WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange will be allowed to walk free after he pleaded guilty to a single felony charge for publishing US military secrets on Wednesday.
Asked by the judge whether he would plead guilty or not guilty, Assange replied: “Guilty to the information.”
The plea was part of a deal with US persecutors that secures Assange’s freedom and concludes a drawn-out legal saga that raised divisive questions about press freedom and national security.
“With this pronouncement, it appears that you will be able to walk out of this courtroom a free man,” the judge said.
Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said Wednesday’s plea hearing was a “welcome development.”
“Given those proceedings that are happening literally in real time, it isn’t appropriate to provide further commentary,” Albanese told reporters.
What are the details of the plea deal?
The US indicted Assange on multiple counts of violating Espionage Act after WikiLeaks published a trove of national security documents relating to the Afghanistan and Iraq wars as well as diplomatic cables.
Under the deal, Assange pleded guilty for one count obtaining and publishing national defense documents. The US has dropped 17 other espionage charges against him.
Assange arrived at the court on the US Pacific island territory of the Northern Mariana Islands after he was released from the UK’s Belmarsh Prison on Monday. The 52-year-old was wearing a black suit and smiled as he walked past security with his team and Australia’s ambassador to Washington Kevin Rudd.
He is set to be sentenced to 62 months of time already served in the UK and ultimately return to his home country, Australia.
As Assange entered the courtroom, WikiLeaks posted on social media that the private jet he arrived in he scheduled to depart for Canberra within hours.
The deal brings to a close a legal saga that spanned more than a decade, and which included seven years seeking asylum inside the Ecuadorian Embassy in London.
Why is the case being heard in the Northern Mariana Islands?
The Northern Mariana Islands is a remote US territory in the Pacific Ocean with a population of just 51,000 people.
Assange faced court in the territory’s capital, Saipan.
According to court documents, the location was chosen “in light of the defendant’s opposition to traveling to the continental United States” as well as its “proximity” to Australia, where he is set to return once the hearing has concluded.
Reporters from around the world gathered outside the courtroom on Wednesday. However, press were not allowed inside the hearing.
“I watch this and think how overloaded his senses must be, walking through the press scrum after years of sensory deprivation and the four walls of his high security Belmarsh prison cell,” Assange’s wife, Stella, said on social media.
zc/jsi (AP, AFP, Retuers)
