February 25, 2014
Newly published secret grand jury orders & other docs shed light on US investigation of WikiLeaks
In agreement with Alexa O’Brien, Professors blogg publishes these important findings obtained by the author. O’Brien’s findings are discussed against the drop of the Swedish case VS, Assange in a new publication in Professors blogg (2 March 2014),: Was Sweden’s reopening of the case, part of the US request to prosecute the WikiLeaks founder by any means?
By Alexa O’Brien on February 17, 2014 10:51 AM |
Newly published documents, including
sealed court orders from the secret Department of Justice grand jury
investigating WikiLeaks, shed light on the manner and scope of the
criminal and intelligence probes into Julian Assange and civilians
associated with the online publisher of censored material.
Diplomatic Security Services, the law
enforcement arm of the U.S. Department of State, along with “other
elements of the U.S. government,” began investigating the unauthorized
disclosure of a U.S. diplomatic cable from the U.S. Embassy in Iceland
and its publication by WikiLeaks four years ago tomorrow, according to the testimony of a Department of State official in charge of the investigation at Chelsea (formerly Bradley) Manning’s trial.
In August 2013, the 26 year old U.S. Army intelligence analyst was convicted
to 35 years in prison for disclosing to WikiLeaks low level battlefield
reports and U.S. diplomatic cables detailing U.S. complicity in the
abuse, torture, and killing of civilians in Afghanistan, Iraq, Yemen,
and Somalia.
I am publishing for the first time, two
court orders that detail the U.S. Department of Justice’s surveillance
of Jacob Appelbaum, a WikiLeaks associate, security expert and
journalist, who has recently collaborated on articles in Der Spiegel detailing NSA surveillance.
Four days after Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew Peterson requested an April 2011 subpoena
commanding the testimony of an unidentified Cambridge resident at a
secret grand jury, empaneled in Alexandria, Virginia, prosecutors also
successfully obtained another court order directing a U.S. based
internet service provider, Sonic.net, to turn over the Internet Protocol
and email addresses of people who had communicated with Appelbaum. See
the secret court order here and below.
Recently released emails also reveal that the secret Sonic order for Appelbaum’s information was part of a small portion of sealed grand jury materials, which were turned over to Manning’s defense at her trial.
Other recently released emails reveal
that the three and a half year old Department of Justice grand jury
probe was already empaneled on September 23, 2010, two months before the Attorney General publicly acknowledged an ongoing U.S. criminal investigation of WikiLeaks and Julian Assange.
The Department of Justice has also
characterized the WikiLeaks criminal probe as a national security
investigation. Evidence may also indicate that the case has been
categorized as terrorism related. If that is so, it raises questions
about the methods (beyond traditional criminal law enforcement) that the
Obama administration is employing against the online publisher, its
employees, associates, and supporters.
Manning, only received portions of the testimony and materials from the secret grand jury investigating WikiLeaks at her trial.
The portions that federal and military prosecutors handed over pertain to three witnesses, were heavily redacted, and totaled just 151 pages.
The material that was turned over to Manning’s defense included the Appelbaum Sonic order as well as information from a 2010 secret order
issued to Twitter, commanding the social media website to turn over
information about individuals associated with WikiLeaks, including
Appelbaum.
Recently released emails further confirm that another secret court order from June 2011 (previously reported about here) and an August 2011 search warrant (also reported about here),
which sought the IP and email addresses as well as the content of
emails from an unidentified Google subscriber, were also part of the
WikiLeaks grand jury and were similarly turned over to Manning’s defense
by federal and military prosecutors.
What is not certain, although likely, is
if the January 2011 secret Google Appelbaum order was included among the
grand jury materials handed over to Manning’s defense. See the secret
order here and below.
The Department of Justice criminal
investigation of WikiLeaks is broader than the Manning probe. “Private
First Class Manning is a piece of the FBI file,” said
the lead military prosecutor Major Ashden Fein at trial. The FBI file,
said Fein, was “42,135 pages or 3,475 documents.” Manning represented
only 8,741 pages or 636 different documents in that FBI file, said Fein.
Most of the file is classified.
Recently released correspondence by military prosecutors
detail how the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in the Southern
District of New York were also involved in the criminal investigation of
Wikileaks, along with the Eastern District of Virginia and the National
Security Division of the Department of Justice.
The August 2011, document coincides with
the FBI investigation in the Southern District of New York of members of
AntiSec, and the subsequent indictment and conviction of Jeremy Hammond
for hacking various websites in the summer of 2011 and the website of
Strategic Forecasting, a private security firm located in Austin Texas,
in December 2011. WikiLeaks later published the Stratfor emails, which
detailed how the private security firm surveilled Bhopal activist in India for Dow Chemical Co.
