Up First from NPR - Julian Assange Plea Deal, Jack Smith Case, Upper Midwest Flooding
Episode Date: June 25, 2024WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange strikes a plea deal. A Florida court weighs whether special counsel Jack Smith can prosecute former President Donald Trump. And the Upper Midwest grapples with devasta...ting river flooding linked to climate change.Want more comprehensive analysis of the most important news of the day, plus a little fun? Subscribe to the Up First newsletter.Today's episode of Up First was edited by Krishnadev Calamur, Ally Schweitzer, Neela Banerjee, Olivia Hampton and Lisa Thomson. It was produced by Ziad Buchh, Christopher Thomas and Nina Kravinsky.Our technical director is Stacey Abbott, with engineering support from Carleigh Strange.Learn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy
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— Wiggy Leaks founder Julian Assange struck a plea deal with the U.S.
His sentence is time already served.
— He sort of, you know, paid his dues.
— How does this resolve the case of a man who published classified documents?
— I'm E. Martinez, that's Steve Inskeep, and this is Up First from NPR News.
— A court hears more arguments today in former President Donald Trump's classified documents case.
Why is Trump's legal team arguing that special counsel Jack Smith was appointed illegally?
And catastrophic flooding destroyed homes and bridges, broke dams and overwhelmed levees in the upper Midwest.
I can tell you the devastation is severe and it's widespread.
Why is this happening again and again? And what is the link to climate change? Stay with us. We've got the news you need to start your day.
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The United States is ending its pursuit of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
This case has been going on for so long that if you had a baby
during the year that Assange published classified U.S. documents in 2010, that baby would be a
teenager now. Now, for most of that time, the U.S. has been trying to extradite Assange from the U.K.
If a plea deal goes as expected, he'll be sentenced to time already served. His mother
said in a statement that she was grateful that her son's
quote ordeal is finally coming to an end. NPR justice correspondent Carrie Johnson has covered
this case for years and years and years. Hi there, Carrie. Good morning, Steve. Okay, so it's a plea
deal, so I can just ask, what's the deal? Assange has agreed to plead guilty to one charge,
conspiracy to obtain and disclose informationated to the National Defense.
And he's likely to enter that plea in the case in a U.S. federal court in the Northern Mariana Islands later this week.
It's happening there because he did not want to set foot in the continental United States.
Under the terms of the deal, he'd serve about five years in prison.
He's already served that much time in the United Kingdom in the Belmarsh prison where he's been waiting out extradition proceedings.
Okay, this I'm remembering was a case that outraged a lot of Americans, particularly Americans in the government, Americans who were named in many of the documents that he published.
What kind of data are we talking about here? The indictment from Virginia accused Julian Assange of working with military private Chelsea Manning to get records related to the war in Iraq and the war in Afghanistan.
Assange also published hundreds of thousands of sensitive cables from the State Department.
Prosecutors and intelligence analysts said Assange failed to black out the names of American informants, and they said that put American lives and foreign lives at risk.
Okay, and if that's the case, why would the United States finally make a deal?
Well, Australian leaders had really been lobbying the White House for years now.
They pointed out that then-President Obama shortened the prison sentence for Chelsea
Manning, and the Assange case just kept dragging on for years. Julian Assange is a native Australian. He's expected to go back
there after his court proceeding ends. And President Biden actually got a question about
this back in April at a news conference. Biden said at the time he was considering the request
from Australia to send Assange home. Okay, and of course, the United States wants to be very
close allies with Australia, so they had a little bit of leverage here. But what are some of the
reactions? Oh, WikiLeaks put out a statement on social media saying it had published
groundbreaking stories of corruption and human rights abuses, for which Julian Assange paid a
high price. He's soon expected to reunite with his wife and children. It's worth noting that while
he has few fans in the Justice Department or the State Department here, human rights groups and
media groups have been vocal supporters of his. They've been arguing these charges against Assange could
have broad implications, and it could allow a future Justice Department to charge journalists
with crimes for publishing national security secrets. The Obama DOJ never filed charges
against Julian Assange. It was the Trump Justice Department that finally took that step. I'm just reminded of the debates over this man's case and the question of whether he was a
journalist who was just publishing stuff he was given or whether he should be treated more like
a spy. Yeah, and that debate may end soon with this plea, but it may not be the end of this kind
of bizarre saga that started with a run-in which Swedish authorities led to him holing up in an embassy in London for seven years
and now finally potentially returning home to Australia.
