Army Pfc. Bradley Manning is escorted out of a courthouse in Fort Meade, Md.(Photo: Patrick Semansky, AP)
FORT MEADE, Md. -- An Army private suspected of sending reams of
classified documents to the secret-sharing WikiLeaks website was
illegally punished at a Marine Corps brig and should get 112 days cut
from any prison sentence he receives if convicted, a military judge
ruled Tuesday.
Army Col. Denise Lind ruled during a pretrial
hearing that authorities went too far in their strict confinement of
Pfc. Bradley Manning for nine months in a Marine Corps brig in Quantico,
Va., in 2010 and 2011. Manning was confined to a windowless cell 23
hours a day, sometimes with no clothing. Brig officials said it was to
keep him from hurting himself or others.
Lind said Manning's
confinement was "more rigorous than necessary." She added that the
conditions "became excessive in relation to legitimate government
interests."
Manning faces 22 charges, including aiding the enemy,
which carries a maximum sentence of life behind bars. His trial begins
March 6.
The 25-year-old intelligence analyst had sought to have
the charges thrown out, arguing the conditions were egregious. Military
prosecutors had recommended a seven-day sentence reduction, conceding
Manning was improperly kept for that length of time on highly
restrictive suicide watch, contrary to a psychiatrist's recommendation.
Lind
rejected a defense contention that brig commanders were influenced by
higher-ranking Marine Corps officials at Quantico or the Pentagon.
Manning
showed no reaction as Lind read her decision. He fidgeted when the
judge took the bench to announce her ruling, sometimes tapping his chin
or mouth with a pen and frequently glancing at his attorney's notepad,
but those movements tapered off during the hour and 45 minutes it took
the judge to read the lengthy opinion.
Mike McKee, one of about a
dozen Manning supporters in the courtroom, said he was disappointed. He
called the ruling "very conservative," although he said he didn't expect
the charges to be thrown out.
"I don't find it a victory," McKee said. "Credit like that becomes much less valuable if the sentence turns out to be 80 years."
Jeff
Paterson of the Bradley Manning Support Network, which is funding
Manning's defense, said the sentencing credit "doesn't come close to
compensating Bradley" for his harsh treatment.
"The ruling is not
strong enough to give the military pause before mistreating the next
American soldier awaiting trial," Paterson wrote in an email.
Lind ruled on the first day of a scheduled four-day hearing at Fort Meade, near Baltimore.
The
hearing is partly to determine whether Manning's motivation matters.
Prosecutors want the judge to bar the defense from producing evidence at
trial regarding his motive for allegedly leaking hundreds of thousands
of secret war logs and diplomatic cables. They say motive is irrelevant
to whether he leaked intelligence, knowing it would be seen by al-Qaida
Manning
allegedly told an online confidant-turned-informant that he leaked the
material because "I want people to see the truth" and "information
should be free."
Defense attorney David Coombs said Tuesday that
barring such evidence would cripple the defense's ability to argue that
Manning leaked only information that he believed couldn't hurt the
United States or help a foreign nation.
Manning has offered to
take responsibility for the leaks in a pending plea offer but he still
could face trial on charges such as aiding the enemy.
The
Crescent, Okla., native is accused of leaking classified Iraq and
Afghanistan war logs and more than 250,000 diplomatic cables while
working as an intelligence analyst in Baghdad in 2009 and 2010. He is
also charged with leaking 2007 video of a U.S. helicopter crew gunning
down 11 men, including a Reuters news photographer and his driver. The
Pentagon concluded the troops acted appropriately, having mistaken the
camera equipment for weapons.
Manning supporters consider him a
whistleblower whose actions exposed war crimes and helped trigger the
pro-democracy Arab Spring uprisings in late 2010.
Associated Press