Assange Visitors
Sued CIA Under 4th AM Dismissed
Now Seek UC Global Default
By Matthew
Russell Lee, Patreon Maxwell
Book
SDNY COURTHOUSE,
March 21 – When
jury selection
was completed
for the
retrial of
accused CIA
Vault 7 leaker
Joshua
Schulte, U.S.
District Court
for the
Southern
District of
New York Judge
Jesse M.
Furman told
the jurors, Do
not read or
say anything
about the
case. Inner
City Press was
there, and
live tweeted here.
[July 20 denial
of access here;
Brutal
Kangaroo]
On August 15,
2022 after conviction Schulte,
a group of lawyers and
journalist who visited Julian
Assange in the Ecuador Embassy
in London sued Mike Pompeo for
surveillance in violation of
the US Fourth Amendment. They
held a press
conference, and Inner
City Press asked if they will
seek emergency relief. Not for
now (video here;
Complaint here).
Jump cut to
February 18, 2025, when the
plaintiffs' last claim was
dismissed with the state
secrets doctrine cited.
On March 21, 2025
the plaintiffs wrote in asking
that default judgement be
entered against UC Global and
Morales.
On October 12,
plaintiffs' counsel asked to
adjourn and postpone the
October 17 conference in the
case: "Plaintiffs had
difficulty locating the
accurate addresses for the two
Spanish defendants, David
Morales (“Morales”), a Spanish
citizen, and Undercover Global
S.L. (“UC Global”), a Spanish
corporation."
On January 13,
2023, the US Attorney's Office
wrote to Judge Koetlt
requesting a pre-motion
hearing for them to dismiss
the complaint against Pompeo
and the CIA. DOJ argues
that there is no "Bivens"
remedy available, and states
that "matters intimately
related to foreign policy and
national security are rarely
proper subjects for judicial
intervention."
On January 18,
the plaintiffs responded that
the CIA and Pompeo have
defaulted, and waited until
the last day to filed a letter
for a pre-motion conference.
They note they are not suing
the CIA for money, only an
injunction against sharing
information. They say the
Court will conclude that the
Defaulted Defendants motion to
dismiss should be denied.
On Saturday,
January 14, Judge Koeltl
ordered that "the parties are
directed to appear on January
20, 2023 at 2:00 p.m. (Signed
by Judge John G. Koeltl on
1/13/2023) (jca)
On January 20,
Inner City Press covered and
live tweeted it, thread here.
On February 16,
US DOJ requested and obtained
another 30 day extension,
saying the Fourth Amendment
claim requires it. The
plaintiffs did not consent,
but the extension was granted.
Letter on Patreon here.
On March 16,
Judge Koeltl granted a joint
request under which the CIA
and Pompeo expanded their word
limit to 14,000 - and the
plaintiff's delayed their
opposition to May 8, reply May
30.
But on May 4,
plaintiffs' counsel wrote in
asking for an additional money
due to being on trial and
traveling. On May 5 Judge
Koeltl granted the extra
month.
On March 20, the
US filed its 42 page motion to
dismiss, arguing among other
things that Plaintiffs Had No
Reasonable Expectation in
their alleged conversations
with Assange, and that the
"incident" capture of US
Citizen info during
extraterritorial surveillance
of foreign targets does not
violation the 4th Amendment."
More on Substack
here.
On June 6, the
plaintiffs filed a memo of law
against the motion to dismiss,
among other things quoting
from Pompeo's memoir "Never
Gave an Inch" that "I was
sitting with Susan and Nick...
reading an unclassified
summary of the US government's
rules and guidelines on
extrajudicial killings," -
Assange was being
contemplated? Full memo on
Patreon here.
On November 16,
2023 Inner City Press live
tweeted the oral argument -
the motion to dismiss seemed
to stall, with letter due in a
week. Thread:
Assistant US
Attorney Barnea, "for the
Federal defendants," goes to
the podium: At the outset -
Judge Koeltl: The
claims against Pompeo is sole
for damages, under Givens, and
against the government if for
injunction relief?
AUSA Barnea: Yes,
your Honor.
AUSA Barnea: On
standing, the plaintiffs
allege no ongoing harm.
