Saturday, November 27, 2010

Friend of Accused #WikiLeaks Source Detained at Border | Threat Level | Wired.com #ti

Friend of Accused WikiLeaks Source Detained at Border

Federal agents briefly detained and questioned an MIT researcher and friend of accused WikiLeaks source Bradley Manning as he re-entered the country from a vacation in Mexico last week.

Bradley Manning (Facebook.com)

David Maurice House, 23, was met by U.S. customs agents as he deplaned at Chicago’s O’Hare Airport last Wednesday, according to a report by Salon.com.  The agents searched House’s bags, then took him to a detention room and questioned him for 90 minutes about his relationship to 23-year-old Manning, the former Army intelligence analyst accused of leaking classified documents to the secret-spilling site WikiLeaks. The agents confiscated a laptop computer, a thumb drive and a digital camera (.pdf) from House and reportedly demanded, but did not receive, his encryption keys.

House helped set up the Bradley Manning Support Network, a grassroots group raising money for Manning’s defense, according to Salon. House had also visited Manning in custody at the Marine Corps’ Quantico brig three times since his arrest.

A record of Manning’s Facebook account shows that House was on Manning’s friends list at the time of Manning’s arrest last May.

Under the “border search exception” of United States criminal law, international travelers can be searched as they enter the U.S. without a warrant. Under the Obama administration, law enforcement agents have aggressively used this power to search travelers’ laptops, sometimes copying the hard drive before returning the computer to its owner. Courts have ruled that such laptop searches can take place even in the absence of any reasonable suspicion of wrongdoing.

A spokeswoman for DHS’s Customs and Border Protection agency declined to comment on Tuesday saying the agency never discusses issues involving individual travelers. Reached by phone Tuesday morning, House also declined comment except to confirm that he’s visited Manning frequently since his arrest.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange alluded to the border incident at a press conference in Geneva last Thursday, just hours after the detainment. He  described House, without mentioning his name, as “a person from MIT, a visitor and supporter of the Free Bradley Manning campaign [who] has no other involvement with our organization … I was not even aware of his name before his involvement with the Bradley Manning campaign.”

A graduate of Boston University, House is a computer scientist who works at MIT’s Center for Digital Business as a research software engineer, according to his resume. At BU he founded the campus hacker space for student tinkerers.

(Image: YouTube)

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