By Craig Murray
February 26, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - This afternoon Julian’s
Spanish lawyer, Baltasar Garzon, left court to
return to Madrid. On the way out he naturally
stopped to shake hands with his client, proffering
his fingers through the narrow slit in the
bulletproof glass cage. Assange half stood to take
his lawyer’s hand. The two security guards in the
cage with Assange immediately sprang up, putting
hands on Julian and forcing him to sit down,
preventing the handshake.
That was not by any means the worst thing today,
but it is a striking image of the senseless brute
force continually used against a man accused of
publishing documents. That a man cannot even shake
his lawyer’s hand goodbye is against the entire
spirit in which the members of the legal system like
to pretend the law is practised. I offer that
startling moment as encapsulating yesterday’s events
in court.
Day 2 proceedings had started with a statement
from Edward Fitzgerald, Assange’s QC, that shook us
rudely into life. He stated that yesterday, on the
first day of trial, Julian had twice been stripped
naked and searched, eleven times been handcuffed,
and five times been locked up in different holding
cells. On top of this, all of his court documents
had been taken from him by the prison authorities,
including privileged communications between his
lawyers and himself, and he had been left with no
ability to prepare to participate in today’s
proceedings.
Magistrate Baraitser looked at Fitzgerald and
stated, in a voice laced with disdain, that he had
raised such matters before and she had always
replied that she had no jurisdiction over the prison
estate. He should take it up with the prison
authorities. Fitzgerald remained on his feet, which
drew a very definite scowl from Baraitser, and
replied that of course they would do that again, but
this repeated behaviour by the prison authorities
threatened the ability of the defence to prepare. He
added that regardless of jurisdiction, in his
experience it was common practice for magistrates
and judges to pass on comments and requests to the
prison service where the conduct of the trial was
affected, and that jails normally listened to
magistrates sympathetically.
Baraitser flat-out denied any knowledge of such a
practice, and stated that Fitzgerald should present
her with written arguments setting out the case law
on jurisdiction over prison conditions. This was too
much even for prosecution counsel James Lewis, who
stood up to say the prosecution would also want
Assange to have a fair hearing, and that he could
confirm that what the defence were suggesting was
normal practice. Even then, Baraitser still refused
to intervene with the prison. She stated that if the
prison conditions were so bad as to reach the very
high bar of making a fair hearing impossible, the
defence should bring a motion to dismiss the charges
on those grounds. Otherwise they should drop it.