RT
July 25, 2013
Col. Denise Lind ruled from Ft. Meade, Maryland Thursday morning that she must reject the defense’s plea to acquit Pfc. Manning on five charges relating to the alleged robbery of government documents.
Manning, 25, has been charged with nearly two dozen counts related to his admitted role in sending sensitive files to the anti-secrecy website WikiLeaks while deployed as an intelligence analyst in Iraq. Last week Col. Lind dismissed a request to acquit Manning on the charge of aiding an enemy, an allegation that could land him in prison for life if found guilty when the sentencing phase commences next week.
Among the 21 counts against Manning are allegations the soldier stole, purloined or knowingly converted information. The government has charged him with five counts of violating 18 USC § 641, one for each of the five tomes of data he admitted to sending to WikiLeaks.
If found guilty of stealing those databases — field reports from the Iraq and Afghan wars, Guantanamo Bay detainee assessment briefs, hundreds of thousands of State Department diplomatic cables and a global email address list for US soldiers — Manning could be sentenced to a total of 50 years in prison.
Defense attorneys for Manning hoped the court would acquit their client on the 641 violations in lieu of accepting pleas to lesser included offenses made by the soldier earlier this year.
Last week, journalist Alexa O’Brien reported from Ft. Meade that Manning faces upwards of 154 years to life if convicted on all counts presented by the government.
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