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                                     News, commentary, opinion on politics, government, books, social trends, American life, travel, cycling, books, other stuff

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Three months in jail instead of seven years for Cecily McMillian for hitting back with her elbow at a police officer who grabbed her from behind. Thats the judges decision. Here is a clip from the NY Times with a link to the full story.

A woman whose assault case had become a cause celebre, first among Occupy Wall Street supporters and then expanding well beyond the movement, was sentenced to three months in jail on Monday(4.19.14), as a judge rejected calls for her immediate release.

The woman, Cecily McMillan, 25, a graduate student at the New School and a volunteer labor organizer,  was convicted two weeks ago of assaulting a police officer at Zuccotti Park in Manhattan in 2012.

GUILTY VERDICT   See below

GUILTY VERDICT   See below

CLICK HERE to read the full story in the NY Times. Commentary and other information follows below.

The Occupy Wall Street demonstrations, which spread briefly around the world, are long since over, having been run out of the park In New York where they had set up, with similar results across the U.S. The trials of people arrested, however, move slowly forward. The following is a republication of a commentary from Chris Hedges. For anyone who knows his writing, Hedges is an aggressive and sometimes depressing writer with deeply negative views about corporate America. Nonetheless, his reporting and comments on one of the Occupy trails in New York are quite interesting and worthy of consideration.

Published: Tuesday 29 April 2014

The trial of McMillan, 25, is one of the last criminal cases originating from the Occupy protest movement. It is also one of the most emblematic. The state, after the coordinated nationwide eradication of Occupy encampments, has relentlessly used the courts to harass and neutralize Occupy activists...

Cecily McMillan, wearing a red dress and high heels, her dark, shoulder-length hair stylishly curled, sat behind a table with her two lawyers Friday morning facing Judge Ronald A. Zweibel in Room 1116 at the Manhattan Criminal Court. The judge seems to have alternated between boredom and rage throughout the trial, now three weeks old. He has repeatedly thrown caustic barbs at her lawyers and arbitrarily shut down many of the avenues of defense. Friday was no exception.

The silver-haired Zweibel curtly dismissed a request by defense lawyers Martin Stolar and Rebecca Heinegg for a motion to dismiss the case. The lawyers had attempted to argue that testimony from the officer who arrested McMillan violated Fifth Amendment restrictions against the use of comments made by a defendant at the time of arrest. But the judge, who has issued an unusual gag order that bars McMillans lawyers from speaking to the press, was visibly impatient, snapping, This debate is going to end. He then went on to uphold his earlier decision to heavily censor videos taken during the arrest, a decision Stolar said “is cutting the heart out of my ability to refute” the prosecutions charge that McMillan faked a medical seizure in an attempt to avoid being arrested. Im totally handicapped, Stolar lamented to Zweibel.

The trial of McMillan, 25, is one of the last criminal cases originating from the Occupy protest movement. It is also one of the most emblematic. The state, after the coordinated nationwide eradication of Occupy encampments, has relentlessly used the courts to harass and neutralize Occupy activists, often handing out long probation terms that come with activists forced acceptance of felony charges. A felony charge makes it harder to find employment and bars those with such convictions from serving on juries or working for law enforcement. Most important, the long probation terms effectively prohibit further activism.

The Occupy Wall Street movement was not only about battling back against the rise of a corporate oligarchy that has sabotaged our democracy and made war on the poor and the working class. It was also about our right to peaceful protest. The police in cities across the country have been used to short-circuit this right. I watched New York City police during the Occupy protests yank people from sidewalks into the street, where they would be arrested. I saw police routinely shove protesters and beat them with batons. I saw activists slammed against police cars. I saw groups of protesters suddenly herded like sheep to be confined within police barricades. I saw, and was caught up in, mass arrests in which those around me were handcuffed and then thrown violently onto the sidewalk. The police often blasted pepper spray into faces from inches away, temporarily blinding the victims. This violence, carried out against nonviolent protesters, came amid draconian city ordinances that effectively outlawed protest and banned demonstrators from public spaces. It was buttressed by heavy police infiltration and surveillance of the movement. When the press or activists attempted to document the abuse by police they often were assaulted or otherwise blocked from taking photographs or videos. The message the state delivered is clear: Do not dissent.  And the McMillan trial is part of the process.

McMillan, who spent part of her childhood living in a trailer park in rural Texas and who now is a graduate student at The New School for Social Research in New York, found herself with several hundred other activists at Zuccotti Park in Manhattan in March 2012 to mark the six-month anniversary of the start of Occupy Wall Street. The city, fearing the re-establishment of an encampment, deployed large numbers of police officers to clear the park just before midnight of that March 17. The police, heavily shielded, stormed into the gathering in fast-moving lines. Activists were shoved, hit, knocked to the ground. Some ran for safety. More than 100 people were arrested on the anniversary. After the violence, numerous activists would call the police aggression perhaps the worst experienced by the Occupy movement. In the mayhem McMillan—whose bruises were photographed and subsequently were displayed to Amy Goodman on the “Democracy Now!” radio, television and Internet program—was manhandled by a police officer later identified as Grantley Bovell. [Click here to see McMillan interviewed on “Democracy Now!” She appears in the last 10 minutes of the program.]

