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Chelsea Manning News

Chelsea Manning faces punishment for suicide attempt, highlighting injustice of US prison system

While UK prosecutors tell Lauri Love he has nothing to fear, Chelsea Manning, already tortured, is punished for attempting to take her own life

The ALCU have announced that Chelsea Manning is facing disciplinary action at the military prison where she is serving her 35 year sentence. Incredibly, the military is seeking to punish Chelsea in connection with her attempt to take her own life on 5 July this year. We have written previously about how officials at Fort Leavenworth abused Chelsea’s rights by informing the media about her medical issues before her family, friends or legal team.

Chelsea has dictated details of her charge sheet to a supporter over the phone. If convicted of these administrative charges, Chelsea potentially faces penalties including indefinite solitary confinement and reclassification out of general population, with all of the social and communicative restrictions that implies. Her chances of being granted parole may also be impacted.

Furthermore, despite Chelsea’s suicide attempt, the prison has not appeared to make any improvement in her mental health treatment. As Fight for the Future note in a press release today,

At this time, Chelsea is not receiving adequate psychological counseling, as her course of treatment is constantly irregular and therefore less effective. Having uncertainty, from day to day, regarding what medical treatment she is even going to receive is stressful in itself, and is certainly not what someone recovering from a suicide attempt should be subjected to.

This is not the first time that Chelsea has been threatened with disciplinary action. Just last year, Chelsea faced potential indefinite solitary confinement for trivial issues including the possession of reading material and expired toothpaste. At that time, public pressure played a key role in ensuring Chelsea was not unfairly penalised.

The threat of solitary confinement, which successive UN Special Rapporteurs have said constitutes psychological torture, is particularly worrisome given Chelsea’s ongoing health issues, including gender dysphoria, depression and her previous horrific 9-month experience in solitary confinement at the Quantico Marine brig before her conviction. Even the military judge who sentenced Chelsea to 35 years imprisonment was obliged to rule that unlawful.

USA vs Love

Indefinite solitary confinement and the denial of access to proper physical and mental healthcare is exactly what Lauri Love can expect to face if he is extradited to the United States. Over the course of Love’s extradition hearing, which concluded this week, experts on the US prison and legal system, medical professionals and Lauri’s own father – who, as a prison chaplain, has direct professional experience of how standards differ in the UK – all testified to their concerns that Love, who has been diagnosed with Asperger Syndrome and who endures crippling anxiety, would commit suicide in a US prison.

As Reverend Love testified, in US prisons, when a prisoner is or appears to be suicidal, the response is ‘suicide watch,’ which actually constitutes solitary confinement, not mental health care.

Prisoners are kept in isolation, which for many of them only exacerbates the problem. Joshua Dratel, who provided expert testimony on the US legal system at Lauri’s extradition hearing, said, “I have visited [clients] in the suicide area of the segregated area and they feel like they are in a zoo, being watched as a caged animal. It doesn’t do any good for their mental health.”

Witnesses agreed that Lauri Love would certainly be put in some form of segregation, or suicide watch, as soon as he found himself in an American prison. There is an additional aggravating factor, and another link to be drawn between Chelsea’s case and Love’s in that segregation appears to be the retaliatory treatment of choice for digital activists or otherwise political prisoners in the United States. In addition to Chelsea Manning’s abusive conditions, where psychiatrists’ recommendations to remove her from ‘prevention of injury’ watch at Quantico were consistently ignored, Jeremy Hammond, Barrett Brown, and environmental rights activist Tim DeChristopher, all drawing international attention for their imprisonment, have all been thrown in solitary confinement and had their voices silenced.

Thomas Kucharski, Professor of Psychology at John Jay College of Criminal Justice and an expert on how psychiatric treatment is actually conducted in US prisons, testified that he believed there would be “unusual administrative pressure” to keep Lauri on suicide watch because of the “international dimension and notoriety of the case.”

Chelsea Manning’s recent appeal filing describes a situation at Quantico where staff were acutely aware of Manning’s status as a “high-profile detainee who would bring media and other attention to Quantico brig and case” and used this as a rationale to ignore repeated professional advice that there was no medical need to keep Manning on prevention of injury watch.

Solitary confinement is finally becoming an issue of national concern in the United States. President Obama banned the practice for juveniles in federal prisons, affecting 10,000 prisoners, and the New York Civil Liberties Union scored a major settlement overhauling solitary in state prisons, freeing 1,100 prisoners from the treatment and setting a path for many more. We think it’s time European courts recognised this shift and reconsidered whether US prison conditions actually meet the international norms they’re meant to be held to. Lauri Love’s extradition ruling on 16 September could be the moment that line is drawn.

What you can do

Sending Chelsea a lettter is a really good way to show your support at the moment. She has already tweeted about the difference it makes to her.

Yan Zhu and the Freedom of the Press Foundation organised a postcard-writing effort at HOPE last weekend and there will be another event in London next Wednesday. We’d be more than happy to publicise others.

You can also donate to Chelsea’s defence fund; the Courage Foundation runs a channel that accepts donations tax free within the EU via Wau Holland.

Chelsea Manning’s experience shows exactly why we have to stop Lauri Love being extradited to the United States. If you’re in the UK, these are all points that are worth making to your MP.

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Courage News Events News

Courage at the 2016 HOPE Conference

Courage hosted a panel discussion at the 11th HOPE Conference in New York City, entitled ‘Hackers are Whistleblowers Too: Practical Solidarity with the Courage Foundation.’

