Judge Vanessa Baraitser has refused to grant Julian Assange bail, whilst sitting at Westminster Magistrates' Court on 6 January 2021. The request was denied on the grounds that the Australian publisher had previously violated prior bail conditions in 2012.
The editor of the whistleblower website WikiLeaks said that he was "disappointed" by the judge's decision, adding that the public should expect Assange's bail denial to be overturned.
The WikiLeaks publisher has spent 15 months in Belmarsh maximum security prison purely on the basis of pre-trial detention, as he challenged his extradition to the US on charges of espionage related to his role in obtaining and publishing classified documents, which revealed, among other things, war crimes committed by US forces.
The decision to refuse to grant bail follows Judge Baraitser's refusal to extradite Assange to the United States to stand trial on espionage-related charges, on the grounds that she was convinced that there was an insurmountable risk that he would commit suicide, should he be subjected to the US prison system, both pre-trial and post-trial, should he be convicted. Her judgement was nonetheless heavily criticised for casting "a shadow over investigative journalism" worldwide.
Judge Baraitser based her decision on the fact that the US government was appealing her refusal to grant extradition to Assange. She said that she was satisfied that there were "substantial grounds for believing" that Assange would still seek to abscond and could make use of a "vast" support network to do so.
The US government, represented by Clair Dobbin, argued strongly against granting the co-founder of Wikileaks bail, higlighting that the "appeal would be frustrated if Mr. Assange was not remanded into custody”.
Ms Dobbin also detailed Assange's role in helping NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden "escape justice" by assisting him in avoiding the arrest by the US, a claim which Judge Baraitser cited in her judgement, refusing to extradite the publisher. The prosecution has also stressed that they planned on appealing the judge's decision to refuse to extradite on the basis that she applied an exceptionally stringent test regarding the risk of suicide.
In arguments for the defence, Edward Fitzgerald QC said that there should now be a presumption in favour of bail now that the extradition request was discharged. He also pointed out that the offer for asylum from the Mexican president was misquoted and conditional upon discussions with the UK government.
Judge Baraitser refused two prior bail applications filed by the defence.
Preivous Bail Applications
The first bail application was made in 2019, after Assange completed his sentence for absconding whilst on bail when sought and obtained asylum the Ecuadorian embassy. His 50-week sentence, nearly the maximum, was criticised at the time for being disproportionate and for ignoring the internationally protected right to seek and attain asylum.
Since taking over Assange's case, Judge Baraitser has refused to intervene in any way regarding the WikiLeaks co-founder's conditions in prison.
Assange's legal team repeatedly said they were prevented from accessing their client, and that their client was being denied proper access to his legal papers. Lawyers also said that, in a single day, Assange was handcuffed 11 times, strip-searched twice and had his legal papers confiscated from him.
Midway through December, Stella Moris tweeted out that her fiancé remained deprived of any warm clothes despite the freezing temperatures.
Calls For Proper Medical Assistance
UN Special Rapporteur on Torture Nils Melzer, along with two other independent medical experts, concluded two years ago that Assange showed clear symptoms of "psychological torture". Melzer also reproached the US, UK and Swedish authorities' continual refusal to properly investigate their findings.
Doctors for Assange, a collection of physicians from around the world, repeatedly called for the embattled publisher to be released from prison so that he could received proper medical treatment and avoid the risks posed by COVID-19 at a time when prisoners were released early all around the world, including, to a limited extent, in the UK.
The US government has signalled that it plans on appealing Judge Baraitser's decision to refuse to extradite Assange.