Archive | September, 2010

Brianna Waters Granted New Trial

17 Sep

From Seattle Times – From Times staff reporter Mike Carter

The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has ordered a new trial for accused Earth Liberation Front arsonist Brianna Waters, saying her 2008 conviction stemming from the May 2001 arson at the University of Washington Center for Urban Horticulture was riddled with judicial errors.

The three-member panel unanimously sent Waters’ case back to the U.S. District Court in Tacoma for a new trial.

“While the evidence against Waters may have been sufficient to sustain her conviction, our review of the record does not leave us convinced that her conviction was fairly obtained,” the judges wrote.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office declined to comment Wednesday on the ruling.

The 34-year-old Californian was sentenced in June 2008 to six years in federal prison and ordered to pay $6 million in restitution by U.S. District Court Judge Franklin Burgess.

Writing for the panel, Judge A. Wallace Tashima said Burgess made a “number of errors,” including allowing the jury to review “highly prejudicial” articles that Waters purportedly gave to another defendant, who pleaded guilty to the arson and testified against Waters in exchange for leniency. The appeals court found the content of the articles – which were emphasized by federal prosecutors at trial – was inflammatory and the government’s efforts to tie them directly to Waters was weak.

“We believe that the appropriately skeptical eye would have excluded the articles from Waters’ trial,” the opinion said. “The articles were highly prejudicial. While most espoused anarchist political theory, a number advocated violence in no uncertain terms,” including advocating attacks on Wall Street, Disneyland and the Statue of Liberty.

“Their repugnant and self-absorbed embrace of destruction is likely to have swayed jurors’ emotions, leading them to convict Waters not because of the facts before them but because she represents a threat to their own values,” the judges wrote.

At the same time, Burgess had prevented Waters from showing jurors a documentary she had worked on pushing for non-violence, thus “compounding the error” of admitting the articles while “depriving Waters of her opportunity to demonstrate that her purported belief in non-violence was genuine” the court ruled.

Beyond those mistakes, the appeals court said, Burgess committed another serious error during her 2008 trial by not inquiring whether jurors had read “highly prejudicial” news stories that occurred during her trial after ELF claimed credit for a March 2008 arson that damaged several “Street of Dreams” homes in South Snohomish County. There was speculation at the time that ELF may have timed the arson to coincide with Waters’ case.

The court said some of the articles drew those connections and mentioned Waters’ ongoing trial. However, Burgess turned aside defense requests to question the jurors about whether they had seen the coverage. Instead, the judge admonished the jurors to not read the stories, or ignore them if they had.

“We agreed with Waters that the district court’s statements to the jury were inadequate in light of the highly prejudicial nature of the publicity,” the appeals court wrote.

The court found that the trial contained a number of other significant errors, including a decision to close a pretrial hearing to the public and media and exclude the public from much of the jury selection process.

The appeals judges rejected Waters’ claim that the government conspired against her by withholding evidence that one of the key witnesses against her had not initially identified her as being in the cell that attacked the UW horticultural center.

Dennis Riordan, Waters’ San Francisco lawyer, did not immediately return a telephone call for comment.

To read the ruling, click here.

Waters, a violin teacher, is one of five activists accused of the UW arson, which prosecutors say caused more than $6 million in damage while destroying rare plants, books and years of research. She was convicted of two counts of arson, but not of other charges, including the use of a destructive device in a crime of violence, which carried a 30-year mandatory minimum sentence.

The Earth Liberation Front had targeted the UW office of Toby Bradshaw, whom arsonists mistakenly believed was involved in genetically engineering poplar trees that would pollute natural forests.

Waters was the first of 18 suspects indicted on charges of involvement in the Earth Liberation Front, a militant Northwest underground group that between 1996 and 2001 claimed it carried out more than a dozen acts of arson and sabotage against targets deemed a threat to the environment or animals. Damage was estimated in the tens of millions of dollars. Targets included a slaughterhouse, timber-company headquarters and a ski lodge at Vail, Colo.

Lacey Phillabaum, 35, was sentenced to three years in prison and Jennifer Kolar, 37, was sentenced to five years in prison for their roles in the UW arson. Both Phillabaum and Kolar testified against Waters.

Also charged in connection with the arson were: William C. Rodgers, who committed suicide in December 2005 while being held in an Arizona jail, and Justin Solondz, 29, who is charged with arson and using a destructive device in a crime of violence. Solondz left the country and was convicted by a Chinese court of manufacturing drugs and is serving a three-year-sentence.

The UW’s new $7.2 million Center for Urban Horticulture reopened in January 2005.

