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Tribune News Service
Tribune News Service
World
Jonathan Browning

Assange extradition battle resumes with fight over US charges

Julian Assange's extradition hearing resumed in London after a seven-month hiatus, with the judge rejecting an attempt by attorneys for the WikiLeaks founder to set aside the allegations of a broader U.S. indictment.

A new charge sheet against Assange arrived "desperately late," giving his team no time to respond, his lawyer, Mark Summers, said Monday. The allegations that Assange conspired with hackers affiliated with the "Anonymous" and "LulzSec" groups form an entirely separate extradition request and should be set aside, he said.

"How much of this is said to be criminal activity is anyone's guess," Summers said. "What's happening here is abnormal, unfair and liable to create real injustice."

Judge Vanessa Baraitser rejected the argument, saying that Assange could have applied to postpone the proceedings and didn't do so.

The U.S. has charged Assange with endangering national security by conspiring to obtain and disclose classified information. He's accused of working with army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning to get classified documents from databases containing about 90,000 Afghanistan war-related activity reports, 400,000 Iraq war-related reports and 250,000 State Department cables.

The extradition proceedings restarted at the Old Bailey court in London after months of delay, with Assange looking clean-shaven and with cropped hair. The 49-year-old has been in a London jail for a year and a half since he was kicked out of the Ecuadorian embassy where he was hiding from Swedish sexual-assault allegations.

Assange's team were attempting "to take a knife" to the extradition, a lawyer for the U.S. said, saying there was nothing improper with the indictment.

The hearings are set to last for as long as four weeks.

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