An Italian journalist is challenging the refusal of the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) to confirm or deny whether it shared email correspondence with US prosecutors over the US investigation and potential extradition of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

Stefania Maurizi, an Italian investigative journalist who writes for La Repubblica, has been fighting a four-year battle with the CPS to release correspondence between the UK, Sweden, Ecuador and the US on the investigation into WikiLeaks and its founder.

Assange took refuge in the Ecuadorian Embassy in 2012, after losing an appeal against extradition to Sweden following allegations of sexual assault. UK police forcibly removed him from the embassy in April 2019. He faces an extradition hearing next year on behalf of the US to face charges under the US Espionage Act.

Maurizi’s Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) campaign has secured significant disclosures on the investigation into Assange, including a confirmation from the Metopolitan Police that it shared correspondence on WikiLeak’s journalists in the UK with the US Department of Justice between June 2013 and June 2017.

The journalists learned in 2014 that a US court had ordered Google to disclose their personal emails, contacts, calendar entries and log-in IP address to the US government, as part of an investigation into alleged violations of the US Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, the Espionage Act and other US federal laws.

The current case began in 2015, when Maurizi filed a Freedom of Information (FOI) request for all the correspondence relating to Assange between the CPS and the US State Department and US Department of Justice, the CPS and the Swedish Prosecution Authority, and the CPS and the Ecuadorian Embassy.

The CPS and the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO) refused the request in August 2015. Maurizi appealed to the First-tier Tribunal (FTT), which dismissed her appeal in December 2017.

Lawyers for Maurizi argued in the Upper Tribunal yesterday (1 July 2019) that the FTT made significant errors in law in refusing to order the CPS to confirm the existence of the correspondence under the Freedom of Information Act.

Maurizi told Computer Weekly that the correspondence between the CPS and US prosecutors could shed light on any collaboration between the US and UK after the US began investigations into Assange following WikiLeaks’ publication of secret files, including the Afgan and Iraq war logs, in 2010.

Read more about the case The Metropolitan Police shared information about WikiLeaks journalists with US prosecutors for at least four years as the US Department of Justice conducted secret investigations into the whistleblowing website and its founder, Julian Assange.

The Metropolitan Police Service faces a legal challenge over its refusal to confirm or deny whether it has shared correspondence with US law enforcement agencies about three prominent members of WikiLeaks staff, including two British citizens, whose personal emails were secretly disclosed to US prosecutors.

“The US-UK correspondence is absolutely crucial. If my lawyers and I win the case, we might be able to finally establish whether the US had discussed charges and extradition with the UK authorities from the very beginning,” she said.

The case is expected to have significant implications for journalists and, if Maurizi is successful, will make it easier to establish what information prosecutors hold in extradition cases.

Philip Coppel QC, representing Maurizi, argued that the First-tier Tribunal should have considered the public interest arguments in disclosing information from the CPS at the time of the hearing in 2017, when new facts were available, rather than at the time of the original decision in 2015.

He argued that the FTT was also wrong to assume, contrary to the facts presented in court, that any correspondence from Ecuador must be about extradition, and therefore exempt from disclosure. It was possible that the CPS engaged with correspondence with Ecuador that went beyond its normal remit, according to a skeleton argument prepared by Maurizi’s lawyers.

The court also heard that although it was true that Assange had a personal interest in knowing whether the CPS held information about his extradition, that did not mean there was not a wider public interest in disclosing the information.

“The stakes in this particular case could not be higher. Julian Assange’s potential extradition to the US has profound ramifications for the ability to publish, and to access, information of significant public interest” Naomi Colvin, Blueprint for Free Speech

The tribunal is expected to make a decision this week. Maurizi said that if she wins the appeal, the case to release the correspondence will be reheard by the FTT in a new trial. If she loses, she will consider appealing to the Court of Appeal, and potentially to the Supreme Court and the European Court of Human Rights.

Barrister Estelle Dehon, part of Maurizi’s legal team, said the case had implications for the UK’s Freedom of Information law.

“The case has wide implications about how the ICO and the FOIA tribunal should interpret the public interest in releasing information. If the appeal is successful, it will make the FOIA system easier to use, because it will allow those seeking information to rely on the up-to-date position. This is important where there are a lot of delays in appealing to the ICO and then to the tribunal,” she said.

Naomi Colvin, programme director for the UK at Blueprint for Free Speech, a charity, said Maurizi’s Upper Tribunal case was crucial for determining the strength of freedom of information in the UK.

“The stakes in this particular case could not be higher. Julian Assange’s potential extradition to the US has profound ramifications for the ability to publish, and to access, information of significant public interest. An overwhelming majority of journalistic institutions and non-governmental organisations internationally see the charges laid against Assange as a profound threat to fundamental press freedoms both in the United States and, through the mechanism of extradition, abroad,” she said.