By Craig Murray
March 02, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - In
Thursday’s separate hearing on allowing Assange out
of the armoured box to sit with his legal team, I
witnessed directly that Baraitser’s ruling against
Assange was brought by her into court BEFORE she
heard defence counsel put the arguments, and
delivered by her entirely unchanged.
I might start by explaining to you my position in
the public gallery vis a vis the judge. All week I
deliberately sat in the front, right hand seat. The
gallery looks out through an armoured glass window
at a height of about seven feet above the courtroom.
It runs down one side of the court, and the extreme
right hand end of the public gallery is above the
judge’s bench, which sits below perpendicular to it.
Remarkably therefore from the right hand seats of
the public gallery you have an uninterrupted view of
the top of the whole of the judge’s bench, and can
see all the judge’s papers and computer screen.
Mark Summers QC outlined that in the case of
Belousov vs Russia the European Court of Human
Rights at Strasbourg ruled against the state of
Russia because Belousov had been tried in a glass
cage practically identical in construction and in
position in court to that in which Assange now was.
It hindered his participation in the trial and his
free access to counsel, and deprived him of human
dignity as a defendant.
Summers continued that it was normal practice for
certain categories of unconvicted prisoners to be
released from the dock to sit with their lawyers.
The court had psychiatric reports on Assange’s
extreme clinical depression, and in fact the UK
Department of Justice’s best practice guide for
courts stated that vulnerable people should be
released to sit alongside their lawyers. Special
treatment was not being requested for Assange – he
was asking to be treated as any other vulnerable
person.
The defence was impeded by their inability to
communicate confidentially with their client during
proceedings. In the next stage of trial, where
witnesses were being examined, timely communication
was essential. Furthermore they could only talk with
him through the slit in the glass within the hearing
of the private company security officers who were
guarding him (it was clarified they were Serco, not
Group 4 as Baraitser had said the previous day), and
in the presence of microphones.
Baraitser became ill-tempered at this point and
spoke with a real edge to her voice. “Who are those
people behind you in the back row?” she asked
Summers sarcastically – a question to which she very
well knew the answer. Summers replied that they were
part of the defence legal team. Baraitser said that
Assange could contact them if he had a point to pass
on. Summers replied that there was an aisle and a
low wall between the glass box and their position,
and all Assange could see over the wall was the top
of the back of their heads. Baraitser said she had
seen Assange call out. Summers said yelling across
the courtroom was neither confidential nor
satisfactory.