Bovell, who was in plainclothes and who, according to McMillan, did not identify himself as a policeman, allegedly came up from behind and grabbed McMillan™s breast—a perverse form of assault by New York City police that other female activists, too, suffered during Occupy protests. McMillan™s elbow made contact with his face, just below the eye, in what she says appeared to be a reaction to the grope; she says she has no memory of the incident. By the end of the confrontation she was lying on the ground bruised, beaten and convulsing. She was taken to a hospital emergency room, where police handcuffed her to a bed.

Had McMillan not been an Occupy activist, the trial that came out of this beating would have been about her receiving restitution from New York City for police abuse. Instead, she is charged with felony assault in the second degree and facing up to seven years in prison. She is expected to take the witness stand this week.

McMillans journey from a rural Texas backwater to a courtroom in New York is a journey of political awakening. Her parents, divorced when she was small, had little money. At times she lived with her mother, who had jobs at a Dillards department store, as an accountant for a pool hall and later, after earning a degree, as a registered nurse doing shifts of 60 to 70 hours in hospitals and nursing homes. There were also painful stretches of unemployment. Her mother, from Mexico, was circumspect about revealing her ethnicity in the deeply white conservative community, one in which blacks and other minorities were not welcome. She never taught her son and daughter Spanish. As a girl McMillan saw her mother struggle with severe depression and, in one terrifying instance, taken to a hospital after she passed out from an overdose of prescription pills. For periods, McMillan, her brother and her mother survived on welfare, and they moved often; she attended 13 schools, including five high schools. Her father worked at a Dominos Pizza shop, striving in vain to become a manager.

Racism was endemic in the area. There was a sign in the nearby town of Vidor, not far from the Louisiana state line, that read: If you are dark get out before  dark. It had replaced an earlier sign that said: Dont let the sun set on your ass nigger.

 

The families around the McMillans struggled with all the problems that come with poverty: alcoholism, drug abuse, domestic and sexual violence and despair. Cecilys brother is serving a seven-year sentence for drug possession in Texas.

I grew up around the violence of poverty, she told me as she lit another cigarette while I interviewed her Thursday night in an apartment in Harlem. She smoked nearly nonstop during our conversation. It was normative.

Her parents worked hard to fit into the culture of rural Texas. She said she competed as a child in a beauty pageant called Tiny Miss Valentines of Texas. She was on a cheerleading team. She ran track.

My parents tried, McMillan said. They wanted to give us everything. They wanted us to have a lifestyle we could be proud of. My parents, because we were ... at times poor, were ashamed of who we were. I asked my mother to buy Tommy Hilfiger clothes at the Salvation Army and cut off the insignias and sew them onto my old clothes. I was afraid of being made fun of at school. My mother got up at 5 in the morning before work and made us pigs in a blanket, putting the little sausages into croissants. She wanted my brother and myself to be proud of her. She really did a lot with so very little.

 

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McMillan spent most of her summers with her paternal grandparents in Atlanta. They opened her to another world. She attended a Spanish-language camp. She went to blues and jazz festivals. She attended a theater summer camp called Seven Stages that focused on cultural and political perspectives. When she was a teenager she wrote collective theater pieces, including one in which she wore the American flag as a burka and sang “The Star-Spangled Banner” as a character dressed as Darth Vader walked onto the stage. “My father was horrified,” she said. “He walked out of the theater.”

As a 13-year-old she was in a play called I Hate Anne Frank. It was about American sensationalism, she said. It asked how the entire experience of the Holocaust could be turned for many people into a girls positive narrative, a disgusting false optimism. It was not well received.

Art, and especially theater, awakened her to the realities endured by others, from Muslims in the Middle East to the black underclass in the United States. And, unlike in the Texas towns where she grew up, she made black friends in Atlanta. She began to wonder about the lives of the African-Americans who lived near her in rural Texas. What was it like for them? How did they endure racism? Did black women suffer the way her mother suffered? She began to openly question and challenge the conventions and assumptions of the white community around her. She read extensively, falling in love with the work of Albert Camus.

I would miss bus stops because I would be reading The Stranger or  The Plague, she said. Existentialism to me was beautiful. It said the world is shit. It said this is the lot humanity is given. But human beings have to try their best. They swim and they swim and they swim against the waves until they cant swim any longer. You can choose to view these waves as personal attacks against you and give up, or you can swim. And Camus said you should not sell out for a lifeboat. These forces are impersonal. They are structural. I learned from Camus how to live and how to die with dignity.

