything. He was not in A
  • released! Government doing bad things should be revealed. The tools the intel agencies use to do their legitimate jobs should not. That helped no one but "bad guys" like unfriendly intel agencies and hackers.

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