WikiLeaks founder Assange’s lawyer Barry Pollack to fight Maduro’s US narcotics charges

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High-profile lawyer Barry Pollack (right) speaking to the media outside a US district court in Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands, US, on June 26, 2024.

Mr Barry Pollack (centre), lawyer of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, outside a US district court in the US territory of the Northern Mariana Islands in 2024.

PHOTO: REUTERS

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WASHINGTON – Mr Barry Pollack – the Washington lawyer who represented WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange – will defend

Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro in a US drug case

that could test immunity claims for foreign leaders and the legality of his capture.

Mr Pollack appeared with Mr Maduro on Jan 5 as he pleaded not guilty in Manhattan federal court days after Mr Maduro and his wife were captured in a US military raid.

Defending Mr Assange gave Mr Pollack a taste of cases steeped in global intrigue and with consequences for America’s standing in the world. The case tested whether US law could criminalise the publishing of sensitive information.

Pollack negotiated Assange release deal

Mr Assange faced

US Espionage Act charges for WikiLeaks’ mass release of secret US documents

, including diplomatic cables and accounts of military actions in Iraq and Afghanistan.

After months of negotiations, he pleaded guilty to a single count of conspiring to obtain and disclose classified defence information. 

The unusual 2024 deal Mr Pollack struck let Mr Assange walk out of a British prison, enter his plea in the US territory of the Northern Mariana Islands before returning to his native Australia.

Pollack says he will challenge Maduro’s alleged ‘military abduction’

Mr Maduro

pleaded not guilty on Jan 5 to a four-count indictment

accusing him of leading a conspiracy to funnel cocaine into the United States, including by working with armed guerrilla groups, drug cartels and international gangs.

At Mr Maduro’s arraignment in Manhattan federal court on Jan 5, Mr Pollack said he anticipated extensive legal wrangling over what he termed Mr Maduro’s alleged “military abduction”, signalling the defence will argue Jan 3’s operation was unlawful.  

A sketch showing Venezuelan leader Nicolas Maduro and his wife Cilia Flores attending their arraignment with defence lawyers Barry Pollack and Mark Donnelly at a US courthouse in New York City.

PHOTO: REUTERS

Mr Pollack may also claim that Mr Maduro is immune from criminal charges as the head of a foreign government. Mr Pollack did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

“The United States has an extraordinary view of what its worldwide jurisdiction is,” Mr Pollack told the legal site Lawdragon in an interview last year about the Assange case.

Both arguments face legal hurdles. 

The US has not recognised Mr Maduro as Venezuela’s leader since 2019, after Mr Maduro claimed victory in an election the US and other countries deemed fraudulent. US courts have generally declined to dismiss prosecutions based on claims a defendant was brought to the US unlawfully.

Mr Pollack, a partner at the Harris St Laurent & Wechsler law firm, also previously represented a former Central Intelligence Agency officer who was convicted of sharing classified information with a reporter. 

He secured an acquittal for a former Enron executive who faced charges tied to the energy company’s collapse in 2001. REUTERS

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