Records Destroyed of Starmer
Trips to DC During Assange Case
By Matt Kennard
Among his
trips, Starmer, then head of Crown
Prosecution Service, led five-person British
delegation that met with Eric Holder for 45
minutes in Washington in November 2011
Delegation
included the U.K. liaison prosecutor to the
U.S., who dealt with extradition
Meeting was
also attended by head of U.S. Department of
Justice’s national security division
CPS refuses
to clarify to Declassified UK if
destruction of the Washington documents is
routine procedure
The
Crown Prosecution Service (CPS), England and
Wales’ public prosecutor, has deleted all
records of its former head Keir Starmer’s trips
to the U.S., it can be revealed.
Starmer served as
director of public prosecutions (DPP) from
2008-13, a period when the body was overseeing
Julian Assange’s proposed extradition to Sweden
to face questioning over sexual assault
allegations.
Starmer, who became
an MP in 2015, is now leader of the Labour
Party. Assange, meanwhile, faces imminent
extradition to the U.S. to face up to 175 years
in prison under charges mostly related to the
U.S. Espionage Act.
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While DPP, Starmer
made trips to Washington in 2009, 2011, 2012 and
2013 at a cost to the British taxpayer of £21,603.
It was his most frequent foreign destination
while in post. Max Hill, the current DPP, has
made just one
trip to
Washington during his five-year tenure.
During Starmer’s
time in post, the CPS was marred by
irregularities surrounding the case of the
WikiLeaks founder.
The organisation
has admitted to
destroying key emails related to the Assange
case, mostly covering the period when Starmer
was in charge, while the CPS lawyer overseeing
the case advised the Swedes in 2010 or 2011 not
to visit London to interview Assange.
An interview at
that time could have prevented the long-running
embassy standoff.
Assange and
WikiLeaks began publishing classified U.S.
diplomatic cables — in alliance with some of the
world’s largest newspapers — in November
2010. In
the same month, Sweden issued an
international arrest warrant for Assange over
allegations of sexual misconduct, leading to a
protracted legal battle, in which the CPS was
heavily involved.
Italian journalist
Stefania Maurizi has been waging a years-long
legal fight to access
documents related
to the CPS and Assange case. However, the role
of its then head, Starmer, in the episode has
always remained unclear.
Starmer in
Washington
Using the Freedom
of Information Act, Declassified requested
the itinerary for each of Starmer’s four trips
to Washington with details of his official
meetings, including any briefing notes.
“The Crown
Prosecution Service (CPS) does not hold any
information falling within the scope of your
request,” the public body told Declassified.
“Information held has been destroyed in line
with retention schedules.”
When asked by Declassified what
these retention schedules are, the CPS pointed
to its retention and disposal schedule policy.
But that document contains no references to
time-limits on the preservation of CPS
documents.
Asked for
clarification — and whether the destruction of
Starmer’s Washington documents was routine — the
CPS did not respond.
But while there is
no longer any official record of what Starmer
did on these four trips on the British side,
some information has come to light on the U.S.
side.
U.S. records show
that on Nov. 9, 2011, then U.S. Attorney General
Eric Holder met with Starmer at his office at
the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) for 45
minutes.
Starmer’s CPS was
then handling Assange’s proposed extradition to
Sweden. In December 2010, Holder had been
asked about
WikiLeaks’ cable releases. “We are
doing everything that we can,” he said.
Asked if he might
mount a prosecution under the Espionage Act,
Holder added: “That is certainly something that
might play a role, but there are other statutes,
other tools at our disposal.”
He continued that
he had given the go-ahead for a number of
unspecified actions as part of a criminal
investigation into WikiLeaks. “I
personally authorised a number of things last
week and that’s an indication of the seriousness
with which we take this matter and the highest
level of involvement at the Department of
Justice,” Holder said.
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder’s diary
for 9 November 2011. (US Department of
Justice)
Meeting at
DOJ
The personnel
involved in the Starmer-Holder meeting at the
DOJ indicates it had a national security focus.
It is possible that some of the unspecified
actions against WikiLeaks and Assange
referenced by Holder the previous year were
discussed.
Starmer was part of
a five-person British delegation. This included
Gary Balch, then U.K. liaison prosecutor to the
U.S., who dealt with extradition.
Also present was
Patrick Stevens, then head of the international
division at the CPS, in which he developed and
led CPS activities worldwide “in support of U.S.
national security.” Stevens states that, at the
time, he was “at the heart of the U.S.
government’s national security and international
justice strategy.”
Alongside them sat
Susan Hemming, then head of counter-terrorism at
the CPS, who was in charge of issues related to
— among other things — “official secrets”.
On the U.S. side,
the point of contact was listed as Amy Jeffress,
then the DOJ’s attaché at
the U.S. embassy in London, a role which
involved coordinating with
the CPS. Before that role, she had been national
security counselor to Attorney General Holder
which involved “interfacing
regularly” with
the U.S. intelligence community.
Jeffress moved from
the DOJ in Washington to the U.S. embassy in
London in September
2010,
two months after WikiLeaks
began publishing the
Afghan War Diary. She would stay in London until
2014.
When Assange was
seized at the Ecuadorian embassy in London in
April 2019, Jeffress toldTheWashington
Post: “It will be some years before a final
decision is reached — at least a year and
probably longer.” She added: “These cases can
become very political in the U.S.”
National
Security
Another U.S.
official present at Starmer’s DOJ meeting was
Denise Cheung who would go on to be deputy
chief of
its National Security Section. Also present was
Bruce Schwartz, then the DOJ’s counselor for
international affairs, who would
go on to win
the department’s award for excellence in
furthering the interests of U.S. national
security.
Lisa Monaco,
another DOJ official at the meeting, had
recently been appointed
assistant attorney general for national
security, leading the DOJ division overseeing
its intelligence functions.
Monaco, who is now
deputy U.S. attorney general, was in London in
February this
year to
“reaffirm and build upon the strong partnership
between the United States and Great Britain in
countering threats to our national security.”
She met with
Matthew Rycroft, permanent secretary at the Home
Office, “to continue the strong working
relationship between the Home Office and the
Justice Department.”
Declassified
has previously
shown that
the U.K. Home Office deployed eight staff on the
secret operation to seize Assange from his
asylum at the Ecuadorian embassy in London. This
was a highly irregular move as Ecuador is a
friendly country and asylum is a right enshrined
in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
The CPS’s lack of
disclosure of documents related to Assange may
raise suspicions of a cover-up. While Starmer
was still in charge, in April 2013, the CPS rejected
Assange’s request for the personal data it had
on him “because of the live matters still
pending.”
Even GCHQ, the
U.K.’s largest spy agency, had granted Assange’s
request for the personal information it held on
him,which revealed one
of its intelligence officers calling the Swedish
case a “fit-up.”
Starmer did not
respond to a request for comment.
Matt Kennard is chief investigator at
Declassified UK.
He was a fellow and then director at the Centre
for Investigative Journalism in London. Follow
him on twitter @kennardmatt
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