WikiLeaks founder Assange denied bail

Bloomberg

Julian Assange was denied bail by a UK judge on Wednesday, two days after the court blocked the WikiLeaks founder’s extradition to the US on mental-health grounds.
The ruling means the 49-year-old will remain in London’s high-security Belmarsh prison, where he’s been for nearly two years. He will be held while the US government tries to appeal the extradition ruling after the judge deemed him to still be a flight risk. Judge Vanessa Baraitser said Assange “still has an incentive to abscond,” and pointed to his previous breaking of strict bail conditions.
Baraitser ruled the WikiLeaks founder shouldn’t be sent to US to face criminal charges because of fears that he might commit suicide in jail.
On Wednesday, an attorney for the US, Clair Dobbin, reminded the court that Assange spent seven years in the Ecuadorian embassy rather than face questioning in a sexual assault probe and that countries, including Mexico, have already offered him asylum rather than allow him to face American espionage charges.
“There are no conditions that can guarantee his surrender,” Dobbin said. “The history of his attempts to evade extradition to the US shows he is capable of going to any length.”
The Australian spent the last decade either in a UK prison or hiding out in Ecuador’s embassy in London to avoid deportation. He’s fighting efforts to bring him to America to face charges of espionage for his role in releasing hundreds of thousands of pages of classified documents via WikiLeaks, with the help of US Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning.

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