Chelsea Manning Chelsea Elizabeth ManningHistory is on Edward Snowden's side: Now it's time to give him a full pardon Hillicon Valley: Justice Department announces superseding indictment against WikiLeaks' Assange | Facebook ad boycott gains momentum | FBI sees spike in coronavirus-related cyber threats | Boston city government bans facial recognition technology Justice Department announces superseding indictment against Wikileaks' Assange MORE said in new court filings on Monday that she will refuse to cooperate with a grand jury investigation on WikiLeaks after an appeals court denied her request to overturn a contempt of court order.

In an affidavit filed by her attorneys in the Eastern District of Virginia, Manning condemned grand juries as “outdated tools used by the federal government to harass and disrupt political opponents and activists in fishing expeditions.”

“After two months of confinement, and using every legal mechanism available so far, I can - without any hesitation - state that nothing that will convince me to testify before this or any other grand jury for that matter,” she said.

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She also claimed that she was housed separately from the general population during the initial weeks she was in prison, causing significant harm to her mental health. And Manning said she is unable to receive proper treatment and medical care after undergoing gender confirmation surgery in October.

Manning said the demand to testify before the grand jury “forces me to choose between an unethical decision and suffering intimate and permanent consequences for doing the right thing.”

“I am not willing to compromise for my own physical benefit,” she said.

Attorneys for Manning also filed a motion on Monday requesting that she be released from the federal facility.

"The only lawful purpose for her confinement is to coerce her to give testimony," the filing reads. "Because her confinement is not serving and will never serve any coercive purpose, it has become punitive, and the Court must terminate the order of confinement."

Manning has been held in federal prison since March, when a federal judge ordered her in contempt of court for refusing to testify in the WikiLeaks case.

Manning was convicted in 2013 of leaking classified materials to WikiLeaks and served seven years of a 35-year sentence before former President Obama commuted her sentence in 2017.

A recently unsealed criminal charge against WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange Julian Paul AssangePsychiatrist says Assange told him he was hearing imaginary voices, music Assange extradition hearing delayed over coronavirus concerns The Intercept's Glenn Greenwald discusses U.S. case against Assange MORE alleges that he sought to help Manning crack the password to a computer on a Defense Department network containing classified materials. It’s unclear from court filings whether the password was successfully compromised.

Assange, who was evicted from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London last month and arrested by U.K. authorities at the request of the U.S., is vowing to fight extradition to the U.S.