“Lone Wolf” Faces New Charges, plus more international news

17 Sep

Walter Bond is being charged with two more arsons in Utah claimed by the “A.L.F. Lone Wolf” as well as the Sheepskin factory in Denver to which he has already agreed to plead guilty The new charges include the Salt Lake City businesses of Tandy Leather Factory and Tiburon (foie gras restaurant).
He now faces two counts of arson and two counts of force, violence and threats involving animal enterprises.

The ALF arson at Tandy did $30,000 in damages was done to the Tandy Leather Factory, and the July Tiburon arson did $10,000 damages.
Bond was allegedly taped admitting to his brother that he was responsible for the arsons.
He could receive a maximum of twenty years in prison for each count of arson, plus animal enterprise additions, which carry a potential five years each.
Bond may be transferred to Utah after the Denver case is over, but until then please support him at the following address.

Walter Edmund Bond
PO Box 16700
Golden, CO 80402-6700

As environmental activism heats up world wide, law enforcement—and especially the Department of Homeland Security—intensifies repression, keeping tabs on people who attend environmentalist meetings, go to events and even attend environmentally conscious movies like Gasland. The situation is so bad that the Governer of Pennsylvania has openly chastized Homeland Security’s repressive measures. Here is an article in the Huffington Post, entitled, “Are So-called “Eco-terrorists Falsely Prosecuted?”

Sea Shepherd is poised in the high seas outside of Tiji, Japan, to stand in the way of the dolphin slaughter made notorious in the movie, The Cove.

Chicago VeganMania is tomorrow! Don’t miss the Rust Belt Ramblers!

Yesterday in Tulsa, models working with PETA protested in the controversial fashion that has brought fame to the animal rights group—naked on the street, concealed in their nudity by nothing more than a banner against the eating of meat. “It’s impossible to ‘go green’ without going vegan,” says PETA’s Lauren Stroyeck. “Just by changing their diets, concerned people can help protect the Earth, their own health, and countless animals.”

RNC8 Charges Dropped!

16 Sep

From RNC8

The RNC 8 received some surprising news Thursday afternoon – charges against Luce Guillen-Givins, Monica Bicking and Eryn Trimmer have been dropped!

The fact that charges have been dismissed against these three members of what Ramsey County has for two years labeled a “criminal enterprise” exposes the political motivations behind this case. Although today’s news is an amazing development, charges against four of the eight defendants still remain and must continue to be fought with renewed strength.

Thanks to everyone who has struggled alongside the 8 and the RNC 8 Defense Committee to help get these charges dropped – and please join us as we continue to seek justice for Max, Rob, Garrett and Nathanael. We’ll post more information and analysis on this development soon – stay tuned.

The RNC 8 are: Luce Guillen Givins, Max Specktor, Nathanael Secor, Eryn Trimmer, Monica Bicking, Erik Oseland, Robert Czernik and Garrett Fitzgerald. All were preemptively arrested prior to the RNC and have been falsely charged with Conspiracy to Riot and Conspiracy to Commit Property Damage act in response to their political organizing (the charge enhancement that included the “Furtherance of Terrorism” under the Minnesota PATRIOT was dropped). This site contains news updates, press releases, biographies and information for donating to their legal support fund and defending the RNC 8.

Taiwanese Artists Protest Oil Drilling, more from around the world

16 Sep

From Taipei Times
A group of writers, musicians and artists yesterday protested against a controversial plan by Kuokuang Petrochemical Technology Co to build oil refineries on ecologically sensitive wetlands along the coast of Dacheng Township (大城) in Changhua County.
LOSING THE SEA
“Although we live on an island surrounded by the sea, we’re so far from the sea in our daily lives,” writer Li Ang (李昂), a native of Lugang (鹿港), a costal town in Changhua County, told a press conference at the legislature.
“When I was a kid, we couldn’t go to the sea because the coast was under tight control during the Martial Law period. When I grew up, the coast was still unreachable because of the Changhua Coastal Industrial Park,” Li said. “Once the Kuokuang oil refineries are built, we will completely lose the Changhua coastline.”
Wu Sheng (吳晟), another Changhua-born writer and poet, turned his anger on politicians who claimed that most of those who opposed the plan were not locals, but outsiders who did not know the needs of local residents.
“Of course the allegations are false. I should point out, however, that although Changhua residents may be the most affected by the oil refineries, the destruction of the environment would have an impact everyone in the country — even people in other countries,” he said. Writer Liu Ke-shiang (劉克襄) said that at this critical time, when governments around the world are formulating policies to cut down greenhouse gas emissions, “[President] Ma [Ying-jeou, 馬英九] is the one with the power to decide whether Taiwan should take a road that leads to sustainable development.”
MA’S TURN
“It’s not the humpback dolphins, but Ma who should take the turn,” he said, triggering laughter.
Liu was referring to a remark by Premier Wu Den-yih (吳敦義) earlier this year that humpback dolphins would know to take a turn when running into oil refineries. Environmental groups claim that the construction of oil refineries in Dacheng would block an underwater corridor used by critically endangered humpback dolphins. In a prerecorded video, the guitarist of the band Alphasia, Luxia Wu (吳逸駿), said: “We could save all the trouble of trying to save the humpback dolphins by curing Wu first,” he said. Music critic Chang Tieh-chih (張鐵志) said efforts to reduce carbon dioxide emissions would be more effective if the Kuokuang oil refineries were shut down.

