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Comedian Thrown Out of White House Press Dinner for Supporting ‘Heroic’ Assange

Randy Credico, an activist, comedian and former director of the William Moses Kunstler Fund for Racial Justice, was unceremoniously thrown out of the White House Correspondents Dinner (WHCD) this weekend after voicing his call for freedom for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
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"I've done Yahoo News' radio show so they just invited me to the WHCD because I'm a harmless guy and I'm a comedian, too. I had a great time the first two hours. I went from one party to the next and there was an open bar and open food," Credico told Radio Sputnik's Loud & Clear about the annual WHCA dinner, a Washington, DC, tradition normally attended by both the president and vice president, along with their wives and close advisers and, of course, the Washington press.

"I shouted that in two different spots and then scary guys in white outfits grabbed me and threw me out really hard out of a side door. I feigned a heart attack because I thought my hand was going to break off. I thought they were going to lobotomize me," Credico said.

The comedian appeared before the US House Intelligence Committee in November 2017 after being given a subpoena to discuss his alleged involvement with Assange after American political consultant Roger Stone told the House Intelligence Committee that Credico was his intermediary with Assange to gather information on Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. 

Assange's Internet Ban May Be Linked to Skripal Case Tweets - Wikileaks Adviser

In March, Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks who has been residing at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London since 2012 for fear of being extradited to the US via Sweden. Although there are no charges against Assange in the US, he fears being tried for espionage.

Assange's internet access in the embassy was cut off shortly after an exchange with a British Foreign Office minister, who called Assange a "miserable little worm" in response to the press freedom advocate's multiple tweets criticizing the British government's decision to oust Russian diplomats in response to the nerve agent attack against a former Russian spy in Britain as "poor diplomacy."

In April, the US Democratic Party filed a lawsuit naming WikiLeaks as one of the culprits allegedly responsible for attempts to disrupt the 2016 presidential election campaign.

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