Lawyers try to cut whistleblower Manning's sentence
Lawyers for whistleblower soldier Bradley Manning are seeking to reduce his potential sentence by having some of his convictions merged.
Their applications were revealed as the sentencing phase of Manning’s court-martial began at Fort Meade, near Baltimore. The sentencing hearing is scheduled to continue until August 23.
The motions seek to merge two of the six espionage counts and two of the five theft counts of which Manning was convicted yesterday. All of the counts involve Manning’s leak of Afghanistan and Iraq battlefield reports.
If the judge agrees to merge the counts, it would mean Manning faces up to 116 years in prison instead of 136 years.
The 470,000 reports were contained in two separate databases but contained similar material.





