Crime | Bradley Manning Bin Laden Sought WikiLeaks Documents: Prosecutors Manning, Julian Assange 'laughed' over Pentagon concerns By Matt Cantor Posted Jan 10, 2013 2:12 AM CST Copied In this June 25, 2012 file photo, Army Pfc. Bradley Manning is escorted out of a courthouse in Fort Meade, Md., after a pretrial hearing. (AP Photo/Patrick Semansky, HO) Osama bin Laden asked an al-Qaeda member for materials Pfc. Bradley Manning allegedly passed to WikiLeaks, prosecutors in Manning's trial plan to say. As the hearings continue, prosecutors will show Internet conversations between Manning and Julian Assange, the New York Times reports; one reveals the pair "laughing" over a Times report saying the Pentagon had dubbed WikiLeaks dangerous to military security. The trial is set to resume June 3 after a review of classified materials that could turn up in court, judge Col. Denise Lind says. Manning is willing to plead guilty to crimes adding up to a maximum 20-year sentence, his lawyers said yesterday. Otherwise, he could face life in prison. Lind has yet to determine whether military law allows such a plea. She recently asked a prosecutor whether charges would be the same if the documents had gone directly to the Times instead of Assange's site; the prosecutor said yes. Read These Next Need a solid 'air hack'? Book your flight on this day. Brazilian influencer is dead at 27 after cosmetic surgery. Trump sets 10% tariff, then raises it. A Jersey Shore star announces they have cancer. Report an error