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War protesters tried on federal conspiracy charges in New
York
By Daniel Renfrew
23 September 2005
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Four Catholic activists went on trial this week in the upstate
New York town of Binghamton, the first antiwar protestors to be
indicted on federal conspiracy charges since the Vietnam War era.
On St. Patricks Day, March 17, 2003, on the eve of the
Iraq war, the four entered a military recruiting center in the
small town of Lansing, poured some of their own blood around the
vestibule and read out a statement condemning the illegal war.
The four Ithaca-based activists, Peter DeMott, Clare Grady,
Danny Burns and Teresa Grady, were arrested and in April 2004
faced charges of criminal mischief and trespassing in a state
case that ended in a mistrial in Tompkins County court, with nine
of 12 jurors voting to acquit. They had rejected a plea bargain
that would have left them with no jail time in return for pleading
guilty to a minor offense.
In response to the states failure to convict, the federal
prosecutors intervened with the conspiracy charge, which carries
a six-year prison sentence and a $250,000 fine for an offense
that the state considered a misdemeanor, punishable by no more
than six months in jail.
While the St. Patricks Four were among roughly
7,000 protesters arrested across the country in acts of civil
disobedience on the eve of the war, they are the only ones thus
far to be tried on federal conspiracy charges. The last such case
was apparently brought in 1968 against Dr. Benjamin Spock and
three others on charges of conspiring to counsel draft resistance.
Spock and his codefendants were convicted, but the verdict was
overturned on appeal.
This latest trial is of utmost political significance for democratic
rights throughout the country, and could provide a legal precedent
for the Bush administration to intensify intimidation and police
crackdowns on nonviolent political dissent.
The charges in the indictment include one felony count of conspiracy
to impede an officer of the United States by force, intimidation,
and threat, and three misdemeanor charges.
The determination of the government to ram through a convictionand
the complicity of US District Judge Thomas J. McAvoy, who is presiding
over the trialhas emerged in the first days of the proceedings.
McAvoy handed the prosecution a key legal victory with an extraordinary
ruling allowing it to change its indictment after the trial had
begun. Thus, the four will be tried for using not force,
intimidation and threat to impede a federal officer, but
rather force, intimidation or threat. This one-word
change makes the prosecutors job far easier, while exposing
the frame-up character of the federal case.
During the state trial in Ithaca, the St. Patricks Four,
representing themselves, invoked the Nuremberg Principles of international
law as a precedent, arguing that individuals have the right and
duty to prevent crimes against humanity, superseding obedience
to any government. They also argued their actions were authorized
under the defense of necessity principle, as the harm
they caused was far less than the one they were trying to prevent.
Danny Burns in his closing argument put it this way:
No jury would convict four people of breaking and entering
if they broke into a burning house to try to save a child. Here,
the building was on fireas Iraq is now, and we broke in
to try to save our troops and the innocent Iraqis. We did not
save them, but justice says we should not be punished for trying.
For the federal trial, however, Judge McAvoy has preemptively
barred the St. Patricks Four from using a similar defense.
This court offers no opinion on the war in Iraq as it is
entirely irrelevant to this matter... assuming an illegal war,
it does not provide a justification for violating the criminal
laws of the United States, he ruled.
Judge imposes political gag order
This ruling amounts to a judicial gag order, stifling the defendants
ability to fully draw out the context of their actions as well
as their appeal to the international law they argue is meant to
function as the supreme law of the land.
In the first day of testimony by the activists, McAvoy made
clear his intention to squelch any effective defense, while allowing
the prosecution free rein. This case is not about the war
in Iraq. It is about what happened in Ithaca, New York,
McAvoy lectured the defendants. To discuss the war and what
is happening in Iraq is not permissible.
The judge found both Peter DeMott and Teresa Grady in contempt
of court for mentioning that they had been subjected to a previous
trial, a fact that he has ordered hidden from the jury.
DeMott was hit with a second contempt charge for refusing to
answer a barrage of questions from the prosecutiondescribed
by some in the court as McCarthy-likedemanding
that he name names of all those who may have helped to prepare
the protest action.
A Citizens Tribunal on Iraq is being held
concurrently at a Binghamton church throughout the week, featuring
former US diplomats and a British MP who resigned in protest of
the war, antiwar activists, various legal experts, and antiwar
Iraq veterans Jimmy Massey and Camilo Mejía.
The St. Patricks Four spoke about their upcoming trial
to a packed Binghamton University-SUNY audience of almost 400
people on Thursday, September 15.
Danny Burns, who hails originally from Binghamton, denounced
the lies of the US government and the fear
and complicity of Democratic politicians such as New York Senators
Charles Schumer and Hillary Clinton, who have supported and justified
the Iraq war.
Vietnam veteran Peter DeMott described the day of the protest,
when the four poured about a pint of their own blood along the
walls, cardboard cutouts, and US flag at the recruiting office
in an act of conscience before reading a statement
and kneeling in prayer. Answering right-wing critics of the action,
the four said they longed for the day when the killing people
upsets as much as the sight of blood poured on the flag.
Expressing confidence in defeating the federal frameup, Teresa
Grady called the prosecutions charge that they used force,
threat, and intimidation against military recruiters absurd.
She said that business continued as usual in the back offices
of the center while they were there. She added that the Catholic
Worker movement, to which the four are affiliated, is opposed
on principle to the use of force or intimidation.
Speaking to the WSWS after the meeting, Peter DeMott said he
hoped the trial would inspire similar actions and resistance,
and that it would raise awareness of what he says are important
but often ignored issues, such as that of US militarys use
of depleted uranium.
You never see it mentioned, or very, very seldom do you
see it mentioned in the mainstream media, that we are in effect
conducting a nuclear war in Iraq right now, and that its
contaminating the earth, the air, the soil, the water of Iraq
and itll be contaminated for millions of years, he
said.
Our own soldiers are returning contaminated with depleted
uranium and now theyre fathering children that are horribly
deformed because theyve been contaminated with radiated
material, DeMott added. This is mind-boggling what
weve done and what were doing right now.
DeMott says the federal trial is part of an effort to stifle
dissent and to show the broader public that if you
protest this way were going to come down hard on you so
dont even think about it.
Hundreds of people have turned out in Binghamton to demonstrate
support for the St. Patricks Four in the course of the week.
While federal prosecutors expressed confidence in holding this
trial in Binghamton, which has historically been one of the states
more conservative cities, they may be in for a surprise. The long-decaying
city, with an unemployment rate reaching almost one quarter of
the working population, has shown public signs of opposition to
the war. This year the city council passed a resolution by a 5-4
margin calling for the immediate withdrawal of US troops from
Iraq.
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