Carrie, thanks for the insights. Really appreciate it.
My pleasure.
That's NPR's Carrie Johnson.
Okay, a Florida judge hears arguments today
in one of the criminal cases against former
President Trump. Yeah, this is the case of classified documents the FBI recovered from
Trump's residence at Mar-a-Lago in Florida. The case is before Aline Cannon, a judge Trump
appointed, and she's been hearing defense motions challenging the case. Trump's lawyers
want to make a case today that the search was illegal. The lawyers have also contended that special counsel Jack Smith, the prosecutor,
was appointed illegally to investigate the ex-president. Josh Gerstein is covering this.
He is senior legal affairs reporter for Politico. Josh, welcome back.
Hey, Steve. Good to be with you.
So I'm just thinking about this. A special counsel was appointed in this case
to be a little more independent and avoid
any appearance that Trump was being prosecuted by a political opponent, arguably to his benefit.
So why would that be illegal?
So under the Constitution, the most senior officials in the government are supposed to
be nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate.
And Trump's lawyers are claiming that special counsel Jack Smith is wielding so
much power and that he's really not under the supervision of the Justice Department,
and therefore that he too should be nominated by the president and confirmed by the Senate,
and that therefore he's acting illegally. Of course, this argument is in some tension with
things Trump himself has been saying publicly, where he claims that Garland is directing Smith to carry
out a political vendetta and that he's acting specifically to advance the agenda of President
Joe Biden. Okay, so you said that the argument was that this should go before the Senate like
a regular nomination for a cabinet post. There should be a confirmation hearing of some kind.
You heard two days of legal arguments
about that. What's the pushback? Well, the pushback is that this is a mechanism that the
Justice Department set up in the wake of the expiration of the independent counsel law that
some of the older listeners might remember was in effect in the 80s and 90s, under which a court
panel basically appointed independent
counsels to do these kinds of politically charged investigations.
Politicians in both parties decided they didn't like that law very much, and they allowed
it to expire.
And the Justice Department then stepped in and created its own kind of internal mechanism
that lets them appoint officials to do investigations.
They're under some supervision by the attorney general,
but they're really not subject to oversight
from all the other offices in the department
that are normally involved in either running
or overseeing a criminal investigation.
Okay, so just so I understand, this case, Jack Smith,
this is being done under Justice Department proceedings.
There's not a detailed law
that governs what is happening here.
Is that what you're telling me? Right, It's being done under 25-year-old regulations that were put in place
at the end of the Clinton administration that allow attorneys general to appoint special
counsels when they think it's a case that may present some kind of conflict of interest for
the department. Okay. And we will continue listening today as there are arguments over
the legality of the search of Trump's home at Mar-a-Lago. Josh Gerstein of Politico, thanks very much for the update. I really appreciate it.
Thank you. Nice to be here.
Okay, the upper Midwest is facing catastrophic flooding after days of heavy rain.
Parts of Minnesota, South Dakota, and Iowa are hardest hit.
And for some neighborhoods in the region, this is the second major flood in just five years.
Rob Jansen of Rock Valley, Iowa, was helping his mom after her house was severely damaged by floodwaters.
It's nice to be by the river for recreation, but it's also a risk that you take living by one
when it floods like this. When you lose everything, some people lost their homes totally, so
not easy to see. Rebecca Herscher of NPR's Climate Desk is here with more. Rebecca, good morning.