She attended Lawrence University in Appleton, Wis., under a scholarship. After graduating, she worked as a student teacher in inner-city schools in Chicago. She joined the Young Democratic Socialists. She enrolled at The New School for Social Research in New York City in the fall of 2011 to write a master™s thesis on Jane Addams, Hull House and the settlement movement. The Occupy Wall Street demonstrations began in the city six days after she arrived at the school. She said that at first she was disappointed with the Occupy encampment in Zuccotti Park. She felt it lacked political maturity. She had participated in the political  protests in Madison, Wis., in early 2011, and the solidarity of government workers, including police, that she saw there deeply influenced her feelings about activism. She came away strongly committed to nonviolence.

Police officers sat down to occupy with us, she said of the protests in Madison. It was unprecedented. We were with teachers, the fire department, police and students. You walked around saying thank you to the police. You embraced police. [But then] I went to Occupy in New York and saw drum circles and people walking around naked. There was yoga. I thought, what is this? I thought for many protesters this was just some social experiment they would go back to their academic institutions and write about. Where I come from people are hungry. Women are getting raped. Fathers and stepfathers beat the shit out of children. People die. ... Some people would rather not live.

At first I looked at the occupiers and thought they were so bourgeois, she went on. I thought they were trying to dress down their class by wearing all black. I was disgusted. But in the end I was wrong. I wasnt meeting them where they were. These were kids, some of whom had been to Harvard, Yale or Princeton, [who] were the jewels of their familys legacy. They were doing something radical. They had never been given the opportunity to have their voices heard, to have their own agency. They werent clowns like I first thought. They were really brave. We learned to have conversations. And that was beautiful. And these people are my friends today.

She joined Occupy Wall Streets Demands Working Group, which attempted to draw up a list of core demands that the movement could endorse. She continued with her academic work at The New School for Social Research. She worked part time. She was visiting her grandmother, who was terminally ill in Atlanta, in November 2011 when the police cleared out the Zuccotti Park encampment. When she returned to the New School she took part in the occupation of school buildings, but some occupiers trashed the property, leading to a bitter disagreement between her and other activists. Radical elements in the movement who supported the property destruction held a shadow trial and condemned her as a bureaucratic provocateur.

I started putting together an Affinity Group after the New School occupation, she said. I realized there was a serious problem between anarchists and socialists and democratic socialists. I wanted, like Bayard Rustin, to bring everyone together. I wanted to repair the fractured left. I wanted to build coalitions.

McMillan knows that the judge in her trial, who in one comment on the lawyers judge-rating website The Robing Room is called a prosecutor with a robe has stacked the deck against her.

The British newspaper The Guardian reported that Bovell, the policeman who McMillan says beat her, has been investigated at least twice by the internal affairs department of the New York City Police Department. In one of these cases, Bovell and his partner were sued for allegedly using an unmarked police car to strike a 17-year-old fleeing on a dirt bike. The teenager said his nose was broken, two teeth were knocked out and his forehead was lacerated. The case was settled out of court for a substantial amount of money. The officer was also captured on a video that appeared to show him kicking a suspect on the floor of a Bronx  grocery.

In addition, Bovell was involved in a  ticket-fixing scandal in his Bronx precinct.

Austin Guest, 33, a graduate of Harvard University who was arrested at Zuccotti Park on the night McMillan was assaulted, is suing Bovell for allegedly intentionally banging his head on the internal stairs of an MTA bus that took him and other activists in for processing.

The judge has ruled that Bovells involvement in the cases stemming from the chasing of the youth on the dirt bike and the Guest arrest cannot be presented as evidence in the McMillan case.

The corporate state, which has proved utterly incapable of addressing the grievances and injustices endured by the underclass, is extremely nervous about the mass movements that have swept the country in recent years. And if protests erupt again, as I think they will, the state hopes it will have neutralized much of the potential leadership. Being an activist in peaceful mass protest is the only real crime McMillan has committed.

Everyone should come and sit through this trial to see the facade that we call democracy, she said. The resources one needs to even remotely have a chance in this system are beyond most people. Thank God I went to college and graduate school. Thank God Marty and Rebecca are my lawyers. Thank God I am an organizer and have some agency. I wait in line every day to go to court. I read above my head the words that read something like Justice Is the Foundation of Democracy.  And I wonder if this is Alice in Wonderland. People of color, people who are poor, the people where I come from, do not have a chance for justice. Those people have no choice but to plea out. They can never win in court. I can fight it. This makes me a very privileged person. It is disgusting to think that this is what our democracy has come to. I am heartbreakingly sad for our country.

