This Article is From Dec 16, 2010

WikiLeaks' Assange ordered freed as court rejects appeal

WikiLeaks' Assange ordered freed as court rejects appeal
London: The High Court in London granted bail on Thursday to Julian Assange, the founder of the anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks, while he fights extradition to Sweden on alleged sex offenses.

But High Court Judge Duncan Ounsley added more restrictive bail conditions to those imposed by a lower court two days ago, when the prosecutors filed an appeal, insisting that Mr. Assange was a flight risk. It was not immediately clear when he would be released from jail.

In dismissing an appeal by prosecutors, the judge said he also accepted arguments by the prosecution that many of those standing bail for Mr. Assange were doing so because they supported WikiLeaks and might regard "absconding as a right and justified act" to keep the beleaguered Web site running.

Dressed in a white shirt open at the collar and a dark suit, Mr. Assange sat with legs crossed through the two-hour hearing in the High Court near the London theater district. He reacted impassively when the Judge Ounsley pronounced his ruling.

Bail of $315,000 was granted by the lower court on Tuesday after a friend of Mr. Assange's offered to allow him to stay at a mansion in Suffolk, in eastern England, an hour from London.

According to the bail conditions set by the lower court, Mr. Assange must spend every night at the mansion, Ellingham Hall, a 10-bedroom Georgian home on a 650-acre estate owned by Vaughan Smith, the wealthy founder of the Frontline journalists' club in London.

The conditions include a curfew, daily visits to the police and electronic tagging to ensure that the police can track his movements.

The hearing on Thursday was formally separate from Mr. Assange's role in the publication of some 250,000 American diplomatic documents and came as federal prosecutors in Washington looked for evidence that would enable them to charge him with helping with an Army intelligence analyst suspected of leaking the information.

The American prosecutors believe that if he did so, they could charge him as a conspirator rather than a passive recipient of the documents.

Mr. Assange's court appearance in London is related to allegations of sexual misconduct on three occasions with two young Swedish women in Stockholm last August, something he denies. Swedish prosecutors say they want him to be returned to their country to question him in connection with accusations that he broke Swedish rape and other laws.

Mr. Assange has said the encounters were consensual but his accusers say they ceased to be consensual when a condom was not being used.

The Guardian newspaper reported on Wednesday that the appeal was initiated by British prosecutors, not their Swedish counterparts, who said they had "not got a view at all on bail."

The case has become bitterly divisive among supporters and critics of Mr. Assange -- and the focus of much attention by media outlets around the world. Scores of reporters, photographers and camera crews gathered outside the High Court as Mr. Assange arrived in a white armored prison services truck. The bail hearing started at around 6:30 a.m. Eastern time.

His incarceration has not ended the flow of classified American diplomatic cables, mostly between American diplomats abroad and the State Department in Washington. Earlier, WikiLeaks published confidential American material relating to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The documents were made available to newspapers including The New York Times.

Ravi Somaiya reported from London, and Alan Cowell from Paris.
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