“For us, Julian´s family, this is a persecution, not a prosecution”, Shipton told Sputnik outside the Westminster Magistrates Court, where the first management hearing after the September major trial was held on Thursday.
The court also heard from psychiatrists and mental health experts that Assange is at a high risk of suicide if extradited to the US, where according to witnesses he will be held in solitary confinement and receive limited medical services even before being convicted by the US court.
The defence also produced evidence that the whistleblower was spied on by a Spanish company in charge of the Ecuadorean embassy's security and passed the information on to the US intelligence services.
Before adjourning the court and announcing that her ruling will come on 4 January 2021, the UK judge presiding over the extradition hearing, Vanessa Baraitser, gave Assange´s lawyers four weeks to submit closing arguments, then a further two weeks to the US prosecutors to reply and present their closing arguments, plus another 72 hours for the defence to reply.
According to Shipton, at Thursday’s management hearing, which was attended by Assange by videoconference from the Belmarsh prison where he is awaiting the verdict, his legal team asked for another week extension, because he has not been able to read all the submissions.
“The reason for his is that the jail has delayed giving Julian the laptop which has all the submission on it for him to review,” he said.
Asked about his expectation for judge Baraitser’s ruling in January, Assange’s father lowered his voiced and whispered: “Not much.”
As in previous hearings, a group of supporters of the whistleblower gathered on Thursday outside the court building in Central London to protest his detention and eventual extradition to the US.
“It is extremely important that we stand up for what we think is right, and freedom of the press, freedom of expression are fundamental corners of a democracy”, Assange Defense Committee coordinator Emmy Butlin told Sputnik.
Butlin recalled that the WikiLeaks founder offered the world a lot of information and revealed war crimes, so he deserves support.
The US Department of Justice is seeking the extradition of the WikiLeaks founder on 17 espionage charges and one count of computer misuse, which carry a maximum sentence of 175 years in prison, for the publication of classified information on the US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and thousands of US diplomatic cables between 2010 and 2011.
The next management hearing is scheduled for 25 November.