English Protest Agro-Fuel Subsides

From
Activists from the Campaign Against Climate Change came to the Whitehall office of the Department of Energy and Climate Change to present thousands of postcards to coalition Energy Secretary Chris Huhne. Later in the day they held a demonstration outside the DECC before a public meeting in the evening.
The group of demonstrators, including one ‘orangutan’ and someone holding a ”Chris Huhne’ mask, highlighted the environmental devastation caused by the felling of tropical forests to grow agrofuel crops such as palm oil – now the largest cause of deforestation in South East Asia – and deforestation is responsible for as much as 20% of global carbon emissions. In many areas palm oil growers are grabbing land from indigenous tribes and destroying their communities. Human rights are being abused on a grand scale and the growth of agrofuel production has the effect of reducing food production, leading to higher food prices, pricing food out of the reach of many poor people around the world.

PETA Billboard Raises Controversy

Anglers have been left reeling after animal rights activists put up a giant poster in Ashford questioning the size of their ‘rods’. People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) has deliberately targeted the town and hired a billboard outside the International Station to provoke fishermen after the recent death of Britain’s largest mirror carp, Two Tone.

Briana Waters (ctd…)

15 Sep

by Lauren Reagan, ED

In a 33 page 9th Circuit Court of Appeals opinion, a 3 judge panel ruled that Green Scare defendant Briana Waters’ conviction for the University of Washington Horticulture arson, is hereby reversed and remanded. What happens next is still up in the air, but possibilities abound– she could secure bail pending either a retrial or plea deal. Since her trial, the mean spirited US Atty no longer works for that office, the Judge has since passed away, and Briana has served about 2.5 years in a federal prison in Connecticut. My opinion on the best case scenario would be for plea negotiations to result in a deal that would give her credit for time served, be reunited with her daughter and family, and would spare them the ordeal of a second grueling trial. You might recall the feds have charged her with possession of an incendiary device which carries a mandatory 30 year prison sentence, along with conspiracy and arson. Stay tuned for more developments as they unfold.
Some good news, finally!!

Green Scare Defendent’s Conviction Overturned on Appeal!!

15 Sep

Appellate court overturns conviction in 2001 UW arson
From the Seattle Times
Posted by John de Leon

The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has overturned the conviction of Briana
Waters in the 2001 arson of the University of Washington’s Center for Urban
Horticulture.

The 34-year-old Californian was sentenced in June 2008 to six years in federal prison and ordered to pay $6 million in restitution by U.S.
District Court Judge Franklin Burgess. A unanimous three-judge panel of the Court of Appeals ruled Wednesday that Burgess made several errors that
raised questions about the fairness of her trial, The Associated Press is reporting. The panel said the judge should not have admitted certain
articles advocating violence as evidence, and should have done more to ensure that news coverage of an unrelated arson did not influence the jury,
according to The Associated Press.

To read the ruling, click here

Waters, a violin teacher, is one of five activists accused of the UW arson, which prosecutors say caused more than $6 million in damage while
destroying rare plants, books and years of research. She was convicted of two counts of arson, but not of other charges, including the use of a destructive device in a crime of violence, which carried a 30-year mandatory minimum sentence.

The Earth Liberation Front had targeted the UW office of Toby Bradshaw, whom arsonists mistakenly believed was involved in genetically engineering poplar trees that would pollute natural forests.

Waters was the first of 18 suspects indicted on charges of involvement in the Earth Liberation Front, a militant Northwest underground group that
between 1996 and 2001 claimed it carried out more than a dozen acts of arson and sabotage against targets deemed a threat to the environment or
animals. Damage was estimated in the tens of millions of dollars. Targets included a slaughterhouse, timber-company headquarters and a ski lodge at Vail, Colo.