Good morning. Okay, so if we just look at a map, this is an area with a lot of rivers that feed
into the Mississippi River. What caused them
to rise so much? Honestly, it's just bonkers amounts of rain. Last week and into the weekend,
seven inches of rain fell in just two days in parts of South Dakota. That is the most rain
ever recorded in 130 years there. And that caused these rivers to swell. You know, a disaster like
this can unfold kind of slowly because it takes time for all the stormwater to collect and flow downstream. So over the last few days, as the water has crested,
we've seen the real damage. So homes destroyed, bridges and dams broken, levees overtopped.
And unfortunately, all of this is exactly what scientists expect will happen more and more in
this part of the country as the earth heats up. Okay, so what is the connection between climate
change and this type of flooding? Some people will have questions because there have always
been floods. There have always been floods. Heavy rain, though, is getting more common
in the upper Midwest. So in the last 60 years or so, scientists have noticed that when it rains
really hard, more water is falling than in the past, like 25 to 45 percent more water.
So not a little bit more rain, a lot more rain.
And the other thing that scientists have been warning about for decades is that heavier rain means more frequent major floods.
So floods that used to happen every few decades instead are going to happen every few years.
And we're definitely seeing that on display as well. You know, this part of the country also had a record-breaking flood in 2019.
And again, now just, you know, five years later.
Although this is also a part of the country that has tried to adapt to floods. If you go to rivers
in this area, there's often like parkland, open space near the river. There are levees, there are
flood zones. Is this not enough?
You know, it's not enough. Some of that infrastructure was able to keep up with all
this water, but in many places, the existing levees in particular are just not high enough
to handle record-breaking rain. And I spoke to hydrologist Nicholas Pinter about this. He says
levees are built to protect against the floods of the past, you know, but today's climate is not the climate of the past. The current flooding in the upper Midwest is a reminder that we've put a lot of
eggs in the basket of protection by levees. And it's a brittle protection. So your levee holds
until suddenly it doesn't, and the result is often catastrophic and sudden flooding.
And that's what we're seeing right now. Now, modernizing flood protection in places like the upper Midwest will take a lot of money.
And some of that money is actually starting to be doled out. There are billions of dollars for
this kind of work in the bipartisan infrastructure law that Congress passed just a couple years ago.
Rebecca, thanks for the update. Thanks so much.
That's Rebecca Herscher from NPR's Climate Desk.
All right, before we go, we have some hockey news.
Yeah, that's right.
The Florida Panthers became Stanley Cup champs last night for the first time in their history.
In a nail-biting Game 7 thriller,
Florida won 2-1 over the Edmonton Oilers,
giving them a 4-3 victory in those finals.
Florida coach Paul Maurice has spent 26 years coaching in this league, and he referred to his
dad as he spoke about the victory with Canadian TV network Sportsnet.
Hey dad, your name's going up with your heroes.
Belival, Richard, Hal, Lindsey, Maurice.
The team got a star performance from goaltender Sergei Brobovsky.
He repelled 23 out of 24 Oiler shots,
including one that nearly tied the game in the final stages.
Now, despite his team's loss, Edmonton's Connor McDavid scored the Conn Smythe Trophy
as the most valuable player of the entire Stanley Cup playoffs.
And that's Up First for this Tuesday, June 25th. I'm Steve Inskeep.
And I'm A. Martinez. How about listening to Consider This from NPR.
Now we hear it up first, give you the three big stories of the day.
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They dive into a single news story and then tell you what it means to you in about 15 minutes. So
listen now on the NPR app or wherever you get those podcasts. Today's Up First was edited by
Krishna Dev Kalamar, Ali Schweitzer, Neela Banerjee, Olivia Hampton, and Lisa Thompson.
It was produced by Ziad Butch and Chris Thomas, along with Nina Kravinsky. We get engineering
support from Carly Strange
and our technical director is Zach Coleman. Join us tomorrow.