00:50 - Source: CNN
Video shows Assange after his release from UK prison
CNN  — 

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has landed back home in Australia, a free man for the first time in 12 years, after a US judge signed off on his unexpected plea deal on Wednesday morning.

Cheers erupted from supporters gathered at Canberra Airport in the Australian capital as Assange disembarked the aircraft. He waved to the crowds as he walked across the tarmac.

As he approached the terminal, his wife Stella emerged with a broad smile on her face. Assange pulled her into hug, lifting her off the floor before the pair kissed.

“Julian wanted me to sincerely thank everyone. He wanted to be here. But you have to understand what he’s been through. He needs time, he needs to recuperate and this is a process,” she said at a press conference after her husband’s arrival.

With tears in her eyes, Stella took several brief pauses in an apparent bid to gather her emotions as she spoke to reporters. “I ask you please, to give us space, to give us privacy, to find our place, to let our family be a family before he can speak again at a time of his choosing,” she added.

Earlier Wednesday, Assange walked out of the courtroom in Saipan, on the Northern Mariana Islands, a remote US Pacific territory, raising one hand to a gaggle of the world’s press before departing by car for the airport to journey on to Australia.

Speaking outside the court, Assange’s US lawyer Barry Pollack said he had “suffered tremendously in his fight for free speech and freedom of the press.”

“The prosecution of Julian Assange is unprecedented in the 100 years of the Espionage Act,” Pollack told reporters. “Mr. Assange revealed truthful, newsworthy information … We firmly believe that Mr. Assange never should have been charged under the Espionage Act and engaged in (an) exercise that journalists engage in every day.”

In a stunning turn of events, the 52-year-old Australian was released from a high-security prison in London on Monday afternoon and had already boarded a private jet to leave the United Kingdom before the world even knew of his agreement with the US government.

Edgar Su/Reuters
A private jet carrying WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange arrives in Canberra, Australia on Wednesday.

He appeared in a US courtroom on the Northern Mariana Islands to formalize the agreement, officially pleading guilty to conspiring unlawfully to obtain and disseminate classified information over his alleged role in one of the largest breaches of classified material in US military history.

“I am, in fact, guilty of the charge,” Assange told the court in Saipan.

Assange - who has long held a deep mistrust of the US, even going so far as accusing it of allegedly plotting his assassination - was hesitant about stepping foot in the continental US, and so prosecutors asked for all proceedings to take place in a day in a US federal court based in Saipan, the largest island and capital of the Northern Mariana Islands, which are located around 6,000 kilometers (3,700 miles) west of Hawaii.

Justice Department prosecutors also said the court on the islands made logistical sense as it is closer to Australia, where Assange will ultimately travel to following the conclusion of his legal battle.

Kevin Rudd, Australia’s Ambassador to Washington and former prime minister who helped facilitate negotiations with the US, watched proceedings in the courtroom.

Edgar Su/Reuters
Assange kisses his wife Stella as he arrives in Canberra, Australia on Wednesday.

‘I hope there will be some peace restored’

At the start of the plea deal hearing the judge reminded Assange that he was back in the US and that this court was the “smallest, youngest, and furthest from nation’s capital.” Assange looked relaxed in the courtroom, wearing a black jacket and brown tie, while next to his attorneys.

Asked by the judge, Honorable Ramona Manglona, to describe what he had done to be charged, Assange said: “Working as a journalist, I encouraged my source to provide information that was said to be classified in order to publish that information. I believe that the First Amendment protected that activity… I believe the First Amendment and the Espionage Act are in contradiction with each other, but I accept that it would be difficult to win such a case given all these circumstances.”

In her sentencing, the judge said Assange was entitled to a credit of time served for his incarceration at a British prison.

“It appears that your 62 months imprisonment is fair and reasonable,” Manglona said. “You will be able to walk out of this courtroom a free man. I hope there will be some peace restored.”

The judge told Assange that “timing matters” and she would have been less inclined to accept a plea 10 years ago. She also said there was no personal victim in this case — Assange’s action did not lead to any known physical injury.

For years, the US argued that the self-appointed champion of free speech endangered lives and posed a threat to national security.

