Bradley Manning, an Army private suspected of leaking hundreds of thousands of cables and military data to WikiLeaks, testified in court that he thought he was “going to die” while in military custody.
Bradley Manning, the former Army private accused of leaking hundreds of thousands of U.S. diplomatic cables and army reports, is expected to testify at his pretrial hearing.
The lawyer for Bradley Manning, the Army private accused of leaking hundreds of thousands of government files to WikiLeaks, is offering to plead guilty on several charges.
Bradley Manning, the Army private on trial for leaking classified information to WikiLeaks, was accused by the U.S. military of aiding a terrorist organization over a security breach.
Media reporting on the impact of hundreds of thousands of secret documents leaked by WikiLeaks is centered mostly on the information’s direct effect on human life.
Army intelligence analyst Bradley Manning was at his wit’s end. He felt he had nobody to turn to, nobody who would listen, and nobody who would accept him. It was in this state that he turned to Julian Assange, founder of information-leaking website WikiLeaks.