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Assange's attorney Barry Pollack will fight Maduro’s US drug charges

Barry Pollack, the Washington lawyer that'represented WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange' will defend the toppled Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro. The case could test the immunity claims of foreign leaders as well as the legality of his capture.

Pollack appeared alongside Maduro in Manhattan federal court on Monday, where he pleaded no guilt days after Maduro was captured along with his wife in an U.S. Military raid.

Assange's case gave Pollack an insight into cases rife with global intrigue, and the consequences they can have on America's reputation in the world. The case was a test of whether U.S. laws could criminalize publishing sensitive information.

A DEAL FOR ASSANGE RELEASE WAS NEGOTIATED BY POLLACK

Assange was charged with espionage by the U.S. Assange faced U.S.

After months of negotiations he pleaded guilty on a single count for conspiring to obtain classified defense information and to disclose it.

The 2024 deal Pollack made allowed Assange to walk out of a British jail, enter his plea on the U.S. territory Northern Mariana Islands and then?return to his native Australia.

POLLACK SAYS: HE WILL CHALLENGE 'MILITARY ABDUCTIONS' BY MADURO

Maduro, who is accused of being part of a conspiracy that funneled cocaine to the United States by working with drug cartels, international gangs, armed guerrillas, and armed guerilla groups, pleaded guilty to a four count indictment on Monday.

Pollack, who represented Maduro at his arraignment before the Manhattan federal court on January 9, said that he expected a lengthy legal battle over what he called Maduro’s “military abduction,” indicating that the defense would argue Saturday’s?operation is unlawful.

Pollack could also assert that Maduro, as head of a government from a different country, is immune to criminal charges. Pollack didn't immediately reply to a question for comment.

Pollack, in an interview with Lawdragon last year regarding the Assange case, said that the United States had an "extraordinary view" of its global jurisdiction.

Both arguments are subject to legal obstacles.

Since 2019, the U.S. does not recognize Maduro's leadership of Venezuela. This is because Maduro won an election that was deemed fraudulent by the U.S. U.S. Courts have in general refused to dismiss prosecutions on the basis that a defendant had been brought into the U.S. illegally. Pollack, a lawyer at Harris St. Laurent & Wechsler, represented a former Central Intelligence Agency agent who was convicted for sharing classified information with a journalist.

He obtained an acquittal of a former Enron Corp. executive facing charges related to the collapse of the energy company in 2001. (Reporting and editing by Noeleen Walder, Howard Goller, Jack Queen. Additional reporting by Andrew Goudsward)

(source: Reuters)