The August 2011
document also coincides with reports that the FBI and Diplomatic
Security Service agents were investigating WikiLeaks in Iceland in the
summer of 2011 under the pretext of an alleged cyber-attack on the computer system of the Icelandic government.
The Icelandic Minister of Interior, Ogmundur Jonasson, reportedly
discovered the FBI’s intention to interrogate an Icelandic citizen as
part of the U.S. investigation of WikiLeaks and ordered local police to
stop cooperating with U.S. agents.
Other recently released emails also evidence weekly coordination between the Departments of State, Justice, and Defense, and military prosecutors even go on to identify themselves as “Team Manning“.
According to anonymous law enforcement sources cited in the Washington Post
on November 18, 2013, the Department of Justice does not have a sealed
indictment against Assange, but the investigation continues.
Since December 2010,
the Department of Justice has been looking at the Espionage Act and
other statutes, including the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, to prosecute
Assange.
A regular criminal grand jury consists of
16 to 23 citizens. The grand jury only hears cases brought before it by
a prosecutor, who decides which evidence to present, which witnesses to
call, and which of those witnesses will receive immunity.
The Department of Justice does not have
to use the same grand jury to indict Assange or any other civilian that
they also used to present their evidence. While regular grand jury terms
are for 24 months, investigative material can be rolled into subsequent
grand juries.
For most criminal offenses the statute of
limitation is five years, but for the Espionage Act, the statute of
limitations is ten. The statute of limitations for alleged offenses is
also based on the last criminal act, and could potentially wrap in all
prior alleged criminal behavior, says Barry Pollack, defense attorney to
Julian Assange.
In December 2010,
the Attorney General Eric Holder acknowledged that prosecuting Assange
under the Espionage Act for publishing would be difficult. The Espionage
Act was originally intended to prosecute U.S. spies, but has been
repeatedly employed by the Obama administration to prosecute
whistleblowers for their disclosures of classified information to the
press.
An anonymous government official familiar with the U.S. investigation told the New York Times in December 2010
that charging Assange under the Espionage Act could be facilitated if
investigators could prove a conspiracy, in other words that Assange
aided any of WikiLeaks’ sources, by for example directing them to find
certain information or providing technological assistance.
At Manning’s court martial, military
prosecutors unsuccessfully alleged that Manning was an employee of
WikiLeaks, who had “harvested” information at the direction of Assange.
Military prosecutors however, also alleged, that Assange had provided
his source with technical assistance.
While the evidence against Assange was circumstantial and Manning admitted that she acted alone, she was nevertheless convicted of a violation of a lawful general regulation for attempting to change the administrator password
on her classified work computer. Military prosecutors had alleged at
trial that Manning received knowledge from Assange on how to do that.
By also arguing at trial that Manning had
leaked an unclassified video of a May 2009 U.S. bombing in the Farah
Province of Afghanistan, which massacred 86 to 140 civilians, including
women and children, within days of her arrival in Iraq to on or about
January 8, 2010 the day WikiLeaks tweet:
prosecutors were attempting to build a case for a criminal conspiracy against Manning and Assange.
The time line of the Garani video offense dovetails with the start date
(November 1, 2009) of all known secret orders including those for
Sonic, Google, Dynadot, and Twitter– to turn over information about
civilians under investigation, including Jacob Appelbaum and Julian
Assange.
At Manning’s pretrial a U.S. Army agent
testified that Adrian Lamo had informed them in July 2010 that he was
aware of someone on the Internet, who was allegedly attempting to
decrypt the Garani video for WikiLeaks. The FBI, said the agent, was
directing the investigation into Jason Katz, an employee at Brookhaven
National Laboratory between February 2009 and March 2010. Katz was later
fired for engaging in inappropriate computer activity.
An internal investigation into Katz by
Brookhaven National Laboratory predated the U.S. investigation of
WikiLeaks, but forensic evidence was later acquired by FBI investigators
and used by military prosecutors at Manning’s trial.
Manning was eventually acquitted of
espionage for the Garani airstrike video, but the military prosecution’s
theory against Katz, Assange, and what one agent referred to the “founders, owners, or managers of WikiLeaks” survives the Manning court-martial.
In December 2010, the Attorney General
stated, “It would be a misimpression if the only statute you think we
are looking at is the Espionage Act. That is certainly something that
might play a role, but there are other statutes, other tools that we
have our disposal.”
One of those statutes includes the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act
. The CFAA was cited in a May 2011 letter,
which accompanied the subpoena ordering one of the founders of the
Private Manning Support Network to testify at the secret grand jury
investigating WikiLeaks. Manning was also convicted under the CFAA for
disclosing 116 U.S. diplomatic cables to the WikiLeaks organization, because she used freely acquired software that automated downloading of the material.