Naomi Colvin and Nathan Fuller, of Courage, summarised our mission and emphasised the importance of building solidarity for each member in the information-exposure chain, from sources to couriers to journalists and publishers. Carey Shenkman, of CCR, explained how a public-interest defence would give whistleblowers the opportunity to fairly defend their actions and motives in the courtroom. Grace North spoke about Jeremy Hammond, who was recently placed in solitary confinement. Yan Zhu, who visited Chelsea Manning earlier this year, read a statement from Chelsea herself, addressed to the HOPE audience. Finally, Lauri Love, via videolink, recapped his case and its wider implications.

View the video below, from about 1 minute in to the 1:08:00 mark.

On another panel, entitled ‘Leak Hypocrisy: A Conversation on Whistleblowers, Sources, and the Label “Espionage”’, Colvin and Shenkman joined Jesselyn Radack (via Skype) for a discussion on selective prosecution and a comparison of whistleblower treatment and laws between the US and Europe.

View the video below:

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Lauri Love News

Lauri Love calls for fair play and justice as extradition hearing concludes

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Call to Action Courage News News

Support Courage’s emergency funding drive to defend whistleblowers worldwide

(en français) (на русском)

Today, Tuesday 12th July, Courage, the international organisation that protects whistleblowers and activists, launches a major funding drive for core costs. We manage the legal and public defence of truthtellers in the most politicised cases, from Edward Snowden to Chelsea Manning, from Barrett Brown to Lauri love – and we fight for whistleblower protections and the public’s right to know generally. Two years on from our launch, we have a fundraising target of £100,000 to secure. If we are unable to meet our needs for core funding within the next month we will be forced to step back our work.

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Chelsea Manning News

Chelsea Manning’s lawyers confirm health status, privacy breach

Today, Chelsea Manning’s attorneys Chase Strangio, Vincent Ward and Nancy Hollander released the following statement jointly:

After not connecting with Chelsea for over a week, we were relieved to speak with her this morning. Though she would have preferred to keep her private medical information private, and instead focus on her recovery, the government’s gross breach of confidentiality in disclosing her personal health information to the media has created the very real concern that they may continue their unauthorized release of information about her publicly without warning. Due to these circumstances, Chelsea Manning requested that we communicate with the media and her friends and supporters on her behalf.

“Last week, Chelsea made a decision to end her life. Her attempt to take her own life was unsuccessful. She knows that people have questions about how she is doing and she wants everyone to know that she remains under close observation by the prison and expects to remain on this status for the next several weeks. For us, hearing Chelsea’s voice after learning that she had attempted to take her life last week was incredibly emotional. She is someone who has fought so hard for so many issues we care about and we are honored to fight for her freedom and medical care.

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Chelsea Manning News

Chelsea Manning’s Legal Team Responds to Unconfirmed Rumors About Her Hospitalization

The following press statement was issued on 6 July 2016 with the approval of Chelsea Manning’s legal team.

Chelsea’s attorneys are still trying to speak to her directly. In the meantime, this is a very good time to send Chelsea a letter.

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News

Whistleblower Antoine Deltour receives 12-month suspended sentence

Antoine Deltour on the 'Anything to Say?' statue (click for source)
Antoine Deltour on the ‘Anything to Say?’ statue (click for source)

Luxleaks whistleblower Antoine Deltour, former Pricewatershouse Cooper employee who in 2014 came forward as a source of the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists’ LuxLeaks release, was found guilty of theft and violating Luxembourg secrecy laws. The release, based on confidential tax rulings, shed light on multinational tax avoidance and prompted a wave of response throughout Europe. In 2015, Detour himself spoke at a public hearing held by the European Parliament.

Last week, Detour was given a 12-month suspended sentence and €1,500 fine.

As the Guardian reports,

Another former PwC employee, Raphael Halet, was convicted on similar charges on Wednesday relating to the theft of a smaller cache of tax deal papers which was also eventually leaked to journalists. He was given a a nine-month suspended sentence and was fined €1,000.

Edouard Perrin, a French journalist accused of helping Halet, was acquitted.

Though he avoids jail time, Deltour criticised the sentence for its broader impact:

sentencing the citizens at the origin of LuxLeaks revelations is equivalent to sentencing the regulatory advancements which have been triggered by these revelations and which have been widely acclaimed across Europe. This is also a warning towards future whistleblowers, which is detrimental to citizen’s information and the good functioning of the democracy.

Deltour’s support committee released a statement as well:

The support committee is outraged by the sentence against the whistleblowers Antoine Deltour and Raphael Halet. This inexplicable and unacceptable sentence ignores the public interest of their action, and overcomes the European law. It is an affront to the many supports received from around the world.

Deltour and Halet’s convictions send the message that protecting secrecy is more important than informing the public about major corporations’ tax avoidance and the rulings that enable them. Courage roundly condemns the convictions and sentences — the whistleblowers deserve praise instead of punishment. Indeed, Deltour has been awarded a European Citizens’ Prize, and more than 200,000 have signed a petition in support of Deltour.

As the support committee notes, “Antoine Deltour doesn’t accept this sentence and he has decided to appeal against it.”

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Lauri Love News

Full coverage of Lauri Love’s extradition hearing, day 2

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Lauri Love News

Lauri Love to testify in extradition hearing day 2, on hacking for social good

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Lauri Love News

Full coverage of Lauri Love’s extradition hearing, day 1