An image of Bradley Manning arriving for day two of his court martial at Fort Meade, Maryland on Tuesday prompted Reuters executive editor Jim Roberts to ask this question:
Is Bradley #Manning getting any sunlight? bit.ly/11h1RP0twitter.com/nycjim/status/…
— Jim Roberts (@nycjim) June 4, 2013
The answer: Yes, these days, but more than three years of confinementhas clearly taken a toll.
The 25-year-old Army private is charged with the largest leak of classified documents in U.S. history and faces a possible life sentence without parole if convicted of aiding the enemy.
The former intelligence analyst said he gave a trove of government and military files to the anti-secrecy Web site WikiLeaks to"spark a domestic debate on the role of our military and foreign policy in general."
Manning was arrested in Kuwaiton May 26, 2010.
From July 2010 to April 2011 he was held as a maximum custody detainee* at Quantico marine base in Virginia, where he sat in a fluorescent-lit 6-by-8-foot cell with no window or natural light for 23 hours per day— guards checked on him every five minutes — and was stripped naked at night because authorities deemed the elastic on his underwear could be used to harm himself.
On April 20, 2011, Manning was transferred to the Joint Regional Corrections Facility at Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, and his conditions improved dramatically.
On Monday defense attorney David Coombs described Manning as a ‘‘young, naive, but good-intentioned’’ soldier whose struggle to fit in as a gay man in the military made him feel he ‘‘needed to do something to make a difference in this world.’’
Here's another look at Manning, whose trial is expected to run all summer (with some parts being closed to the public):
*In response to Manning's confinement, more than 250 of the most eminent U.S. legal scholars sent a letter to President Obama in protest of Manning's treatment; UN special rapporteur on torture Juan Ernesto Mendez called it"cruel, inhuman and degrading"; and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's chief spokesman, P.J. Crowley, resigned after he publicly denounced the treatment as "ridiculous and counterproductive and stupid."
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