Chelsea Manning, the former U.S. Army soldier who was convicted  of violating the Espionage Act in 2013, is facing indefinite solitary confinement.

A statement on ChelseaManning.org reveals that Manning is currently up against four charges, which include: disrespect, disorderly contact, the possession of prohibited property and medicine misuse.

Manning, who is transgender and filed a lawsuit in federal court that claimed she had been denied access to medically necessary treatment for her gender disorder, is now in hot water over the possession of books and magazines related to politics and LBGT issues.

The incident of “medical mis-use” apparently relates to having a tube of expired toothpaste.

Manning is currently facing 35 years in prison for leaking 750,000 pages of classified documents to Wikileaks.

"The catalyst for this attack on Chelsea seems to have been an incident in the mess hall where she may have pushed, brushed, or accidentally knocked, a small amount of food off of her table,” reads the statement, which goes on to say that the charges were placed after Manning asked to speak to her lawyer.

In an op-ed piece for the New York Times, Manning defiantly championed her decision to leak information, saying that she did so “out of a love for my country and a sense of duty to others.”

“I’m now serving a sentence of 35 years in prison for these unauthorized disclosures. I understand that my actions violated the law,” wrote the 27 year old.

Explaining the motivation that drove her to get the information out regardless of the cost, Manning wrote that she was shocked by the military’s complicity in the March 2010 elections in Iraq and how "these deeply troubling details flew under the American media’s radar.”

Faulting an atmosphere that forces journalists to compete against one another for so-called “special access” to important matters of foreign and domestic policy, Manning wrote that the "American public’s access to the facts is gutted, which leaves them with no way to evaluate the conduct of American officials."