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#JulianAssange There's been an interesting development that I just learned... The post is a little lengthy, but timing of the new development is very interesting 🤓 All the signs, imho of course, are painting a picture for #JulianAssange to enter stage right, front & center SOON, imho of course. Remember when it was reported Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, was subjected to extensive covert surveillance while living in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London (2012–2019) ? A Spanish security company, UC Global S.L., who was hired for embassy protection, allegedly installed hidden cameras and microphones to record his private conversations with lawyers, family, visitors, doctors, and others — including sensitive legal discussions that could breach attorney-client privilege. The company's owner, David Morales — a former Spanish soldier based in Jerez de la Frontera — directed the operation. According to El País investigations (based on witness testimony from former employees, internal emails, seized devices, and recovered data), the recordings and reports were passed to the CIA, referred to internally as "the Americans" or "American friends." Evidence included folders labeled "CIA" containing videos of visitors, plus emails showing data transfers and Morales' frequent trips to the U.S. Assange's legal team filed complaints in Spain, triggering an investigation by the Audiencia Nacional (Spain's High Court). Morales faced serious charges, including privacy violations. Last year, his lawyers requested a 20-year prison sentence for Morales. The case also involved allegations of falsified evidence by Morales (who at one point tried to blame a now-deceased Ecuadorian ambassador) and issues with missing or tampered data from seized devices. 👉 Recent update: David Morales has died from an undisclosed illness, according to a statement from his company UC Global S.L. posted on LinkedIn. His death came, with just months to go before trial. His head of operations, Michel Wallemacq, will now face the proceedings instead, with prosecutors seeking up to five years in prison. The story, extensively documented by El País since 2019 through audio, video, emails, and protected witnesses, highlights concerns over intelligence operations targeting Assange and potential breaches of legal privileges. Assange himself is now free following his 2024 plea deal with the U.S. Sources: El País English reports (March 2026 and prior investigations).

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