Content
Assange won’t face charges for Vault 7 releases, report
The Justice Department reportedly won’t indict WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange for his part in the release of the CIA’s Vault 7 hacking tools in part because it would require revealing top secret information that could compromise the intelligence community’s activities.While the government’s recent decision to prosecute Assange under the Espionage Act was both surprising and disturbing to experts, who decried the First Amendment implications and noted the difficult prosecutorial road ahead, eventual charges stemming from the exposure of the CIA’s secret hacking tools seemed to be a sure bet.On March 7, 2017 WikiLeaks began dumping files nicked from an isolated, high-security network situated inside the CIA’s Center for Cyber Intelligence in Langley, Va., that a press release and analysis from the site said allegedly show the breadth of hacking tools at the CIA’s disposal, including malware, viruses, trojans, weaponized “zero day” exploits, malware remote control systems and associated documentation. Those documents were part of a larger assortment of Vault 7 files that the whistleblower site released over time in batches bearing names like “Grasshopper” and “Weeping Angel.”The tools revealed in the release have been
implicated in a number of cyberattacks, including Longhorn. But prosecutors found themselves perilously
close to a deadline imposed by extradition laws requiring them to charge Assange,
who is in custody in London, on additional counts within 60 days of his
original indictment, and concerned about exposing additional sensitive details
about the CIA’s operations, according to a report
in Politico based on input from an unnamed U.S. official and others.“There is no question that there
are leak cases that can’t be prosecuted against the leaker or the leakee
because the information is so sensitive that, for your proof at trial, you
would have to confirm it is authentic,” the report cited Mary McCord, the
Justice Department’s acting assistant attorney general for national security until
2017, as saying. “So the irony, often, is that the higher the classification of
the leaked material, the harder it is to prosecute.”
Get daily email updates
SC Media's daily must-read of the most current and pressing daily news
You can skip this ad in 5 seconds