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Monday, August 02, 2010

WIKILEAKS detained by Stalinist Regime

Dissident arrested by Stalinist Regime.

Wikileaks editor detained by US customs -- by Stephen Foley
8:51 AM Monday Aug 2, 2010

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been advised against travelling to the US, where site editor Jacob Appelbaum was detained by customs. Photo / AP

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been advised against travelling to the US, where site editor Jacob Appelbaum was detained by customs. Photo / AP

A senior volunteer for Wikileaks in the US has been detained, questioned and had his phones seized when he returned to the country from Europe, as the FBI steps up its investigation into the leak of thousands of Afghanistan war secrets to the whistleblower website.

Jacob Appelbaum, who has stood in for Wikileaks founder Julian Assange since he was advised not to travel to the US, spent three hours at a New York airport while customs officers photocopied receipts and searched his laptop, and he was again approached and questioned by FBI officers at a computer hackers conference in Las Vegas.

Two officers approached Mr Appelbaum after he had given a talk on how to subvert Chinese government internet surveillance at the annual DefCon conference. He declined to talk to them.

The internet security researcher had returned to the US for the conference from the Netherlands on Thursday when he was detained.

Border officials quizzed him on the whereabouts of Mr Assange, on his attitudes to the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq and on the philosophy behind Wikileaks.


Jacob Appelbaum pub 4096R/E012B42D 2010-05-07 Key fingerprint=D8C9 AF51 CAA9 CAEA D3D8  9C9E A34F A745 E012 B42D

Mr Assange has not been to the US since Wikileaks published a secret video showing US military personnel in Iraq celebrating a helicopter attack in which 12 civilians were killed, including Reuters journalists.

The controversy has escalated further since the site additionally published 90,000 field reports and other military documents from the war in Afghanistan, including some that contained the names of Afghan informants.

Mr Appelbaum, who works with the Tor project, which helps internet users to obscure their identity online, has long been a senior spokesman for Wikileaks in the US.

Last month he stood in for Mr Assange at a New York computer conference and used the event to ask for funding and volunteers. Fearing the authorities, instead of returning to the stage as promised after the helicopter video played, he left by a side entrance and used a decoy in a similar hooded top to walk out of the front.

http://news.cnet.com/i/bto/20091125/JacobAppelbaum.png

Since the seizure of his electronic equipment last week, Mr Appelbaum's voicemail now says "this telephone number is no longer an appropriate way to reach me".

Talking to The Independent at DefCon at the weekend, he angrily rejected comments from the US joint chiefs of staff, Admiral Mike Mullen, who said of Wikileaks and its volunteers last week that "they might already have on their hands the blood of some young soldier or that of an Afghan family" because insurgents could use information in the documents to launch reprisals.

"When you have been waging war for 10 years, who are you to say that?" Mr Appelbaum said. "What are you thinking, writing these people's names down? And what are you doing in concrete terms to protect these people?"

Both the FBI and the US military believe that the documents came from the same source as the helicopter video, and they have already charged a 22-year-old intelligence analyst working in Iraq, Bradley Manning, with that leak. Now they are examining Mr Manning's links with the hacker community.

At DefCon, Mr Appelbaum refused to confirm or comment on his detention but defended Wikileaks' commitment to exposing information that governments around the world want suppressed.

"All governments are on a continuum of tyranny," he said. "In the US, a cop with a gun can commit the most heinous crime and be given the benefit of the doubt. In the US, we don't have censorship but we do have collaborating news organisations."

- THE INDEPENDENT

By Stephen Foley

http://www.slipperybrick.com/wp-content/uploads/2008/02/seth-schoen-jacob-appelbaum-princeton-researchers.jpg

Jacob Appelbaum is an independent computer security hacker. He currently is employed by the Tor project and spoke as a representative of Wikileaks at the 2010 Hope conference.[1]

He is known for his research on the cold boot attack amongst other things.[2][3]

Appelbaum is a founder of the hackerspace Noisebridge, located in San Francisco.[citation needed] He is also a photographer[4] and ambassador for the art group monochrom.

On July 17, Appelbaum spoke on behalf of Wikileaks at the 2010 Hackers on Planet Earth conference in New York City, replacing Assange due to the presence of federal agents at the conference.

Detainment and questioning

Upon returning to the U.S. from Holland, on July 29, Appelbaum was detained for three hours at the airport by U.S. agents, according to anonymous sources.[7] The sources told Cnet that Appelbaum's bag was searched, receipts from his bag were photocopied, his laptop was inspected, although in what manner was unclear.[7] Appelbaum reportedly refused to answer questions without a lawyer present, and was not allowed to make a phone call. His three mobile phones were reportedly taken and not returned.[7] On July 31, he spoke at a DEF CON conference and mentioned his phone being "seized". After speaking, he was approached by two FBI agents and questioned.[7]



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