Wikileaks founder Julian Assange is Free

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange is Free

Julian Paul Assange (/əˈsɑːnʒ/ ə-SAHNZH; né Hawkins; born 3 July 1971) is an Australian editor, publisher and activist who founded WikiLeaks in 2006. He came to international attention in 2010 after WikiLeaks published a series of leaks from US Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning.

Name of the court where they held the case? The Old Bailey

Some would argue is effectively a political prisoner under house arrest.

Therefore, we are obliged to note that Julian Assange is not a prisoner in Great Britain awaiting extradition by the United States but a hostage of a private organisation, the City of London Corporation.
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2011/oct/31/corporation-london-city-medieval

The media gaslighting is so strong on this whole trial. They keep on saying “British court”, “British judge”. Wrong, the City of London is not British, it’s not the UK. It’s only located in Britain/UK. If the King wanted to attend, he’d have to ASK PERMISSION. Lol. This whole trial is a charade being carried out by the banking cartels. Keep this in mind as the whole thing continues to get weird.

How the City of London really does make up its own rules

Name of the Prison? Belmarsh Prison

Location of the Prison? 

The 1 square mile private property owned by the Bankers called the “City of London”.
The tax haven in the heart of Britain.
There is an institution with a murky history and remarkable powers that acts like a political and financial island within our island nation state. Welcome to the Square Mile and the City of London Corporation.

The City of London Corporation, the local-government authority for the 1.2-square-mile slab of prime real estate in central London that is the City of London. The corporation is an ancient, semi-alien entity lodged inside the British nation state; a “prehistoric monster which had mysteriously survived into the modern world”, as a 19th-century would-be City reformer put it. The words remain apt today. Few people care that London has a mayor and a lord mayor – but they should: the corporation is an offshore island inside Britain, a tax haven in its own right.

The term “tax haven” is a bit of a misnomer, because such places aren’t just about tax. What they sell is escape: from the laws, rules and taxes of jurisdictions elsewhere, usually with secrecy as their prime offering. The notion of elsewhere (hence the term “offshore”) is central. The Cayman Islands’ tax and secrecy laws are not designed for the benefit of the 50,000-odd Caymanians, but help wealthy people and corporations, mostly in the US and Europe, get around the rules of their own democratic societies. The outcome is one set of rules for a rich elite and another for the rest of us.
The City Corporation is different from any other local authority. Here, hi-tech global finance melds into ancient rites and customs that underline its separateness and power with mystifying pomp. Among the City’s 108 livery companies, or trade associations, you will find the Worshipful Companies of Loriners (concerned with stirrups and other harnesses for horses) and Fletchers (arrow-makers) as well as the Worshipful Company of Tax Advisers, among whose four prime aims is “to support the Lord Mayor and the City of London Corporation”, and the Worshipful Company of International Bankers, whose heraldic “supporters” are the griffins, guardians of treasure.

HMP Belmarsh

HMP Belmarsh is a Category-A men’s prison in Thamesmead, southeast London, England. The prison is used to house high-profile criminals, particularly those who directly threaten national security. Within the prison, grounds is a unique unit referred to as the High-Security Unit (HSU). It is a 48 single-cell unit and is regarded as the most secure prison unit in the United Kingdom. Belmarsh Prison became operational on April 2, 1991.

Few prisons in England have a notorious reputation as HMP Belmarsh, where criminals convicted at the Old Bailey (Central Criminal Court) are often sent. The prison is one of England and Wales’s only three high-security jails.

Despite this, around a third of its inmates stated that they felt unsafe, with levels of violence had escalated since an inspection in 2015. According to the HM Chief Inspector of Prisons Peter Clarke’s report in 2018, the prison had a small number of prisoners who required “specific management” to their high-profile status with the public and general media. Some big names imprisoned at Belmarsh include Levi Bellfield, Julian Assange, David Copeland, Wayne Couzens, and Danyal Hussein.

Convicted of espionage against America and plead guilty so he got off with time served and went back to Australia.

John Cusack: Reporter’s Must Have First Amendment Rights

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