ASSANGE: KEY MOMENTS

  • 2006: Julian Assange founds whistleblowing website, WikiLeaks.
  • Apr 2010: WikiLeaks posts video showing a US helicopter killing civilians in Iraq in 2007.
  • Jul 2010: WikiLeaks posts classified documents related to the Afghanistan war.
  • Aug 2010: Sweden launches probe of Assange after claims of sexual assault emerge, which he denies.
  • Jun 2012: Assange enters Ecuadorian embassy in London seeking political asylum.
  • Apr 2019: British police arrest Assange on behalf of the US, requests his extradition after Ecuador withdraws his asylum.
  • Jun 2022: UK home secretary signs his extradition order, which he later appeals.
  • May 2024: Assange wins permission to bring new extradition appeal.
  • Jun 2024: Assange strikes US plea deal allowing him to leave UK prison and return to Australia.

Following his release, the US Department of Justice said in a statement that Assange is barred from returning to the US without permission, “pursuant to the plea agreement.”

Assange and his whistleblower website rose to global prominence in 2010 after a string of leaks from former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning related to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The website posted a video showing a US military helicopter firing on and killing two journalists and several Iraqi civilians in 2007. Several months later, it disclosed more than 90,000 classified Afghan war documents dating back to 2004.

Later in 2010, he was wanted in Sweden to answer questions over allegations of sexual assault that had emerged.

Two years later, Assange sought political asylum within the Ecuadorian embassy in west London. He remained there for almost seven years until the Metropolitan Police entered his safe haven in 2019 acting on an extradition warrant from the US Justice Department.

The deal brokered with the US is the final act of a 14-year legal drama that has spanned continents, though it was not immediately clear why it reached a resolution now.

Australian officials have been pushing diplomatic angles for some time. It was widely thought that Prime Minister Anthony Albanese had raised Assange’s case when he visited the White House last October.

Speaking in parliament on Wednesday, the Australian leader said he was “pleased that (Assange) was on his way home to Australia to reunite with his family.”

“This outcome has been the product of careful, patient and determined work,” Albanese said, adding “this is what standing up for Australians around the world looks like.”

