Assange landed on a chilly Canberra evening in a private jet, the final stage of an international drama that led him from a five-year stretch in the high-security Belmarsh prison in Britain to a courtroom in a US Pacific island territory and, finally, home.
WikiLeaks founder Assange freed as US court accepts his plea
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WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange freed as a US court in Saipan accepts his plea on Wednesday.
Julian Assange's family and lawyer hailed Wednesday as a "historic day" after the WikiLeaks founder was freed by a US court in a landmark plea deal.
"Today is a historic day. It brings to an end 14 years of legal battles," Assange's lawyer Jen Robinson told reporters outside the court in Saipan. "It also brings to an end a case which has been recognised as the greatest threat to the First Amendment in the 21st century."
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange left a US court in Saipan where he was freed in a landmark plea deal on Wednesday but did not address reporters.
AFP journalists saw the 52-year-old leaving the court in the Northern Mariana Islands, a Pacific US territory, by car. He will now fly to Canberra in his native Australia, WikiLeaks said.
Assange lands in Australia, a free man
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange returned home to Australia to start life as a free man Wednesday after admitting he revealed US defence secrets in a deal that unlocked the door to his London prison cell.
Assange banned from returning to US without permission
The United States has banned Julian Assange from returning unless he is granted permission, the justice department said Tuesday, as the Australian native was freed in a US territory and boarded a plane for Canberra.
"Pursuant to the plea agreement, Assange is prohibited from returning to the United States without permission," a Department of Justice statement said of the WikiLeaks founder, who has been embroiled in a years-long international legal drama after publishing thousands of secret US documents in 2010.
WikiLeaks founder Assange lands in Australia, a free man
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange returned home to Australia to start life as a free man Wednesday after admitting he revealed US defence secrets in a deal that unlocked the door to his London prison cell.
Assange landed on a chilly Canberra evening in a private jet, the final stage of an international drama that led him from a five-year stretch in the high-security Belmarsh prison in Britain to a courtroom in a US Pacific island territory and, finally, home.
How US and Assange reached a plea deal
After more than thirteen years in England, including five years spent in prison, Julian Assange pleaded guilty in the Northern Mariana Islands, a far-flung US territory in the Pacific, and walked out of court a free man.
The timing -- and location -- of the plea deal seemed to have come out of nowhere.
But an agreement between Assange, an Australian citizen who leaked US national security secrets in 2010, and American prosecutors had been moving forward in earnest for months.
- When did discussions around a deal start? -
Assange leaked the documents and was investigated during the Barack Obama administration. He was indicted under the Donald Trump administration, with the case continuing into Joe Biden's presidency, which began in 2021.
Then Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese was elected in 2022, and made it a priority to free Assange -- a move that coincided with Canberra's rising importance as a US ally in the Pacific.
Movement toward a plea deal picked up pace at the beginning of this year, when Albanese said publicly that "this thing cannot just go on and on indefinitely."
Assange was by then jailed in Britain and fighting his extradition to the United States, after being holed up for years in Ecuador's embassy in London.
British prosecutors on Tuesday said that by March, they had been informed of a potential plea agreement between Assange and the US government.
US Ambassador to Australia Caroline Kennedy "has been talking about this in the last few months," Jared Mondschein, director of research at the University of Sydney's United States Studies Center, said.
- Why did a deal come now? -
The deal comes two weeks before a crucial hearing in a British court on Assange's extradition fight -- preventing any potential legal setback for Washington and London.
It also settles an affair that has dogged three successive US presidential administrations -- and raised free speech concerns, even if many journalists question Assange's ethics.
"The Biden administration will be thrilled to close this case," Jameel Jaffer, director of the Knight First Amendment Institute at Columbia University, wrote for the specialist news site Just Security.
"It's largely forgotten that, at the time the Obama administration was considering indicting Assange, some prominent legislators were pressuring it to indict major newspapers as well for printing some of the same secrets" that Assange's Wikileaks organization had published.
The material he released through WikiLeaks included video showing civilians being killed by fire from a US helicopter gunship in Iraq in 2007. The victims included a photographer and a driver from Reuters.
However Assange is also notorious among critics who say the massive disclosures, including troves of unredacted information, endangered US security and intelligence sources.
He "should have been prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law," former vice president Mike Pence said on Monday.
Representative Thomas Massie countered that "his liberation is great news."
In any case, Assange has avoided a potential 175-year sentence under the 1917 Espionage Act. He was instead sentenced to five years and two months in prison -- with credit for having already served that same amount of time in Britain.
He pleaded guilty to "conspiring to unlawfully obtain and disseminate classified information relating to the national defense of the United States."
Media advocates worry that the plea deal still sets a concerning legal precedent.
"The logic of the deal is that Assange will have served five years in prison for activities that journalists engage in every day," Jaffer wrote.
- Why did Assange plead guilty in the Northern Mariana Islands? -
In its letter to Ramona Villagomez Manglona, chief judge of the District Court for the Northern Mariana Islands, the Department of Justice said Assange had an "opposition to traveling to the continental United States."
The Pacific territory is also close to his home country of Australia, "to which we expect he will return at the conclusion of proceedings."