Julian Assange freed after admitting crime in US Pacific court
Julian Assange, the creative programmer and founder of the WikiLeaks website, who was transferred from U.S. jurisdiction in the Pacific Ocean to “Saipan” for trial just yesterday, has been formally released today, June 26th, after accepting charges related to the disclosure of classified documents.
Assange, known primarily for his disclosures, has been under scrutiny since 2010 for releasing thousands of confidential documents from the U.S. Department of Defense and spent the past five years in the high-security Belmarsh prison in London.
The trial session of Julian Assange was held on Wednesday at “Saipan” in the Pacific Ocean. He admitted to at least one of the charges during this three-hour trial, after which the judge officially confirmed his release.
The charge Assange confessed to involves violations of espionage laws and conspiracy to obtain and disclose classified documents from the U.S. Department of Defense. However, he defended his actions by stating, “As a journalist, I encouraged my source to provide information for publication that was allegedly classified.”
It is noteworthy that Julian Assange had previously been accused by the U.S. court of attempting to infiltrate U.S. military intelligence bases to obtain sensitive (classified) information in 18 counts of alleged crimes.
Following issuing his release order from “Saipan,” Assange departed for Australia, where he was born, a small jurisdiction in the Pacific Ocean.
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