Lacey Phillabaum, 35, was sentenced to three years in prison and Jennifer Kolar, 37, was sentenced to five years in prison for their roles in the UW
arson. Both Phillabaum and Kolar testified against Waters. Also charged in connection with the arson were: William C. Rodgers, who
committed suicide in December 2005 while being held in an Arizona jail, and Justin Solondz, 29, who is charged with arson and using a destructive
device in a crime of violence. Solondz is believed to be out of the country.

Moderator’s note: This decision is great news, but it doesn’t mean that Brianna is out yet. According to lawyers, the best case scenario is that she is let out on bail to be with her daughter pending plea negations that might give her credit for time served (2.5 years) rather than going through a second, grueling trial.

People Are Pissed: public meetings intensify, full spectrum resistance continues

15 Sep

Marcellus Shale Unrest

From pittsburgh tribune-review: About 120 people attended a public hearing held at the request of a petition by city residents. The hearing followed a half-hour protest on the steps of the City-County Building, Downtown.
From Times Herald-Record: BINGHAMTON – The battle lines were drawn Monday morning two hours before the federal meeting to help determine the future of gas drilling in New York and the country.
On one end of the street where the Environmental Protection Agency’s public hearing on fracking will begin at noon stood a few hundred anti-drilling people. They held signs saying, “Protect Our Water Stop Fracking America.” They listened to speakers like Josh Fox, the Honesdale, Pennsylvania director of the film, “Gasland” say, “the restoration of the EPA’s mission is to stop fracking now.”
Counter-protesters of the Industry
There are protesters from the Tea Party and other conservative groups fighting carbon emissions caps from New Jersey to California. According to salon.com, “Prop. 23 is the California ballot initiative that aims to suspend California’s pioneering Global Warming Solutions Act — AB 32. To suggest that the oil companies abhor it is akin to saying that Sarah Connor has a problem with robots.”
The fight is clearly a financial one between industry and the people, not a regional one between backwards republicans against progressives. This is made clear by students in the Deep South hub of the University of Alabama in Birmingham protesting a new coal mine, claiming that it will pollute their groundwater.
Protesting False Solutions, Development and the Gang Green’s Cronyism
Still, alternatives to coal are not having an easier time. According to Las Vegan Review-Journal, the Chemehuevi of the Colorado River and Fort Mohave, call the Mojave Desert a sacred place, and Tuesday, they came to a sacred site to join about 20 protesters who want to protect a 5.6-square-mile stretch of desert below the ridge—the spot where BrightSource Energy expects to break ground next month on what will be the world’s largest system of mirrors, or heliostats. The system will focus the sun’s energy on three solar towers to create heat to drive turbines to generate electricity for Southern California.
In other places, such as Terra Ceila Island, Florida, residents are fighting to ban more subdivisions and development, but not everything can be done through the government. Leaving the Wilderness Society of Australia after 12 years of acting as its executive director, Alec Marr has that much to say this week. “The cronyism that was rife in The Wilderness Society during the 1980s is in the process of being reintroduced on an unprecedented scale.” The Wilderness Society gained international notoriety with the 1982 blockade of Frank Road that stopped illegal logging in the Tasmanian rainforest that was greatly assisted by Earth First! and also helped to launch EF! in the region. EF!ers in Australia and all around the world stand in solidarity with Marr, the residents of Terra Ceila, the Chemehuevi and everyone else fighting industry and the destruction of the world this week.

Anti-GMO Protest at the White House

15 Sep

from Fish News

PROTEST rally is being planned in front of the White House in a bid to persuade President Obama to halt approval of the first genetically engineered salmon for human consumption.

The Center for Food Safety, Food & Water Watch and Friends of the Earth are leading the rally and press conference scheduled for tomorrow Thursday afternoon September 16, at 3.15pm EDT.

Protesters say that the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are expected to decide whether to approve the controversial product – Aquabounty’s genetically engineered (GE) salmon – at a series of remote hearings in Rockville, Md. this Sunday through to Monday.

The rally organisers say they are mounting the protest because they claim the FDA’s approval process is designed to limit public knowledge and participation and because approval of the GE salmon would jeopardise environmental and consumer health.

* They add: “In assessing the impact of GE salmon on consumers and the environment, the FDA admitted that, ‘Primary deference was given to controlled studies submitted by ABT (AquaBounty Technologies – the company producing the salmon.)’
* “No long-term or independent studies have been conducted to assess the human health risks associated with eating transgenic fish.
* “Despite AquaBounty’s claim to produce only sterile salmon, up to 5 percent of their genetically engineered salmon eggs could be fertile (and could therefore breed with wild populations), prompting the FDA to label their claims “potentially misleading”.
* “A large part of AquaBounty’s success hinges on GE salmon. The company has invested $50 million in the product, while posting zero sales and almost five million dollars in net losses in 2009.”

