HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019589.jpg

1.68 MB

Extraction Summary

9
People
8
Organizations
5
Locations
2
Events
3
Relationships
5
Quotes

Document Information

Type: Book excerpt / house oversight production
File Size: 1.68 MB
Summary

This document is page 101 of a book (likely titled 'The Plot to Hack America' or similar based on context and ISBN in footer) produced as part of a House Oversight investigation. It details Julian Assange's involvement in Edward Snowden's flight to Russia, specifically noting Assange's advice to avoid Ecuador in favor of Russia and his deployment of WikiLeaks staffer Sarah Harrison to Hong Kong to assist Snowden. It also provides background on Harrison's family connections in Hong Kong and her operational security measures.

People (9)

Name Role Context
Julian Assange WikiLeaks Founder
Advised Snowden to go to Russia; directed Sarah Harrison to assist Snowden.
Edward Snowden Leaker/Subject
Subject of the narrative; seeking asylum.
Sarah Harrison Senior Staff Member (WikiLeaks)
Dispatched by Assange to Hong Kong to help Snowden escape to Russia.
Greenwald Journalist
Received text from Snowden.
Lam Interviewer
Conducted an explosive interview with Snowden.
Kate Harrison Sarah Harrison's sister
Lived in Hong Kong.
Alexandra Harrison Sarah Harrison's sister
Lived in Hong Kong.
Simon Harrison Sarah Harrison's brother
Head of Avra; headquartered in Singapore but traveled to Hong Kong.
Poitras Filmmaker/Journalist
Mentioned in comparison to Harrison regarding operational security.

Timeline (2 events)

June 11 (Implied 2013)
Sarah Harrison arrived in Hong Kong.
Hong Kong
Unknown
Assange advises Snowden to seek asylum in Russia.
Unknown

Locations (5)

Relationships (3)

Julian Assange Advisor/Subject Edward Snowden
Assange counseled Snowden to go directly to Russia.
Julian Assange Employer/Employee Sarah Harrison
Assange called Harrison... dispatch one of his senior staff members.
Sarah Harrison Sibling Simon Harrison
She also had an older brother, Simon.

Key Quotes (5)

"those people should be shot in the balls."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019589.jpg
Quote #1
"My advice was that he should take asylum in Russia despite the negative PR consequences"
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019589.jpg
Quote #2
"Snowden was well aware of the spin that would be put on it if he took asylum in Russia."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019589.jpg
Quote #3
"bound for the republic of Ecuador via a safe route."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019589.jpg
Quote #4
"a lifetime in prison."
Source
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019589.jpg
Quote #5

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,438 characters)

Enter Assange | 101
departure from the position Snowden had taken in his postings on
the Ars Technica site in January 2009. He complained in a post there
about the detrimental consequences to U.S. intelligence of leakers'
revealing "classified shit" to The New York Times, and he suggested
as punishment "those people should be shot in the balls." Either he
had a change of heart, or he was telling Assange what he believed he
wanted to hear.
Assange counseled Snowden to go directly to Russia. "My advice
was that he should take asylum in Russia despite the negative PR
consequences," he told the London Times in 2015. He said, "Snowden
was well aware of the spin that would be put on it if he took asylum
in Russia." So a story would be released presumably by WikiLeaks,
coinciding with his departure, asserting that Snowden was "bound
for the republic of Ecuador via a safe route." When Snowden asked
how he would carry out the plan, Assange told him that he would
immediately dispatch one of his senior staff members to help him
engineer his escape to Russia. That senior staff member was Sarah
Harrison.
After speaking to Snowden, Assange called Harrison, who was in
Melbourne. She had gone there a month earlier to help organize
Assange's somewhat quixotic election campaign for president of
Australia. Assange told her to forget the campaign and go to Hong
Kong. She was to use WikiLeaks's resources to save Snowden from "a
lifetime in prison." Presumably, Assange told her that he had advised
Snowden to proceed to Russia. Harrison later said that she didn't
even bother to pack her clothing after hearing from Assange. She
caught the next plane to Hong Kong and arrived there on June 11—
the same day that Snowden texted Greenwald he was in a safe house
and before Snowden's explosive interview with Lam. Harrison had
her own connections in Hong Kong. Her two younger sisters, Kate
and Alexandra, lived there and were part of the expatriate commu-
nity. She also had an older brother, Simon, who headed Avra, a ship
brokerage and commodity trading company, headquartered in Sin-
gapore, but he frequently traveled to Hong Kong on business.
Like Poitras, Sarah Harrison took great care to shield her move-
ments. She did not have a Twitter, Facebook, or any other social media
account. She did not own a cell phone for fear of being tracked by an
Epst_9780451494566_2p_all_r1.z.indd 101 9/29/16 5:51 PM
HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_019589

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