 Hello. My name is Joshua Rosenberg. I'm a UK based legal journalist and I've been covering this case really since the start. I appreciate that you're ultimately suggesting that this should lead to the withdrawal of the application for extradition. But in the meantime, are you alleging that there's any breach of English law? And are you saying that this should have any impact on the proceedings in England or Wales at the moment? This is Richard Roth. I can answer that. We are alleging that it is a breach of the Fourth Amendment of the US Constitution. Bob, you can chime in as well. Any US citizen, whether they're in the country or not, is entitled to the search and seizure clause to not be searched or have their information seized. So it is specific to the US Constitution and not to British law, but I would imagine that British law has something parallel. But this lawsuit is in the US, it is in New York, it is on behalf of US citizens, and it is for a violation of the US Constitution. So it's not going to have any impact on the current proceedings in the United Kingdom unless you persuade the US government to withdraw the extradition request. Bob, I think that's fair. Certainly that's a question that could be better answered by the attorneys representing Mr. Assange in the extradition proceeding. But this particular case is seeking relief in the US courts for violation of US constitutional rights. It may very well have an effect legally in the UK. But that's something you should post to his attorneys in that proceeding. I think Deborah would like to comment on that as well. I just wanted to make a brief point that one of the components of whether extradition is appropriate is whether Mr. Assange is likely to have a fair trial in the US and this is just one of many indications that that's not in fact the case. So I would imagine that the behavior should certainly should have an impact.