Lewis now hands the judge a copy of a “statutory instrument based upon EU law.”— Mac William Bishop (@MacWBishop) February 27, 2020
“It’s quite complicated, I’m afraid,” Lewis adds. He begins reading from the document. The point of all this again is to establish that the “political offence” exception has no bearing here.
Lewis returns to the idea that the allegations contained in the US indictment are that Assange leaked unredacted documents containing sensitive names of sources, thereby putting those sources at risk. He argues that this is inherently not a political act, but a criminal one.— Mac William Bishop (@MacWBishop) February 27, 2020
Article 5 of the European Convention on Human Rights is incorporated into Extradition Act 2003, Fitzgerald argues.— Mac William Bishop (@MacWBishop) February 27, 2020
For those unfamiliar, Article 5 ECHR establishes that a person cannot be deprived of liberty without due process of law. US equivalents in 5th & 14th Amendments.
The defense is giving a lot of play to Dr Julia Jansson’s book “Terrorism, Criminal Law and Politics,” as it contains a number of specific passages about WikiLeaks.— Mac William Bishop (@MacWBishop) February 27, 2020