William West/AFP/Getty Images
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange waves after arriving at Canberra Airport in Canberra, Australia, on June 26.
LEON NEAL/AFP/Getty Images
Assange holds a copy of The Guardian newspaper in London on July 26, 2010, a day after WikiLeaks posted more than 90,000 classified documents related to the Afghanistan War.
BERTIL ERICSON/AFP/Getty Images
Assange attends a seminar at the Swedish Trade Union Confederation in Stockholm on August 14, 2010. Six days later, Swedish prosecutors issued a warrant for his arrest based on allegations of sexual assault from two women. Assange has always denied wrongdoing in that case, and years later Swedish prosecutors eventually dropped their investigations.
LEON NEAL/AFP/Getty Images
Assange, in London, displays a page from WikiLeaks on October 23, 2010. The day before, WikiLeaks released approximately 400,000 classified military documents from the Iraq War.
FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images
Assange and his bodyguards are seen after a news conference in Geneva, Switzerland, in November 2010. It was the month WikiLeaks began releasing diplomatic cables from US embassies.
Carl Court/AFP/Getty Images
Assange sits behind the tinted window of a police vehicle in London on December 14, 2010. Assange had turned himself in to London authorities on December 7 and was released on bail and put on house arrest on December 16. In February 2011, a judge ruled in support of Assange's extradition to Sweden. Assange's lawyers filed an appeal.
LEON NEAL/AFP/Getty Images
In October 2011, a month after WikiLeaks released more than 250,000 US diplomatic cables, Assange speaks to demonstrators from the steps of St. Paul's Cathedral in London.
Geoff Caddick/AFP/Getty Images
Assange leaves the High Court in London in December 2011. He was taking his extradition case to the British Supreme Court.
Oli Scarff/Getty Images
Assange leaves the Supreme Court in February 2012. In May of that year, the court denied his appeal against extradition.
CARL COURT/AFP/Getty Images
Assange addresses the media and his supporters from the balcony of the Ecuadorian Embassy in London on August 19, 2012. A few days earlier, Ecuador announced that it had granted asylum to Assange. In his public address, Assange demanded that the United States drop its "witch hunt" against WikiLeaks.
Leon Neal/AFP/Getty Images
Assange speaks from a window of the Ecuadorian Embassy in December 2012.
Philip Toscano/PA Images/Getty Images
Assange addresses the Oxford Union Society from the Ecuadorian Embassy in January 2013.
Frank Augstein/AP
Assange appears with Ecuadorian Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino on the balcony of the embassy in June 2013.
David Paul Morris/Bloomberg/Getty Images
Assange speaks during a panel discussion at the South By Southwest Festival in Austin, Texas, in March 2014.
John Stillwell/AFP/Getty Images
Assange attends a news conference inside the Ecuadorian Embassy in London in August 2014.
FABRICE COFFRINI/AFP/Getty Images
Assange is seen on a video screen in March 2015, during an event on the sideline of a United Nations Human Rights Council session.
Carl Court/Getty Images
Assange, on the balcony of the Ecuadorian Embassy, holds up a United Nations report in February 2016. The United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention said that Assange was being arbitrarily detained by the governments of Sweden and the United Kingdom.
Jack Taylor/Getty Images
Assange speaks to the media in May 2017, after Swedish prosecutors had dropped their investigation of rape allegations against Assange. But Assange acknowledged he was unlikely to walk out of the embassy any time soon. "The UK has said it will arrest me regardless," he said. "The US CIA Director (Mike) Pompeo and the US attorney general have said that I and other WikiLeaks staff have no ... First Amendment rights, that my arrest and the arrest (of) my other staff is a priority. That is not acceptable."
Maria Sol Borja for CNN
Assange was seen for the first time in months during a hearing via teleconference in Quito, Ecuador, in October 2018. The hearing was then postponed due to translation difficulties.
Alastair Grant/AP
A van displays images of Assange and Chelsea Manning, the former Army intelligence analyst who supplied thousands of classified documents to WikiLeaks, outside the Ecuadorian Embassy in London in April 2019. A senior Ecuadorian official at the time said no decision had been made to expel Assange from the embassy. According to WikiLeaks tweets, sources had told the organization that Assange could be kicked out of the embassy within "hours to days."
from Ruptly
A screen grab from video footage shows the dramatic moment when Assange was hauled out of the Ecuadorian Embassy by police in April 2019. Assange was arrested for "failing to surrender to the court" over a warrant issued in 2012. Officers made the initial move to detain Arrange after Ecuador withdrew his asylum and invited authorities into the embassy, citing his bad behavior.
Jack Taylor/Getty Images
Assange gestures from a police vehicle after arriving at the Westminster Magistrates' Court in London in April 2019.
Daniel Leal-Olivas/AFP/Getty Images
Assange is seen through the window of a prison van as he is driven into the Southwark Crown Court in London in May 2019. He was sentenced to 50 weeks in prison for breaching his bail conditions in 2012.
Elizabeth Cook/PA/AP
A sketch depicts Assange appearing at the Old Bailey courthouse in London for a ruling in his extradition case in January 2021. A judge rejected a US request to extradite Assange, saying that such a move would be "oppressive" by reason of his mental health. That ruling was overturned in December by two senior judges.
@wikileaks via X/Reuters
Assange boards a plane at a location given as London, in this still image from video released on June 25 by WikiLeaks via X.
Kim Hong-Ji/Reuters
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange leaves the United States District Court in Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands, US, following a hearing on June 26. Assange pled guilty to a single count of conspiracy to obtain and disseminate national defence information and left for his native Australia as a free man.
Edgar Su/Reuters
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange waves as he arrives in Australia on June 26.
Edgar Su/Reuters
Assange kisses his wife Stella Assange as he arrives in Canberra on June 26.

US President Joe Biden had in recent months alluded to a possible deal pushed by Australian government officials to return Assange to Australia. However, the administration distanced itself from the developments on Tuesday. National Security Council spokesperson Adrienne Watson told CNN it “was an independent decision made by the Department of Justice and there was no White House involvement.”

Now the WikiLeaks founder has touched down in Australia, one thing on his to-do list will be paying off his government for the ride home. Assange will owe $520,000 for the charter flight, according to the international campaign that called for his release.

To cover the purported expenses as well as other funds for his recovery, the campaign has launched an appeal, asking supporters for donations.

This story has been updated with additional developments. CNN’s Evan Perez, Devan Cole, Katelyn Polantz, Holmes Lybrand, Claudia Rebaza, Isaac Yee, Sandi Sidhu and DJ Judd contributed reporting.