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Potential Russian financial support and coordination between Julian Assange, WikiLeaks, and Edward Snowden
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kaggle-ho-020257House Oversight

Potential Russian financial support and coordination between Julian Assange, WikiLeaks, and Edward Snowden

Potential Russian financial support and coordination between Julian Assange, WikiLeaks, and Edward Snowden The passage links Assange’s embassy stay funding to Russia‑backed RT and mentions a Russian visa for his deputy, suggesting possible Russian influence. While these connections are known in public discourse, the specific claim of RT sponsoring his weekly program and facilitating a documentary provides a concrete lead for financial‑flow investigation, but lacks new, verifiable details or direct evidence of wrongdoing. Key insights: Assange received a weekly income from the Ecuador embassy sponsored by RT, a Russian‑state funded broadcaster.; Assange’s deputy, Sarah Harrison, obtained a multi‑entry Russian visa for work on a documentary tied to Russian topics.; Snowden contacted Assange in 2013 seeking assistance to leave Hong Kong, indicating possible coordination.

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House Oversight
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kaggle-ho-020257
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Summary

Potential Russian financial support and coordination between Julian Assange, WikiLeaks, and Edward Snowden The passage links Assange’s embassy stay funding to Russia‑backed RT and mentions a Russian visa for his deputy, suggesting possible Russian influence. While these connections are known in public discourse, the specific claim of RT sponsoring his weekly program and facilitating a documentary provides a concrete lead for financial‑flow investigation, but lacks new, verifiable details or direct evidence of wrongdoing. Key insights: Assange received a weekly income from the Ecuador embassy sponsored by RT, a Russian‑state funded broadcaster.; Assange’s deputy, Sarah Harrison, obtained a multi‑entry Russian visa for work on a documentary tied to Russian topics.; Snowden contacted Assange in 2013 seeking assistance to leave Hong Kong, indicating possible coordination.

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kagglehouse-oversightmedium-importancerussiawikileaksjulian-assangeedward-snowdenrt

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105 CHAPTER THIRTEEN Enter Assange “Thanks to Russia (and thanks to WikiLeaks), Snowden remains free.” — Julian Assange Born on July 3, 1971 in Queensland, Australia, Julian Assange had made a brilliant career of trafficking in state, military and corporate secrets. While still a teen-ager, using the alias “Mendax” (the untruthful one), he had hacked into the computers of the Pentagon, the U.S. Navy, NASA, Citibank, Lockheed-Martin and Australia's Overseas Telecommunications Commission. At the age of 25, pleaded guilty to 25 charges of hacking in Australia, but was released on a good behavior bond. In 2006, with the spread of TOR software, he co-founded Wikileaks, a website in which secret documents could anonymously be sent and posted. The site received little public attention until Bradley Manning sent it several hundred thousand lowly-classified U.S. military and State Department documents in April 2010. With these stolen documents, Wikileaks became a media sensation and Assange, the runner-up for Zime’s Man-of-the Year for 2010, became a leading figure, along with Appelbaum, in the global hacktavist underground. In November 2010, however, he also ran into a legal problem. A judge in Stockholm, Sweden ordered his detention on suspicion of rape, sexual molestation and unlawful coercion. He denied the charges but he was arrested in London on a European arrest warrant for him. In December, he was released on a $312,700 bail deposit (supplied by his supporters) and confined to Ellingham Hall in Norfolk, England. While awaiting the outcome of the extradition proceedings, he lived there with Sarah Harrison, his 28- year deputy at Wikileaks. A graduate of the elite Sevenoaks School in Kent, she also served as Assange’s liaison with the outside world. Although she officially was given the title “investigative editor” of Wikileaks, she worked so closely with Assange during this period that the British press carried stories saying she was his paramour. During this period, Harrison also worked on a Wiki leak’s documentary entitled “Mediastan/” The film concerned Wikileaks’ exposure of US secret operations in Russia and other parts of the former Soviet Union. It was also a project which took her to Russia and provided her with a multi-entry Russian visa. In June 2012, after the extradition order was upheld, he jumped bail and fled to the Ecuador embassy in London. For the next year, his only visible means of income was a weekly program from the embassy. It was sponsored by RT Television, a Moscow-based English-language news channel funded by the Russian government, which would also finance and release “Mediastan.” Snowden telephoned Assange at his refuge at the Ecuador embassy on June 10, 2013. According to Assange, Snowden needed his help for his exit plan. He wanted Assange to use Wikileaks’ “resources” to get him out of Hong Kong. Assange considered it a surprising request since Snowden had not given any of the stolen documents to Wikileaks. In their discussion,

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