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Chelsea Manning will testify before grand jury investigating WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

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Former Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning appeared in Alexandria federal court Tuesday to unsuccessfully fight a subpoena requiring her to testify in front of a grand jury investigating WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.

Outside the courthouse after an hour-long closed hearing, Manning said her motion to quash the subpoena was denied but her team believes they “still have grounds to litigate.” She would not go into detail because Judge Claude Hilton also blocked her bid to unseal the proceedings. But she said she was “probably going to be” at the courthouse multiple times in coming days.

U.S. Attorney G. Zachary Terwilliger attended the sealed hearing, as did the Assange prosecutorial team — Assistant U.S. Attorneys Gordon Kromberg, Tracy McCormick, Evan Turgeon and Kellen Dwyer.

Manning, 31, was convicted in 2013 of the largest leak of classified documents in U.S. history and served seven years of a 35-year military prison sentence before being released by then-President Barack Obama.

The material she exposed included field reports from Iraq and Afghanistan, cables between the State Department and U.S. embassies and assessments of detainees held at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

During Manning’s 2011 military trial, prosecutors revealed chat logs showing the Army private chatted with Assange about cracking a password to a computer anonymously. But during the trial Manning testified she acted alone and approached other news organizations before going to WikiLeaks. The anti-secrecy website published the material.

In a statement Friday, Manning said she stood by that testimony and sees no reason to repeat it.

Outside the courthouse Tuesday, Manning did not mention Assange or WikiLeaks, saying she opposed grand juries as a principle.

“Grand juries are terrible tools,” she said. “The idea that there is an independent grand jury is long gone; it’s run by a prosecutor.” Witnesses do not have their own lawyer in the secret proceedings, she noted: “There is no adversarial process . . . I am generally opposed to the existence of a grand jury.”

“There was an awful lot of government attorneys in there,” she told a crowd of reporters and activists. But, she said, “we didn’t learn anything” about why the government had subpoenaed her now, years after her conviction. “I only can speculate,” she said.

She was represented in court by Moira Meltzer-Cohen, Sandra Freeman and Chris Leibig.

Prosecutors inadvertently exposed Assange has been charged under seal late last year, but the nature of the charges against him remain unknown. U.S. officials speaking on the condition of anonymity because of grand jury secrecy say the case is based on his pre-2016 conduct, not the election hacks that drew the attention of special counsel Robert Mueller.

Assange has been living in Ecuador’s London embassy for the past seven years to avoid prosecution in Britain for fleeing his bond on Swedish sexual assault charges. Those charges have been dropped, but Assange has resisted leaving the embassy for fear of being extradited to the United States.

Since leaving prison Manning, who was formerly known as Bradley Manning, has become an activist for transgender rights and launched an unsuccessful primary campaign against Sen. Benjamin Cardin, D-Md.

A group of supporters cheered as Manning left the courthouse, shouting “We love you Chelsea!” and waving signs saying, “Solidarity with Chelsea” and “Defend Grand Jury Resistance.”

The Washington Post’s Ellen Nakashima contributed to this report.