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Indictment Undercuts Assange on Source of Hacked Emails

by Associated Press

   WASHINGTON --

   At the beginning of 2017, one of Julian Assange's biggest media
   boosters traveled to the WikiLeaks founder's refuge inside the
   Ecuadorean Embassy in London and asked him where he got the leaks that
   shook up the U.S. presidential election months earlier.

   Fox News host Sean Hannity pointed straight to the purloined emails
   from the Democratic National Committee and Hillary Clinton's campaign
   chairman.

   "Can you say to the American people, unequivocally, that you did not
   get this information about the DNC, John Podesta's emails, can you tell
   the American people 1,000 percent you did not get it from Russia or
   anybody associated with Russia?"

   "Yes," Assange said. "We can say -- we have said repeatedly -- over the
   last two months that our source is not the Russian government and it is
   not a state party."

   12 Russians indicted

   The Justice Department's indictment Friday of 12 Russian military
   intelligence officers undermines those denials. And if the criminal
   charges are proved, it would show that WikiLeaks (referred to as
   "Organization 1" in the indictment) received the material from Guccifer
   2.0, a persona directly controlled by Russia's Main Intelligence
   Directorate of the General Staff, also known as GRU, and even gave the
   Russian hackers advice on how to disseminate it.

   Whether Assange knew that those behind Guccifer 2.0 were Russian agents
   is not addressed in the indictment. But it seems unlikely that Assange,
   a former hacker who once boasted of having compromised U.S. military
   networks himself, could have missed the extensive coverage blaming the
   Kremlin for the DNC hack.

   Assange told Hannity he exercised exclusive control over WikiLeaks'
   releases.

   "There is one person in the world, and I think it's actually only one,
   who knows exactly what's going on with our publications and that's me,"
   Assange said.

   Timeline

   On June 22, 2016, by which point the online publication Motherboard had
   already debunked Guccifer 2.0's claim to be a lone Romanian hacker,
   WikiLeaks sent a typo-ridden message to the persona, saying that
   releasing the material through WikiLeaks would have "a much higher
   impact than what you are doing," the indictment states.

   "If you have anything hillary related we want it in the next (two) days
   pref(er)able because the DNC is approaching and she will solidify
   bernie supporters behind her after," says a message from July 6, 2016,
   referring to the upcoming Democratic National Convention and Clinton's
   chief party rival, Bernie Sanders.

   The exchange appears to point to a desire to undercut Clinton by
   playing up divisions within the Democratic camp.

   "we think trump has only a 25% chance of winning against hillary ... so
   conflict between bernie and hillary is interesting," the message says.

   At that time in the campaign, there were simmering tensions between the
   supporters of Clinton and Sanders that would come to a head during the
   convention because of the hacked emails.

   WikiLeaks and a lawyer for Assange, Melinda Taylor, did not return
   messages seeking comment on the indictment or the exchanges with
   Guccifer 2.0.

   Reporter told to butt out

   Assange's eagerness to get his hands on the alleged material from GRU
   reflected in the indictment -- and prevent anyone else from beating
   WikiLeaks to the punch -- is also revealed in leaked messages to
   journalist Emma Best. She, like several other reporters, also was in
   communication with Guccifer 2.0.

   In copies of Twitter messages obtained by The Associated Press and
   first reported by BuzzFeed, WikiLeaks demands that Best butt out.

   "Please 'leave' their convers(a)tion with them and us," WikiLeaks said
   on August 13, 2016, arguing that the impact of material would be "very
   substantially reduced" if Best handled the leak.

   Best told BuzzFeed she dropped the matter. About an hour after the
   conversation ended, Guccifer 2.0 announced on Twitter that it was
   sending a "major trove" of data and emails to WikiLeaks.

   Seth Rich theory put to rest

   The indictment also puts to rest a conspiracy theory, carefully
   nurtured by Assange and his supporters, that slain DNC staffer Seth
   Rich was at the origin of the leaks.

   Rich died in July 2016 in what police in the District of Columbia say
   was a botched robbery. But the tragedy became fodder for conspiracy
   theorists who pushed the unfounded allegation that Rich, 27, had been
   providing information to the hackers and was killed for it.

   It was Assange who first floated the idea into the mainstream, bringing
   up Rich's case in an interview with Dutch television the following
   month.

   "What are you suggesting?" the startled anchor asked him.

   "I'm suggesting that our sources take risks and they become concerned
   to see things occurring like that," Assange answered.

   The anchor pressed Assange repeatedly, eventually saying: "It's quite
   something to suggest a murder. That's basically what you're doing."

   Over the next few months, WikiLeaks would continue to amplify the
   conspiracy theory -- all while stopping short of endorsing it outright.
   During all this time, the indictment alleges, WikiLeaks knew full well
   that Guccifer 2.0 was its source, cajoling the account's operators to
   hand it more data and ordering rival journalists to steer clear.

   The conspiracy theory has been a source of deep pain for Rich's family,
   who declined to comment on the indictment.

   Lisa Lynch, an associate professor of media and communications at Drew
   University who has written about WikiLeaks, said the indictment
   highlighted the cynicism of WikiLeaks' wink-wink support for conspiracy
   theories.

   "We can see very well-intentioned people arguing about whether those
   documents should be published," Lynch said of the DNC documents. "But
   the whole Seth Rich thing is incredibly venal."