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The "Other RNC 8" trial Continues.

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annm4peace Donating Member (1000+ posts) Send PM | Profile | Ignore Wed Sep-16-09 06:56 PM
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The "Other RNC 8" trial Continues.
Eight peace activists who engaged in nonviolent civil disobedience at the Republican National Convention to protest the both the war in Iraq and U.S. prisoner torture policies, face trial beginning Monday morning, September 14, at 9 AM in Ramsey County District Court in St. Paul. The eight include full-time peace and social justice activists, homemakers, veterans, a nun, a retired general surgeon, and a college professor. They are Joshua Brollier, Steve Clemens, David Harris, Jeanne Hynes, Betty McKenzie, Dan Pearson, Mary Vaughan, and Joel Weisberg. The activists call themselves "the other RNC 8" to distinguish themselves from another group of 8 facing more serious charges in connection with protests at the convention. The 8 plan to cite International Treaties and the Nuremberg Tribunals in their defense. Although it took place near the site of the Republican Convention, the action was aimed at protesting the policies of both major political parties.
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(shameful that Pioneer Press uses a picture of violence on their website for these peopel who have spent their whole life advocating non-violence)

Republican National Convention Aftermath / Nun among 8 on trial for war protest

http://www.twincities.com/localnews/ci_13346147?nclick_check=1

Trespassing charges say peace group tried to move fences
By Maricella Miranda
mmiranda@pioneerpress.com
Updated: 09/16/2009 12:46:51 PM CDT

While protesting the Iraq war the day before the Republican National Convention in St. Paul, Sister Elizabeth A. McKenzie left a designated protest route, passed through a security fence and was arrested, her attorney said Tuesday. The 79-year-old nun is on trial this week, along with seven others, for trespassing.

McKenzie, a member of the Sisters of St. Joseph of Carondelet in St. Paul, said her conscience compelled her on Aug. 31, 2008, to pass through a security fence to deliver her message against the war to convention delegates — a message that could not be heard on the designated protest route, her attorney, Theodore Waldeck, said during the trial's opening statements in Ramsey County District Court.

"Ms. McKenzie will tell you that she had a right to be on that property that day," Waldeck said. "It was her conscience ... that informed her beliefs about the immorality of the Iraq war."

The defendants' motives don't make their actions legal, assistant city prosecutor Steven Christie said. The defendants breached a security fence near the Landmark Center at Washington and Sixth streets in St. Paul, he said. They went over, around and under the fence to get closer to the Xcel Energy Center.

"It wasn't their property," Christie told the six-member jury. "They had no right to enter that secure area. You'll decide that their actions were intentional. A person's motives are different than legal intent."

The other protesters on trial are Jeanne M. Hynes, Joshua D. Broiller, Joel M. Weisberg, David L. Harris, Stephen D. Clemens, Daniel R. Pearson and Mary A. Vaughan.

A ninth person, Duncan Hardee, 20, of Raleigh, N.C., was arrested during the incident but never charged. The St. Paul city attorney's office could not say why Hardee was not charged.

McKenzie has been a nun for nearly 60 years, Waldeck said. She was sentenced in 2001 to six months in jail for trespassing at Fort Benning in Columbus, Ga., while seeking closure of the Army school, the Western Hemisphere Institute for Security Cooperation, formerly the School of the Americas.

Most of those arrested during the Aug. 31 march in St. Paul were members of the group Veterans for Peace, which organized the march from the state Capitol to the Xcel Energy Center to protest the Iraq war.

The crowd of about 300 planned to march on the route, but a smaller group peeled off and headed south along St. Peter Street, police said. The rest of the marchers headed back to the Capitol.

Kipp Duncan, conservation officer for the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources, testified Tuesday that he was working security at the Landmark Center's loading dock gate when the protesters tried to breach the 10-foot and 5-foot fences. Some picked up sections of the fence and tried to move it, he said.

Duncan said he and a Secret Service agent shouted at the group to keep out.

During the protest, Duncan's finger was pinched between the fences.

Attorney Kirk Lund, representing five of the defendants, said the protesters on trial believed international law gave them the right to deliver their message against the war to the convention delegates.

But Christie said the case is not about international law. Rather, the prosecutor said, the case is about the ability of police to control a crowd.

If convicted of a trespassing misdemeanor, the defendants could face up to 90 days in jail, a $1,000 fine or both.

Maricella Miranda can be reached at 651-228-5421.
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