 Now we'll hear from Deborah Herbeck, a media attorney who has visited Mr. Assange. I am a media lawyer and I have represented WikiLeaks journalists and videographers. I visited Julian Assange at the Ecuador Embassy in London a few times during his stay there to discuss sensitive legal matters. On arrival, there was a strict protocol for the protection of Julian, we were told. Passports, mobile phones, cameras, laptops, recording devices and other electronic equipment were turned over to the security guards in the lobby. We learned much later through a criminal investigation under the supervision of a court in Spain that while visitors like me were meeting with Julian in the embassy conference room, the guards next door were taking apart our phones, removing and photographing SIM cards and we believe downloading data from our electronic equipment. Their boss, David Morales from UC Global who appears to have been recruited by the CIA through associates of Sheldon Adelson during a visit to a tech conference was making regular trips to Washington DC, to New York, to Las Vegas, reported leader handover thumb drives and to receive further instructions from his US government handlers. In other words, during our meetings with Julian at the embassy, recordings of our confidential conversations and the contents of our electronic devices were being delivered into the hands of the United States government. I'm a New York lawyer. I have the right to assume that the US government is not listening to my private and privileged conversations with my clients and that information about other clients and cases I may have on my phone or laptop are secure from illegal government intrusion. This is not just a violation of our constitutional rights, this is an outrage.