ASSANGE EXTRADITION: Confusion Over Superseding Indictment May Delay Hearing
Julian Assange’s defense team asked for a possible delay until next week in a procedural hearing after the United States introduced a superseding indictment to the court.
By Joe Lauria
Special to Consortium News
The defense for imprisoned WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange has asked for a possible delay in a procedural hearing on Friday after the United States introduced a superseding indictment to the court, leaving Magistrate Vanessa Baraitser uncertain about whether Assange would still be under arrest if she accepted the new indictment.
The defense argued that there wasn’t enough time before the scheduled resumption of the substantial hearing on Sept. 7 to deal with a new indictment and said it was too late to introduce new evidence to the court, according to tweets from WikiLeaks supporter Juan Passarelli. The U.S. had a June 2019 deadline to submit all evidence to the British extradition court.
The defense accused the prosecution of an “abuse of justice” and requested that the hearing resume in September as planned without inclusion of the new indictment, Passarelli said.
The media was allowed onto a conference call and stood by for an hour for the hearing to begin on Friday. After it began the media could hear Baraitser ask Assange to state his name and date of birth. Nothing was said in court after that for about 20 minutes when Baraitser left the conference call.
When the hearing resumed she did not rejoin the call, leaving the media in the dark, dependent on tweets from observers, such as Passarelli. Conference calls to Assange’s hearings have continually been marred by technical difficulties.
Passarelli reported on the prosecution’s response to the defense:
“The prosecution argue(d) that the US continued to investigate #Assange’s alleged criminal activity after the grand jury returned the indictment. There has been a continuing investigation, and that this is common in the American system. … Prosecution agree9d) that the indictment is similar to the previous indictment but with some added alleged conduct by #Assange. … Prosecution argues that this is a new prosecution case and that the court does not [have] the power to dismiss anything in the indictment.”
The defense, in turn, said rather than the new evidence being part of a “continuing investigation,” it was actually known to U.S. investigators in 2011.
The superseding indictment, made public by the U.S. Justice Department in June, merely adds details to the previous indictment of Assange for alleged conspiracy to commit computer intrusion and includes no new charges.
“Defence argues that this material was available in 2011, there is no reason that this is the fruit of new investigation,” Passarelli tweeted.
Stella Moris, an Assange attorney and his partner, tweeted that the new U.S. extradition request was filed after the defense had submitted its legal argument on the initial request.
According to Passarelli, Baraitser then said it wasn’t even clear if Assange would still be under arrest if the U.S. wanted to start the extradition process over again by introducing new evidence past the June 2019 deadline.
“Judge says that #Assange has not been even arrested by this replacement indictment. She says she has to consider if the hearing can be just. She does not have the power to exclude new allegations. The defence may decide if they require more time,” Passarelli tweeted.
The defense then asked for the procedural hearing to be postponed until next Friday to give it time to decide whether to ask for an extension of the September date, he tweeted. Baraitser asked for it be pushed back to Wednesday. With this scheduling issue apparently unresolved, Baraitser adjourned the hearing until Sept. 7 “pending any applications for delay,” Passarelli said.
John Shipton, Assange’s father, said after the hearing that submissions have to be made by the defense “as to whether the court date [of Sept.7] will be vacated. I hope it is not. We work towards the hearing being on the 7th of September.”
The U.S., Shipton said, is “making every effort to ensure that the [substantive] hearing is not the 7th of September, but in fact after the American election.”
Joe Lauria is editor-in-chief of Consortium News and a former UN correspondent for The Wall Street Journal, Boston Globe, and numerous other newspapers. He was an investigative reporter for the Sunday Times of London and began his professional career as a stringer for The New York Times. He can be reached at joelauria@consortiumnews.comand followed on Twitter @unjoe .
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