The same thing as the New York Times and the Pentagon Papers.Scot Dutchy wrote:Just what has Assange got to do with free speech? He is just a leach.
The right to publish true information, even if someone else revealed the information by stealing it or violating a government rule against disclosing it.
In a wonderful, classically liberal, ruling, the US Supreme Court in New York Times vs. United States, ruled that The New York Times and The Washington Post newspapers had a fundamental right to publish the then-classified Pentagon Papers without risk of government censorship or punishment. In that situation, Daniel Ellsberg illegally disclosed like 7,000 pages of documents about the Vietnam War which showed a lot of bad acts on the part of the United States. The US government sued to stop the publication, claiming that disclosure of the illegally released documents constituted a violation of the Espionage Act and was an illegal disclosure of secret government information.
The SCOTUS properly ruled that it might well be illegal for Ellsberg to have violated rules that bound him to not disclose the information, but the New York Times was not bound by Ellsberg's obligations. The New York Times was exercising its right of free speech and the press by publishing the information, even if it was top secret according to the government. So, the government shall make no law abridging the freedom of speech or of the press - so that means the government cannot make the Espionage Act punish a media report of information, even if it would be illegal conduct for Ellsberg to have obtained and released the information because of his role as a government employee.
That's Wikileaks. If Wikileaks receives leaked confidential or secret information, and then publishes it, it is doing what the New York Times did, as long as Wikileaks didn't commit a crime in getting the info - like doing illegal hacking or breaking into an office to get the info, or paying someone to do it, etc.
Add to that that Wikileaks is not American or British, and did what it did from some other country, it's not clear how American and British cops would even have jurisdiction.
Obviously, we all know why the cops are pissed off about it - it's embarrassing - it's showing the warts and crimes and bad acts of government officials and politicians. But, in my view, that's a good thing, and I certainly don't want it to be a crime for some guy to say to Scot Dutchy, "hey, here is a big report I found in the back of a taxicab after a government official accidentally left it there, and it discloses how the President of the US, the President of France and the Chancellor of Germany are conspiring to commit illegal acts, " and then Scot Dutchy has to return it to the government to allow them to keep that all secret under the rubric of espionage against the governments and such. That's bullshit.
Yes, the government is allowed to keep secrets, but the obligation to keep it secret is the government's obligation, not Scot Dutchy's, not 42's, not the New York Times' and not Wikileaks. We are allowed to know the truth. We are allowed to speak the truth. And, we are allowed to disclose information, absent some legal obligation that we consented to do to do otherwise. None of the people I just listed work for the government, agreed to keep anything secret, or agreed to any secrecy obligation.