Nothing has happened in seven
or eight years. They do not
allege any imminent plans. The
information could be a file
cabinet.
Judge Koeltl:
They do allege an ongoing
concern, that the information
seized could be disseminated.
They want the return of the
information now. AUSA
Barnea: They are just
hypothesizing.
Judge Koeltl:
They are saying, your
continuing detention of my
information is harmful. Do you
have any case law? AUSA: The
Phillips case from the 9th
Circuit, albeit different...
The Court said for seek
expungement, plaintiff had to
assert some imminent harm
AUSA: This
was a one-time event. The
cases they cite are about
ongoing harm, like siphoning
up metadata and querying it.
That was ongoing, in ACLU v.
Clapper. Here, they can't ask
for injunctive relief.
AUSA: Plaintiffs
allege with the Spanish
defendants were approached by
the CIA. But even if true, it
doesn't prove that the CIA
controlled the Spanish
defendants. Seeking
information from a foreign
police force does not show
control
Judge: But
contemporaneous monitoring was
from in the US, no? AUSA: I
imagine they are alleging
that. But the test is not
involvement, but control by
the US government. Were those
doing the searches controlled
by the US government? Money
and training is not enough
Judge: What about
direction, if not control?
AUSA: The Second Circuit uses
the combined phrase, direction
and control. So we can only
hypothesize. Maybe a
contractor... Even if the 4th
Amendment applied, they did
not have a reasonable
expectation of privacy
AUSA: Government
buildings commonly have
security cameras. There is no
expectation of privacy, like
in a police station, except if
privacy is promised, like in
attorney meeting rooms. No one
told plaintiffs that. The
question is not if the CIA was
listening
AUSA:
Turning over their passports
and electronics waived any
expectation of privacy. Even
if they did, surveillance
would have been reasonable.
The 4th Amendment does not
apply to a search of a foreign
citizen outside of the US. No
warrant is needed
AUSA:
Assange was being investigated
for various criminal acts. So
surveillance was reasonable.
Judge Koeltl: What about the
content of their electronic
devices? AUSA: No warrants are
required outside of the US.
Judge Koeltl: What case?
AUSA: Bombings in
E Africa Judge: Your papers
imply a warrant is required
for the contents of the
phones-- AUSA: Let me clarify.
They just allege conclusorily
it was illegal. We put in a
footnote about that. Judge: I
frankly don't understand what
you just said. [Laughter in
the courtroom]
Judge: Don't you
say the plaintiffs haven't
even alleged that no warrant
was obtained? I can re-read
them, they were read with care
initially... AUSA Barnea: No
doubt, your Honor. Judge: The
government should know if a
warrant was obtained. Now
you're saying, No
AUSA: No
warrant requested under the
Constitution outside the US.
There are statutory -- Judge
Koeltl: You reply on East Asia
bombings - AUSA: East Africa
bombings, In Re... Maybe it's
in the reply brief... Page 8,
we cited it. 2d Circuit 2008.
Judge: So
all the plaintiffs have to do
to make this claim survive is
to replead that the warrant
was required & it wasn't
reasonable? AUSA: If they had
standing. We'd have to
study how they repleaded. If
they made that type of
allegation it could solve the
issue
AUSA: All they
allege is that someone took
their phone and it was
illegal. Now in a footnote
they say they have more.
Judge: It would seem to me
unnecessarily wasteful to tell
the plaintiff, motion to
dismiss ruled on..
AUSA: I apologize
Judge Koeltl:
Never apologize
AUSA: I was just
getting to the Bivens point.
Judge Koeltl: I understand it
has never been applied in the
context of national security
and abroad. I envision that
Congress would not be amenable
to providing this remedy
overseas AUSA: There are
alternate remedies
Judge: What
about qualified immunity?
AUSA: I'm happy to summarize
it for the court. Judge: I'm
familiar with it. AUSA: All
they have are conclusory
statements by Mr. Pompeo, it's
not sufficient to implicate
him personally
Plaintiffs'
lawyer Levinson: There is no
doubt that the plaintiffs have
standing, under ACLU v.
Clapper... They would not have
engaged in conversations there
if they thought the CIA was
listening
Judge: Listening
to the government today, if
you made a few more allegation
about the seizure of the
electronic devices, their
objection would fall out.
