Ben & Jerry’s Co-founder Arrested for Protesting US Government’s Prosecution of WikiLeaks Publisher Julian Assange

Washington, D.C. – Ben Cohen, co-founder of Ben & Jerry’s, and Jodie Evans, co-founder of CODEPINK, have been arrested for blocking the entrance to the Department of Justice. Cohen and Evans arrived in Washington, D.C. to protest the US government’s prosecution of Wikileaks publisher Julian Assange, who has been indicted on 18 charges for the publication of the Afghan War Diary and the Iraq War Logs, which uncovered war crimes, torture, and civilian deaths perpetrated by the US government.

“It’s outrageous. Julian Assange is nonviolent. He is presumed innocent. And yet somehow or other, he has been imprisoned in solitary confinement for four years. That is torture….He revealed the truth, and for that he is suffering, and  we need to do whatever we can to help him, and to help preserve democracy, which is based on freedom of the press,” Ben Cohen said during the demonstration. “It seems to me that, right now, unless things change, and unless we change them, freedom of the press is going up in smoke.”

“Why do we have freedom of press? Because there needs to be someone reporting the truth about the violence of power….When you don’t have freedom of the press and no one’s telling the truth, it weaponizes your capacity to feel, to have compassion and empathy. Because if you don’t have the full story and if your heart is being manipulated with lies, then we’re all lost. How can we have peace in the world if we’re just drowning in lies?” Jodie Evans said.

Cohen and Evans asked to enter the Department of Justice to discuss their attack on the freedom of press. Security guards denied them access. They proceeded to sit peacefully in the entrance until DC Metropolitan Police arrested them.

Members of Congressworld leaders, as well as major publishers, have urged the Department of Justice to drop the charges against Julian Assange due to the threat it poses to the First Amendment and press freedom.

The Obama administration declined to indict Assange because it would risk criminalizing basic journalistic activities that every mainstream media outlet engages in on a regular basis.

This month, UK High Court Judge Jonathan Swift rejected Assange’s most recent appeal, pushing him ‘dangerously close’ to extradition. The Australian government, where Assange is a citizen, is currently working through diplomatic channels to end Assange’s incarceration, while his legal team continues the appeal process.

Julian Assange is currently confined in Belmarsh’s maximum-security prison in London and has been since April 2019. If extradited, he will face up to 175 years in prison.

View photographs of the arrest herehereherehere, and here. An original tweet from Ben is here.

Video footage of the action is available here and the full stream of the event is here. The footage is free to use and courtesy of Robin Bell/Assange Defense.

NOTE for producers:

00:00 – 05:47 Ben’s opening remarks, burning the 1A, approaching the DOJ guard

05:48 – 16:59 Ben Cohen Q&A with press

17:00 – 19:27 Ben Cohen arrest footage

For more information about AssangeDefense.org.

CONTACT: Edward Erikson | Edward.Erikson@gmail.com | 202-420-9947

Melissa Garriga | melissa@codepink.org | 228-990-4168

7 thoughts on “Ben & Jerry’s Co-founder Arrested for Protesting US Government’s Prosecution of WikiLeaks Publisher Julian Assange”

  1. Ben Cohen and Jodie Evans did the right thing by demanding Julian Assange be freed. If the Press can’t tell the truth, there is no freedom of the press. The journalists that should lose their jobs are the ones denying war crimes and reporting the news biased in their favors.
    Assange should be allowed to return to Australia. It’s too bad the Ecuadorian Embassy in London could not sneak him out.

    1. The CIA wanted to sneak him out. And kill him. That was the desire of Mr. Trump. Probably the desire of Mr. Biden. President Obama did the right thing.

      1. I didn’t know Trump wanted to kill Assange. Shame on him. For much of America’s history and so far in the 21st Century, the US only had warmongering criminals in chief.

  2. Assange is a journalist. America has no standing to prosecute under the Espionage Act. The Act was targeted at citizens of the United States,and/or, employees of United States government entities. Assange was neither a citizen of the U.S., nor was he such employee. The case is fabricated so as to set the record straight: there will be no truthful reporting, or there will be carnage.

    1. The Espionage Act was a despicable piece of legislation that was a stain on U.S. history for 90 years and then dusted off for heavier usage. Originally was intended to shut down dissent against entering WWI.

  3. Assange is the Daniel Ellsberg of our generation.

    Even as mainstream media hail Ellsberg as a hero now, we forget that Ellsberg only escaped jail because Nixon’s corruption bungled up the prosecution and gotten off on a technicality. I’m not sure that anyone would’ve pardoned him had he been tried.

    And the government is now doing the exact same thing to Assange as they tried to do with Ellsberg, by silencing the truth.

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