A lawyer for Julian Assange on Tuesday complained that the WikiLeaks frontman was handcuffed 11 times, stripped naked twice and had court papers taken away on the first day of a hearing on his extradition to the US.
Attorney Edward Fitzgerald told a judge that the treatment of Assange at London’s Belmarsh Prison “could be a contempt of this court.”
The extradition hearing opened on Monday at Woolwich Crown Court, which is next to the prison.
District Judge Vanessa Baraitser, who is hearing the case, said she had no power to act unless Assange becomes unable to participate in the proceedings, which are expected to last several months.
“If it comes to that, please let me know,” the judge said.
Another lawyer for Assange, Gareth Peirce, told the judge on Tuesday that Assange was “struggling” and finding it hard to concentrate.
Assange, 48, is wanted in the US on espionage charges over the leaking of classified government documents a decade ago.
US prosecutors accuse Assange of conspiring with US Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning to crack a password, hack into a Pentagon computer and release hundreds of thousands of secret diplomatic cables and military files on the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
They allege that WikiLeaks’ publication of the unedited documents put US intelligence sources who were mentioned in them at risk of torture of death.
Assange has said he was acting as a journalist entitled to First Amendment protection.
His lawyers argue that the US charges — which carry a maximum sentence of 175 years in prison — are a politically motivated abuse of power.
Defense lawyers also deny that Assange put lives at risk.
Attorney Mark Summers said that WikiLeaks in 2010 worked with international news organizations to publish the trove of files in edited form.
He said that the following year Assange telephoned the White House to warn that a password published in a book about WikiLeaks by journalists from the Guardian newspaper — one of WikiLeaks’ then-media partners — could allow people to view the full unredacted cache of documents.
Summers said Assange had warned that “unless we do something, then people’s lives are put at risk.”
WikiLeaks’ relationship with its media partners, which included the Guardian and the New York Times, soon soured, and in 2011 WikiLeaks began releasing large numbers of the uncensored documents.
The Guardian said it was “entirely wrong to say the Guardian’s 2011 WikiLeaks book led to the publication of unredacted US government files.”
“The book contained a password, which the authors had been told by Julian Assange was temporary and would expire and be deleted in a matter of hours,” the newspaper said in a statement. “The book also contained no details about the whereabouts of the files.”
The extradition hearing is expected to continue for the rest of the week, then take a break before resuming in May.
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