Assange Is No 'Ordinary Journalist': US Opposes Request For Appeal The U.S. government defended their prosecution of Assange saying he is no "ordinary journalist" and WikiLeaks is not a legitimate publisher.
UK High Court Finally Hears Assange's Request For An Appeal Assange's attorneys claim the WikiLeaks publisher has been prosecuted for exposing U.S. government criminality on a "massive and unprecedented scale."
'Terrorism Enhancement' Applied Against Ex-CIA Programmer For Leaking Represents A Stark Development A United States judge applied a “terrorism enhancement” when sentencing former CIA programmer Joshua Schulte, who was convicted of disclosing "Vault 7" materials to WikiLeaks.
In Leak Prosecutions, US Government Treats Use Of Privacy Tools As Criminal Activity The following article was made possible by paid subscribers of The Dissenter. Become a subscriber and support independent journalism in defense of press freedom. In Espionage Act prosecutions involving leaks, attorneys at the United States (DOJ) consistently treat the use of privacy tools as evidence of criminality. This tendency should
From Prison, Assange Expresses Regret That WikiLeaks Can No Longer Expose War Crimes "WikiLeaks is no longer able to expose war crimes and corruption as in the past," according to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange
Judge Rules Assange Visitors May Sue CIA For Allegedly Violating Privacy Support independent journalism on press freedom, whistleblowers, and government secrecy. Become a subscriber of The Dissenter today. A federal judge ruled that four American attorneys and journalists, who visited WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange while he was in the Ecuador embassy in London, may sue the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) for
Resolution In US Congress Calls For End To Assange Case As Extradition Nears Thanks for being a paid subscriber to The Dissenter. The following is an exclusive article. But while billing is paused in December, exclusive articles published this month are available to everyone. Become a paid subscriber and support independent journalism on whistleblowing, government secrecy, and press freedom. A resolution in support