Anderson and Assange
© GC Images; AP
It was love at first leak!

"Baywatch" star Pamela Anderson has gone from slow motion runs on the beach to mysterious late night visits to the embassy where WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is holed up.

Anderson was most recently spotted entering the Ecuadorian safe space in London Thursday night wearing a camel overcoat, snug black top โ€” and either a really short skirt, or no pants at all.

Anderson, 49, is a regular at the facility, coyly smiling for photographers as she struts inside to see Assange, 45, whose rogue outfit has dumped some of the US government's most closely guarded secrets.

She refused to deny the dating rumors โ€” saying he intellectually stimulates her more than all her "ex-husbands and lovers combined."

"I think he's quite sexy," she wrote in a blog post on Thursday. "He has tremendous strength and stamina โ€” though vulnerable. Hard to imagine him that way โ€” as capable as he is. But, he is up against the biggest super powers in the world."

In early January, Anderson penned a letter to then-President Barack Obama โ€” urging him to consider "pardoning" Assange after the hack of Democratic emails in the months before the 2016 election.

Speaking to John Bishop on The Nightly Show this week, she described meeting Assange last year through British fashion designer Vivienne Westwood.

"We started seeing each other every month, and now we see each other a lot more regularly," she said, according to The Sun.

"I do really think he's one of the most important people in the world, and I think what he does is historic. It's very important," Anderson added. "He's very brave and he sacrificed a lot for all of us."

Assange, who has been living in the embassy for four years after he was granted political asylum by Ecuador, came under fire this week after a 8,000-plus-file dump of CIA secrets was posted on WikiLeaks.

Vice President Pence Thursday vowed to go after the web site, saying the leak was "one of the most significant compromises of national security in recent memory."

"Trafficking in national security information, as is alleged WikiLeaks has done, is a serious offense," Pence said during a "Special Report" appearance on Thursday night.

"This president and this administration will take it very seriously and use the full force of the law, and the resources of the United States, to hold all of those to account that were involved."

In her blog post this week, Anderson defended the Australian-born Assange โ€” saying he had "ruffled a few very powerful feathers โ€” who will stop at nothing to discredit him, or worse."

"He is on the side of every civilian. And, he is exposing corruption in governments we elect," she said. "People need to understand that."

Anderson also spoke about Assange's sexual assault allegations in Sweden, saying they were "embarrassing for all involved."

"There is no rape โ€” it is a case of condom or not," she said. "It is ridiculous."