There should be a simply way
to add this to the complaint
and we can move on. I can
accept a letter amending
Plaintiff's
lawyer Levenson: That's what
we proposed in Footnote 10 - a
letter amendment with
additional allegations. Judge:
When? Levenson: In a week. Oh,
Thanksgiving. Judge: Two
weeks.Plaintiffs' lawyer
Levenson: Mr. Pompeo wanted to
crush Mr. Assange. The CIA
gave software to UC Global to
surveil Mr. Assange... They
filmed, and video of Pamela
Anderson with Mr. Assange was
on David Morales' laptop.
These are private actors on
the payroll
Plaintiffs'
lawyer Levenson: It came out
that the CIA learned how Mr.
Assange could get diplomatic
status - and acted in hours.
On the need for a warrant, see
Riley v. California Judge:
What about the passports?
Levenson: That was to show the
CIA knew they were US
Plaintiffs'
lawyer Levenson: We are not
alleging a 4th Amendment
violation for photographing
the outside of a passport. I
had to show my passport to get
into the building today. But
Riley is about the content of
the phone Judge: And
surveillance of the meetings?
Plaintiffs'
lawyer Levenson: The
government knew these were
American citizens, and they
were being surveilled without
a warrant. Judge: Any case on
this, privacy in a foreign
embassy? Levenson: There is no
case like this. There are
prison cases cited by the US
Plaintiffs'
lawyer Levenson: These were
not prisoners. These were
lawyers going to meet a
client. Judge: But you can
expect surveillance in an
embassy, just like in this
courthouse. Levenson: These
were private areas,
journalists were there to see
a source
Plaintiffs'
lawyer Levenson: The
government is relying on
terrorism cases. That's not
what this is... We allege that
took photos, inside the phone,
"of something called the IEMI
card," that gives them access
to information.
Judge: Bivens?
Levenson: This is worse
Plaintiffs' lawyer Levenson: A
phone is more private than a
home: it could have
compromising photos. Riley v
California in 2014 made it
clear that phones are off
limits. Judge: The
Supreme Court has only found
Bivens violations 3 times
Levenson: Phones are worse
Plaintiffs'
lawyer Levenson: There are no
national security implications
to these meeting. These are
not people crashing the
border. They are not on a
watchlist or no-fly list.
Judge: No one has suggested
that they are [Again, laughter
in the courtroom]
Judge: The
danger the US is asserting is
Mr. Assange. Plaintiffs'
lawyer Levenson: He is not the
plaintiff here. These visitors
were surveilled. Judge:
Anything further? AUSA Barnea:
We have no cases on this on
Westlaw. What about police
stations?
AUSA Barnea: A
court concluded even police
don't have an expectation of
privacy in the precinct. Also
the Port Authority, a nurses
office - there was a secret
camera but that was found to
be OK. There are surely
security cameras in this
courthouse
AUSA
Barnea: Last point.
These IMEI numbers, they are
simply written on the phone,
they are not the content
Judge: I'll take
the motion under advisement. I
look forward to the letter.
On December 19,
Judge Koeltl issued an order
granting the Government's
request to dismiss Pompeo (on
a Bivens claim) and on
communications with Assange
and photographing of passports
and devices - but DENYING the
motion to dismiss as to the
contents of the phones: "the
Government’s motion to dismiss
the plaintiffs’ claim against
the CIA with regard to the
seizure of the contents of the
plaintiffs’ electronic devices
is denied." Full order on
Patreon here.
On April 11, four
days before its motion's due
date, the US Attorney's Office
wrote it asking to submit a
classified "ex parte"
submission, from Director
William Burns and a memo of
law. Meanwhile, Inner City
Press recently won an order in
the Joshua Schulte case
unsealing CIPA transcripts.
On May 24, 2024,
the plaintiff responded that
the CIA's motion to dismiss is
wrong on the applicable
standard: it is not whether it
involved classified
information but rather if the
information poses a threat to
national security. Plaintiffs
note that the facts in the
case are not a "secret" as
they have already been the
subject of testimony in court
proceeding including in Spain
and the UK, where Assange
recently won the right to a
full appeal of extradition to
the US.
