Chelsea Manning Found Guilty of Violating Prison Rules
Convicted national security leaker Chelsea Manning was found guilty
Tuesday of violating prison rules and will receive three weeks of
recreational restrictions at the Kansas military prison where she's
serving her 35-year sentence, her attorney said.
The transgender Army private was accused of having a copy of Vanity Fair
with Caitlyn Jenner on the cover and an expired tube of toothpaste,
among other things. Her attorney, Chase Strangio of the American Civil
Liberties Union, said in a news release that Manning was convicted of
all charges after a closed four-hour disciplinary board hearing in which
she had no counsel.
Manning received 21 days of recreational restrictions limiting access to
the gym, library and outdoors. The maximum punishment she could have
faced was indefinite solitary confinement.
The U.S. Army has declined to release any information on the results of
the hearing, citing the Privacy Act of 1976. The military said in a
statement last week that it is committed to "a fair and equitable
process," and called such proceedings "a common practice in correctional
systems to hold prisoners accountable to facility rules."
The prison infractions include possession of prohibited property in the
form of books and magazines while under administrative segregation;
medicine misuse over the toothpaste; disorderly conduct for sweeping
food onto the floor; and disrespect. All relate to alleged misconduct on
July 2 and 9.
"When I spoke to Chelsea earlier today she wanted to convey the message
to supporters that she is so thankful for the thousands of people from
around the world who let the government know that we are watching and
scrutinizing what happens to her behind prison walls," Strangio said.
Strangio credited public support for keeping Manning out of solitary
confinement. Petitions signed by 100,000 people were delivered Tuesday
to the U.S. Army by digital rights group Fight for the Future and
others.
In addition to the recreational restrictions, the convictions that are
now on her record could be cited in future hearings concerning parole or
clemency, which could delay her transition to a less restrictive
custody status, Strangio said.
The intelligence analyst, formerly known as Bradley Manning, was convicted in 2013 of espionage and other offenses for sending more than 700,000 classified documents to WikiLeaks
while working in Iraq. She is serving a 35-year sentence at Fort
Leavenworth for leaking reams of war logs, diplomatic cables and
battlefield video to the anti-secrecy website in 2010.
Comments
Post a Comment