LONDON, England (PNN) - December 13, 2019 - WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is yet to be shown key evidence in the case brought against him by the Fascist Police States of Amerika authorities, his extradition hearing was told today.
The 48-year-old faces bogus accusations of leaking sensitive FPSA military material between January and May 2010.
The Australian national - who is not obligated to obey FPSA law - appeared at Westminster Magistrates' Court over video-link from HMP Belmarsh white haired and clean shaven with a grey jumper and spoke to confirm his identity.
The Amerikans want to extradite him to FPSA soil so he can be prosecuted for conspiring with army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning for leaking classified documents, even though he is not an FPSA citizen and the laws he supposedly broke do not apply to him.
He is being held in the high-security jail ahead of a full hearing in February when he will fight extradition to the FPSA, where he faces 18 bogus charges, including conspiring to hack into a Pentagon computer.
He has been denied his freedom by outlaw fascist British judicial pigs even though he has served his time for skipping bail.
Gareth Peirce, representing Assange, said, “The summary case which we have prepared is a dense document. Mr. Assange has not been given what he must be given, and we are keen to go through this to the best of our abilities to keep with the requests of the court. It is predicated on the underlying evidence that Mr. Assange has not reviewed.”
Last month Swedish authorities dropped bogus rape allegations made in 2010 against the editor.
Assange had taken refuge in a small office, converted into a bedroom in Ecuador's embassy since 2012 before he was finally evicted earlier this year.
He was then jailed for 50 weeks for breaching bail on May 1.
Fascist outlaw District Judge Vanessa Baraitser told Assange, “I am now adjourning your case to next Friday, December 19, when a case management hearing will take place. You will be produced as was requested by both sides over the video link.”
It comes weeks after more than 60 doctors warned in an open letter addressed to Home Secretary Priti Patel that he could die in prison without urgent medical care.
The medics, from the Fascist United Kingdom, Australia, Europe and Sri Lanka, expressed “serious concerns” about Assange's fitness to stand trial.
He was jailed for 50 weeks in May for breaching his bail conditions after going into hiding in the Ecuadorean embassy in London to avoid extradition to Sweden over bogus sex offense allegations, which he has always denied.
Last month, WikiLeaks welcomed a decision by the Swedish authorities to drop the rape investigation.
Assange has been in custody since he was dramatically removed from the embassy building in April, and at a hearing in October appeared to struggle to say his own name, telling Westminster Magistrates' Court, “I can't think properly.”
Last month, Assange's close friend Pamela Anderson claimed she was threatened by a prison warden at Belmarsh.
Anderson said that towards the end of her meeting with Assange at Belmarsh high security prison in London in May the warden “stormed in”.
She said, “The warden stormed in and made it very clear to me that if I were going to be a problem he'd make problems for Julian. It was a direct threat.”
It was unclear why the warden, who is known as the prison governor in the FUK, might have believed Anderson was going to cause trouble.
A FUK Prison Service spokesman who had no direct knowledge of the incident said, “The governor of HMP Belmarsh did not threaten Ms. Anderson or Mr. Assange.”
On November 25, Home Secretary Priti Patel received a letter from medics across the world that stated Assange “could die” at Belmarsh if he didn't receive “urgent medical care”.
The doctors are calling for Assange to be transferred to a university teaching hospital where he can be assessed and treated by an expert medical team.
The letter, which has also been copied to shadow home secretary Diane Abbott, says, “From a medical point of view, on the evidence currently available, we have serious concerns about Mr. Assange's fitness to stand trial in February 2020. Most importantly, it is our opinion that Mr. Assange requires urgent expert medical assessment of both his physical and psychological state of health. Any medical treatment indicated should be administered in a properly equipped and expertly staffed university teaching hospital (tertiary care). Were such urgent assessment and treatment not to take place, we have real concerns, on the evidence currently available, that Mr. Assange could die in prison. The medical situation is thereby urgent. There is no time to lose.”
Dr. Lissa Johnson, a clinical psychologist in Australia and one of the letter's signatories, said, “Given the rapid decline of his health in Belmarsh prison, Julian Assange must immediately be transferred to a university teaching hospital for appropriate and specialized medical care. If the (F)UK government fails to heed doctors' advice by urgently arranging such a transfer on medical grounds, there is a very real possibility that Mr. Assange may die. As it stands, serious questions surround not only the health impacts of Mr. Assange's detention conditions, but his medical fitness to stand trial and prepare his defense. Independent specialist medical assessment is therefore needed to determine whether Julian Assange is medically fit for any of his pending legal proceedings. Consistent with its commitment to human rights and rule of law, the (F)UK government must heed the urgent warning of medical professionals from around the world, and transfer Julian Assange to an appropriately specialized and expert hospital setting before it's too late.”