Here is a link to the website about this trail.

Here is a link to the website about this trail.

GUILTY VERDICT   See below

GUILTY VERDICT   See below

GUILTY VERDICT   See below

TerryReport comment:

The suppression of dissent is an undeniable fact in America. It starts with the idea that anyone who wants to protest anything is strange, different, weird. In turn, the police and city administrators know that any taint of law breaking will likely turn the public against the demonstrators. The public will see or hear the reports of laws being broken and not take the time to learn the circumstances (in many cases, no details are offered to the public in initial reports). So, if it is just a bunch of weird rowdy protesters getting thrown in jail, who really cares? Why werent they somewhere earning a living instead of causing trouble in the streets?, many people will say more or less automatically.

The former police chief in the District of Columbia, Charles Ramsey (now in Philadelphia) would tell reporters how important dissent is in democracy. Ramsey, who is of mixed parentage, is generally identified as being African-American. The Chief would talk about the Civil Rights movement and how important it was in bringing change to the United States, then his officers would go forth pepper spraying and arresting as many protesters as possible. Under his leadership, the DC police even raided houses were demonstrations were being planned and took protesters into custody on the nights before schedule events.

Dissent is one of the most important and difficult acts for patriotic citizens. It is important because, even if the demonstrators are not completely right in the points they want to make, they can help force a society to look at itself and see what it might be doing wrong. Dissenters help to set the limits of reasonable dialog. The Occupy movement focused attention on the 1% of the richest Americans, and income/wealth inequality, and that attention has come to the forefront of consideration. That is a very important accomplishment. Closed societies allow no dissent. We allow it here, but we dont really like it and we havent found a way to accommodate views that differ from the majority. A more mature society would find better ways of dealing with dissent than staging crackdowns by police and turning peaceful citizens into law breakers by attacking them.

This is from the website, Justice For Cecily

Cecily was found guilty.

We are devastated by the Jurys verdict today (Monday, May 5th, 2014). It has been clear from day one that Cecily has not received a fair and open trial. The job of a judge during a jury trial isnt to guide the verdict to fit his opinion. Judge Zweibel, who consistently suppressed evidence, has demonstrated his clear bias by consistently siding with the prosecution. In addition to suppressing evidence, he imposed a gag order on Cecilys lawyers, which is a clear violation of their 1st Amendment Rights, and placed the burden of proof on the defense, not the prosecution. He is rightly known as a prosecutor in robes.

Beyond Judge Zweibel, it is disgusting to see vast resources from taxpayers wasted for over two years to prosecute Cecily. Manhattan DA Cy Vance has refused to drop this case, pursuing maximum charges against Cecily while ignoring police violence and misconduct. This is unfortunately not isolated to Cecilys case but is indicative of a system concerned not with justice but with the unrelenting harassment of dissenters and the powerless.

In the two years awaiting trial, Cecily was never offered anything less than a felony charge, a charge that would stay with her for the rest of her life. While awaiting a trial, Cecily has lived in limbo for two years, not knowing what her future would be, forced to re-live her trauma every one of those days. Beyond the sexual assault and physical injuries she sustained, Cecily suffered PTSD and has had difficulty finishing her masters degree and continuing her work as a union organizer and activist.

Despite the chilling precedent this verdict puts forth for activists, we will not be deterred from seeking social and economic justice, as evidenced in the courtroom today. Though weve held our tongues throughout this trial as Cecily was personally attacked and degraded, we could not stand silent today in the face of such a gross miscarriage of justice. The people had to speak truth to power today by standing up and will continue to do so as long as this justice system continues to punish the 99% and protect the 1%.

As journalist Chris Hedges said in a recent article, The corporate state, which has proved utterly incapable of addressing the grievances and injustices endured by the underclass, is extremely nervous about the mass movements that have swept the country in recent years. And if protests erupt again, as I think they will, the state hopes it will have neutralized much of the potential leadership. Being an activist in peaceful mass protest is the only real crime McMillan has committed.

We recognize that, as poorly as Cecily has been treated these past two years, she was lucky enough to have an amazing support system comprised of representation from the National Lawyers Guild and Mutant Legal, as well as significant financial help from supporters of Occupy Wall Street and a team of ten who tirelessly worked to bring her case to light and support her through this trying time. Its harrowing to imagine how many unfortunate people encounter this system without the resources Cecily had, though we know countless innocent people are forced to plea to felonies and ruin their lives every day in this building.

We will be fighting this unjust verdict in the court of appeals. Cecilys lawyers are optimistic, given the circumstances of the case and the gross bias demonstrated throughout, that we can win on appeal.

Thank you all for your ongoing support throughout this trial. We know that many share our outrage at this verdict. Please continue your support: we will keep this website updated with how you can best help.

Here is a link to the website about this trail.

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