The Obama administration’s attempt in a recent strategy document
to re-frame WikiLeaks by associating the media organization with
cyber-crime and intellectual property theft for the publication of
“computer files provided by corporate insiders indicating allegedly
illegal or unethical behavior at a Swiss bank, a Netherlands-based
commodities company, and an international pharmaceutical trade
association” is an attempt to bypass a constitutional challenge to
prosecuting Assange for publication.
Typically, the Department of Justice
simply indicts, keeps the indictment sealed, issues a warrant, and then
sits and waits. It is a violation of federal law for an official to
disclose the instance of a sealed indictment before an accused is in the
custody of law enforcement.
Once an indictment is unsealed or an
investigation is concluded, all the secret orders and search warrants
related to the case are simultaneously unsealed. All the secret orders
and search warrants related to the WikiLeaks investigation that are
publicly known, including those published here, remain under seal.
In the Assange case, however, there are
public relations concerns, says Stanley Cohen, U.S. defense attorney on
numerous high profile terrorism and cyber-crime cases. “The Department
of Justice could also list a target as an un-indicted co-conspirator and
still get the benefit of him or her fitting within the history and
evidence chain presented to the grand jury,” says Cohen. An unindicted
co-conspirator can later be charged whether on his or her own, or by a
superseding indictment along with those previously charged, Cohen added.
In the end, however, Assange (or any other civilian) could be extradited by criminal complaint or by indictment.
Neil MacBride, the former U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, who was in charge of the WikiLeaks grand jury, hired
Andrew Peterson (who later requested the Appelbaum secret Sonic Order)
to join the Terrorism and National Security Unit, nine days after
Manning was arrested in Iraq. The Terrorism and National Security Unit became the National Security and International Crime Unit soon after.
While a grand jury is under the purview
of the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, the criminal
investigation of WikiLeaks is under the supervision of the Assistant
Attorney General of the National Security Division at the Department of
Justice or a higher authority, which includes the Attorney General.
In February 2011
James Clapper, the U.S. director of national intelligence, who is in
charge of the 16 agencies and departments that make up the U.S.
Intelligence Community, remarked to the Senate Intelligence Committee at
a hearing on current and projected national security threats that
WikiLeaks disclosures had been damaging to U.S. national security.
Then in March 2011,
Clapper declared to the Senate Armed Services Committee that WikiLeaks
disclosures were a current and projected counterintelligence threat to
the national security of the United States — on par with corporate
espionage, drug trafficking, and climate change.
Evidence may indicate that the National
Security Division has characterized the WikiLeaks investigation as a
‘Category 2′ terrorism case. Category 2
terrorism cases allege “an identified link to international terrorism”
including “any link or reference to a designated Foreign Terrorist
Organization (FTO),” according to the U.S. Attorney’s Manual.
Since the September 11, 2001 terrorist
attack, U.S. law enforcement has morphed from its traditional role
obtaining evidence to use in a court of law to an agency that employs
extra-judicial methods geared towards the prevention of future crimes.
In a law journal article, entitled Addressing Tomorrow’s Terrorists, authored by the WikiLeaks grand jury prosecutor, Peterson writes that the Department of Justice declared
that it’s responsibility was “not simply to prosecute terrorists for
crimes, but to ‘[p]revent, disrupt, and defeat terrorist operations
before they occur.’”
Although later acquitted of aiding the enemy, Manning was charged at trial with giving intelligence to the enemy via the WikiLeaks website.
Military prosecutors also identified the
enemy as al Qaeda and al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). Both
entities are designated as terrorist organization on the FTO list
maintained by the U.S. Department of State. Aiding the enemy is also
one of two articles under the Uniform Code of Military Justice that
apply to “any person” and not just military personnel.
Manning was also convicted of making U.S.
intelligence accessible to Al Qaeda and AQAP on the Internet. The
charge and conviction to ‘wanton publication’ was unprecedented, because
the offence is not actually tied to any existing punitive article under
the Uniform Code of Military Justice or U.S. federal criminal statute.
The CFAA also falls under the statutes
that can be used in Category 2 terrorism cases. The National Security
Division and the Office of the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of
Virginia declined to comment on the nature of the ongoing
investigation.
“It is possible that the WikiLeaks
investigation has been characterized as a Category 2 terrorism case,”
says Pollack, “However, as a practical matter, I think there is no
question that the WikiLeaks investigation is being treated as a case the
National Security Division must approve and supervise.”
Even if the investigation of WikiLeaks
were not characterized as a Category 2 terrorism related case and the
Department of Justice was simply constructing a case alleging criminal
violations of the Espionage Act and the CFAA, says Pollack, the criminal
probe would still unambiguously fall under the purview of the National
Security Division.
Closing the four-year-old WikiLeaks
investigation, therefore, requires the authorization of the National
Security Division or a higher authority, such as the Attorney General.
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