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On February 23, International Protests of Bradley Manning’s 1,000th Day in Jail Wthout Trial

PFC Bradley Manning has been in jail awaiting trial for nearly 1,000 days for exposing war crimes, corruption, and widespread abuse. When he returns to court in Fort Meade, MD, for a pretrial hearing from February 26 to March 1, Judge Denise Lind will rule on the defense’s motion to dismiss charges for lack of a speedy trial.

PFC Bradley Manning has been in jail awaiting trial for nearly 1,000 days for exposing war crimes, corruption, and widespread abuse. When he returns to court in Fort Meade, MD, for a pretrial hearing from February 26 to March 1, Judge Denise Lind will rule on the defense’s motion to dismiss charges for lack of a speedy trial.

As defense lawyer David Coombs said in the motion, “PFC Manning’s statutory and constitutional speedy trial rights have been trampled upon with impunity.” In court, he laid out the ways in which the government has made an “absolute mockery” of Manning’s right to a speedy trial by violating the 5th and 6th Constitutional Amendments, Rule for Court Martial 707, and Uniform Code of Military Justice Article 10. Prosecutors were supposed to arraign Manning within 120 days but took well over 600. They’re also supposed to remain actively diligent throughout the proceedings, but Coombs has showed substantial periods of their inactivity and needless delay. Manning’s due process rights have been clearly violated, and the only legal remedy is to dismiss charges. Judge Lind could dismiss charges with prejudice, if she determines the government intentionally delayed Manning’s trial, which would set the young Army private free. She could also dismiss without prejudice, which would allow the government to simply retry the case and restart the speedy trial clock. If she dismisses the motion altogether, she will condone the government’s unconstitutional delays and the deprivation of Manning’s due process rights. Manning would then proceed to trial, currently scheduled to start June 3, 2013 — over three years after his arrest in May 2010.

We’ll also hear Manning’s updated plea offer, in which he’s expected to offer to plead guilty to several lesser-included offenses, which could carry a maximum punishment of 20 years in prison.

“This allows Bradley to accept responsibility for exposing these documents to public scrutiny, and debate the merits and impact of these releases, while fighting the most serious charges against him at court martial,” noted Jeff Paterson, project director of the Bradley Manning Support Network.

The government can still charge as planned, including using the Espionage Act and UCMJ Article 104, alleging Manning indirectly “aided the enemy” simply because he knew Al Qaeda could access WikiLeaks. By the time that pretrial hearing begins, Manning will have been in jail for over 1,000 days. In response to this historic abuse, supporters around the country and around the world are planning demonstrations, rallies, and marches on February 23. From California, to Florida, to Italy, to Germany, supporters of PFC Manning will make their protests known.

U.S. Events

Tucson, AZ     Feb 23, 11am-5pm

Tempe, AZ     Feb 23, 5:30-6:30pm

Guerneville, CA     Feb 23, 12-1pm

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Cahuenga (L.A.), CA     Feb 23, 9-11am

Los Angeles, CA     Feb 23, 5:30-6:30

Long Beach (L.A.), CA 
Feb 23 at 1pm until Feb 24 at 2pm

Montrose (L.A.), CA     Feb 23, 5:30-7pm

Studio City (L.A.), CA     Feb 22, 6:30-7:30pm

San Francisco, CA     Feb 23, 1-4pm

San Diego, CA     Feb 23, 7-9pm

Denver, CO     Feb 23, 12-3:30pm

Washington, DC     Feb 24, 6:30-9pm

Ft. Lauderdale, FL     Feb 23, 12-1:30pm

Pensacola, FL     Feb 23, 5:30-6:30pm

Tallahassee, FL     Feb 23, 12-1pm

Honolulu, HI     Feb 22, 4-5:30pm

Chicago, IL     Feb 23, 12-1:30pm

Ft. Leavenworth, KS     Feb 23, 1-3pm

Boston, MA     Feb 23, 1-2pm

Augusta, ME     Feb 23, 11:30am-12pm

Portland, ME     Feb 23, 12pm

Detroit, MI     Feb 23, 3-8pm

New Orleans, LA     Feb 23, 2-6pm

Minneapolis, MN     Feb 23, 9:30am-12pm

Wilmington, NC     Feb 23, 12-1:45pm

Albuquerque, NM     Feb 23, 10am-12pm

New York, NY     Feb 23, 2-4pm

Rochester, NY      Feb 23, 10am-12pm

Toledo, OH     Feb 23, 12pm

Corvallis, OR     ongoing

Philadelphia, PA     Feb 23, 2-4pm

Newport, RI     Feb 23, 1-2pm

Austin, TX     Feb 23, 10:30am

Houston, TX     Feb 23, All Day

Bristol, VT     Feb 23, 10am-12pm

Seattle, WA     Feb 23, 12-4pm

International Events

Melbourne, Australia     Feb 22, 2-4pm

Sydney, Australia     Feb 23, 11am-2pm

Vancouver, Canada     Feb 23, 1-5pm

Paris, France     Feb 23, 3-5pm

Berlin, Germany      Feb 23, 12:30-3pm

Kaiserslautern, Germany     Feb 23, All Day

Rome, Italy      Feb 23, 4-5pm

Oslo, Norway      Feb 23, 10am-12pm

Oporto, Portugal     Feb 23, 3-6pm

Seoul, South Korea     Feb 23, 11am

Kampala, Uganda     Feb 23, 10am-12pm

Dublin, Ireland, UK     Feb 23, 1-3pm

London, UK     Feb 23, 2pm

Peterborough, UK     Feb 23, 12-2pm

Yorkshire, UK     Feb 23, 11am

Fairford, UK      Feb 23, 9:30am-12pm

Bangor, Wales, UK     Feb 23, 11am-2pm

Cardiff, Wales, UK     Feb 23, 10:30am-2:30pm

Wales/Ireland/Scotland/England, UK     ongoing

Slovakia