Docketed on
February 18, 2025, Judge
Koeltl dismissed the
plaintiffs' last claim in the
case, citing the "state
secrets privilege."
Inner City
Press will stay on the
case(s).
Back on October
13, Judge Koeltl pushed the
initial pre-trial conference
back to February 21, 2023:
"ORDER granting [13] Letter
Motion to Adjourn Conference.
Adjourned to Tuesday, February
21, 2023, at 2:30 PM. SO
ORDERED."
On November 29
Morales' and UC Global's
lawyer filed a denial full of
misspellings, such as pointing
to Wikipedia to state that
"purpouse [sp] far from acting
as journalistic information
whose sole purpose is dissent
and media manipulation in
order to influence public
opinion with the clear
intention of destabilizing the
interests of Western
countries," etc.
On December 8,
Judge Koeltl ruled starting
" ORDER: The plaintiffs
in this action have served all
four of the defendants. See
ECF Nos. 15-19. For two of
those defendants, the Central
Intelligence Agency ("CIA")
and Michael R. Pompeo, the
deadlines to answer were
November 9, 2022, and November
18, 2022, respectively. To
date, neither of those
defendants has answered or
otherwise responded to the
complaint. The time for these
two defendants to answer is
extended-" full Order on
Patreon here.
And this: "NOTICE
OF APPEARANCE by Jean-David
Barnea on behalf of Central
Intelligence Agency, Michael
R. Pompeo..(Barnea,
Jean-David)."
On February 21,
Judge Koeltl ordered: "on
December 8, 2022, the Court
directed those defendants to
obtain local counsel and to
ensure that such local counsel
filed a notice of appearance
and, if necessary, an
application for admission pro
hac vice on or before January
30, 2023. See ECF No. 21. The
Court also directed those
defendants to submit a letter,
with local counsel's
assistance, indicating whether
the November 29, 2022
submission was intended as an
answer to the complaint or a
motion to dismiss. Id. That
letter was due no later than
February 10, 2023. To date,
there has not been any
appearance by local counsel
for Mr. Guillen or for
Undercover Global S.L., and
the requested letter was never
filed. The Court notes, as it
did in its prior Order, that
Mr. Guillen may proceed prose,
but that Undercover Global
S.L., as a corporate
defendant, must appear by
counsel. The time for Mr.
Guillen and Undercover Global
S.L. to retain local counsel
is extended to March 21, 2023.
Local counsel should file a
notice of appearance and, if
needed, an application for
admission pro hac vice by that
date. By April 7, 2023, local
counsel for Mr. Guillen and
for Undercover Global S.L. (or
for only Undercover Global
S.L., in the event Mr. Guillen
chooses to proceed prose)
should file a letter
indicating whether the
November 29, 2022 submission
(ECF No. 20) was intended as
an answer or as a motion to
dismiss. If local counsel
wishes to file a new
responsive pleading or motion,
local counsel may request an
opportunity to do so in that
letter. If Mr. Guillen chooses
to proceed prose, he should
file his own letter meeting
the same requirements by the
same deadline. The plaintiffs
are directed to serve a copy
of this Order and of the
Court's December 8, 2022 Order
(ECF No. 21) on both Mr.
Guillen and Undercover Global
S.L. and to file proof of such
service on the docket by March
3, 2023. SO ORDERED. (Signed
by Judge John G. Koeltl on
2/21/2023)."
Inner City
Press will continue to cover
the case.
Back in August,
Inner City Press immediately
asked the United Nations, from
which it remains banned,
"What are the comments and
actions if any of SG Antonio
Guterres on lawsuit filed Aug
15, 2022 in SDNY alleging that
lawyers and journalists visting
Assange in the Ecuadorian
Embassy in London were spied
on?" No answer.
On August 16, the case was
assigned to SDNY District Judge
John G. Koeltl, of whom Inner
City Press has so far reported
on 223 cases. It will report on
this one. There was an earlier
notice: "info for these parties
has been modified: Margaret
Ratner Kunstler, Deborah Hrbek,
John Goetz, Charles Glass, CIA,
Michael R. Pompeo, David Morales
Guillen, Undercover Global
S.L.," tweeted here.
It is Kunstler, et al. v.
Central Intelligence Agency, et
al., 22-cv-6913 (Koeltl)
***
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