The rally and press conference will be held in front of the White House (near Lafayette Park) in Washington, DC.

Speakers include:
– Wenonah Hauter, Executive Director, Food & Water Watch
– Jostein Solheim, CEO, Ben & Jerry’s
– Jaydee Hanson, Senior Policy Analyst, Center for Food Safety
– Eric Hoffman, Biotechnology Policy Expert, Friends of the Earth

Ruckus Society Action Camp starts tomorrow

14 Sep

from Ruckus Society

Action Camp is Ruckus’s cornerstone program – where we bring together activists from all over who have a shared vision, and immerse them in a week-long training community to learn nonviolent direct action theory, strategy, planning, and hands-on tactics.

In a post-COP15 world, when it’s clear that our world governments refuse to take meaningful and effective action to avert catastrophic climate change, Ruckus’s Advanced Action Boot Camp for Eco-Justice is a prime opportunity for us to gather to deepen our skills and hone our strategy in order to build sustainable and just communities locally and globally.

This year, we are dedicating our Action Camp to focusing on Advanced skills for participants who have already completed intro trainings and/or have action experience.

CAMP DETAILS:

What: Advanced Action Boot Camp for Eco-Justice

Where: Harmony Park, Clarks Grove, MN (about 1 hr south of Minneapolis)

When: September 15-21, 2010 (full 7 days of training; participants should plan to arrive the evening of the 14th)

Who: Direct Action experienced activists working on ecological and environmental justice issues. Experience and skill-levels can vary; however, participants should have received some nonviolent direct action training in the past, and have action experience of some kind under their belts.

CAMP CURRICULUM:

Participants will be placed in one of the following tracks:

1. Advanced Action Climbing
2. Blockades & Occupations
3. Arts & Action Communications (includes Media, Messaging, Action Communications & Tech, Creative Resistance Arts)

And all participants will receive full-camp trainings in:

-Action Prep & Planning
-Scouting
-Action Strategy & Campaign Planning
-Action Roles
-and more!

We will be tent-camping outside, and have 3 gourmet meals per day prepared by long-time camp chefs!

Our advanced action camp will focus on the intersection of economic and environmental struggles, which we at Ruckus see as foundational to ALL struggles for justice – meaning, we want folks to apply who are going to use these skills in action for justice, and we will not be turning experienced folks away if their work isn’t environmentally focused, though we will seek to align your work with an eco-justice analysis.

click here to apply

Utah Agency Approves Oil-Sands Project

14 Sep

by Paul Foy

SALT LAKE CITY – A top Utah regulator approved plans Monday for the first commercial U.S. oil sands project.

John Baza, director of Utah’s Division of Oil, Gas & Mining, upheld an earlier decision by his staff to give Earth Energy Resources Inc. a permit to mine a 62-acre pit in eastern Utah.

Environmental activists had objected to the project and demanded a hearing held by Baza in July.

Baza concluded Monday that his staff followed all of the legal requirement in giving its approval for the tar sands project a year ago.

The company is still trying to raise $35 million for the project, said Glenn Snarr, president and chief operating officer for Calgary, Alberta-based Earth Energy, which needs only the local approval of Grand County to get started.

“We are working on (funding ) actively with a few parities and hope we’re getting closer to putting a shovel into the ground,” he said Monday.

Opponents, who argued that the project would dig up fragile topsoil and pollute groundwater, can still appeal Baza’s decision to a state board.

One of them, John Weisheit, a Colorado River guide and founder of Living Rivers, didn’t immediately return a message Monday from The Associated Press.

Baza’s personal review was unusual. He normally leaves decisions about mining permits to a staff of engineers and scientists and doesn’t sign off on approvals for permits. He agreed to hold a protest hearing to take objections from Grand County residents and environmental groups. The groups promised not to file a formal appeal to a state board pending Baza’s review.

Baza said his only role was to “make certain proper procedures were followed” by his staff of professionals.

Earth Energy insists it won’t pollute anything and will leave Utah’s oil sands as clean as beach sand after processing with a citrus-based solvent.

The company plans to truck the waxy crude to Salt Lake City for refining.

“It will be a good project for Utah,” company vice president Barclay Cuthbert testified in July at the protest hearing. “We’ll be providing energy that will be used in the state.”

The company plans to produce bitumen, a tar-like form of petroleum, from oil-soaked sands. For decades, other Utah operators have used oil sands as a poor-man’s asphalt, but nobody has tried to produce petroleum from U.S. oil sands on a scale planned by Earth Energy.