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| FILE - This Aug. 19, 2012 file photo shows WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange making a statement to the media and supporters at a window of Ecuadorian Embassy in central London.(AP Photo/Sang Tan, File) |
FORT Meade,
Maryland: The US Army published dozens of documents online Wednesday in the
case of WikiLeaks suspect Bradley Manning, after media outlets and other groups
had criticized a lack of transparency.
The move
came in response to multiple Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests related
to the case against Manning, who stands accused of passing a trove of secret
files to Julian Assange's anti-secrecy WikiLeaks website.
Among the
organizations that demanded access to the pre-trial documents were The
Washington Post, CNN and the Center for Constitutional Rights, which all said
they had been prevented from informing the public about the case.
Such
documents have been sealed based on requests either by the prosecution or
defense lawyers in the case against Manning, which is being heard in a military
court at Fort Meade, Maryland, north of the US capital Washington.
In federal
civilian court, similar types of documents are nearly always made public.
Even in the
military commissions at the Guantanamo detention facility, where pre-trial
hearings in the case against the 9/11 plotters are being heard, military
lawyers have made such documents available.
On
Wednesday, 84 court orders and rulings were released in the Manning case,
including a partial transcription of a deposition made by Manning.
The
25-year-old Army private faces a slew of charges, including "aiding the
enemy," for allegedly leaking hundreds of thousands of sensitive US
military and diplomatic documents to WikiLeaks.
He was
arrested in May 2010 while serving as an intelligence analyst near Baghdad and
subsequently charged over the largest leak of restricted documents in American
history. The trial is expected to begin in June.
"Due
to the voluminous nature of these documents, it will take additional time to
review, redact, and release all of the responsive documents," the Army
said in a statement, adding that 500 documents have been released thus far.
During
Wednesday's hearing at Fort Meade, Judge Denise Lind dealt the defense a blow
when she rejected their claim that the documents allegedly leaked by Manning
were incorrectly marked top secret.
"Evidence
of overclassification is not relevant," she said.
The
proceedings at Fort Meade are shown to reporters via closed circuit television
with a slight delay, so the transmission can be cut if sensitive matters are
discussed.
Prosecutors
had asked that hearings be closed when classified information is to be
discussed.
Prosecutor
Ashden Fein said that of 141 possible witnesses, "some form of
classification" should be used for testimony from 73 of them, though
"not necessarily all their testimony."
Manning is
expected to offer a revised plea proposal Thursday.
The most
serious of the 22 charges against him, "aiding the enemy," carries a
maximum sentence of life imprisonment, but Manning's team is trying to have
that charge dropped.

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