ANTI-TRUMP PROTEST HEARING START
Police fire pepper spray those protesting against the inauguration of Donald Trump : AP Photo |
A
status hearing for three batches of defendants arrested during the inauguration
of US President Donald Trump is slated for Friday.
The
next trial, which is for seven defendants, could start as early as February.
That
batch has seen their charges reduced to misdemeanours and will have a bench
trial, meaning the judge will determine their verdict rather than a jury.
The
22 defendants are among 188 still people facing a slew of charges related to
their alleged participation in a rally against Trump's inauguration in
Washington, DC, on January 20, 2017.
Most
of the 188 people - known collectively as the "J20 defendants" - are
facing a swath of felony charges that could land them behind bars for several
decades.
Erin
Lemkey, a 35-year-old defendant in an upcoming batch of seven, described the
attempt to prosecute Inauguration Day protesters as "draconian".
"If
they put one anti-capitalist protest through the ringer, it's a showcase for
the new range of possible penalties for other protests," Lemkey told that, arguing that the case could set a precedent for authorities to
intensify the criminalisation of other protest groups and activists.
Mass arrests
During
the anti-fascist bloc march on January 20, police attacked demonstrators with
tear gas and sound grenades, surrounding them and carrying out mass arrests.
Among
those detained were demonstrators, medics, legal observers, reporters and bystanders.
More than 230 people were charged with felony rioting.
In
April, the DC Superior Court returned a superseding indictment that included
additional felony charges for 212 defendants, three of whom were not among the
initial group of those who were charged on January 21.
With
new felony charges including urging to riot, conspiracy to riot and destruction
of property, many of the defendants were facing more than 70 years in prison.
Some
charges have been dropped and others reduced, putting the bulk of the
defendants at risk of more than six decades behind bars.
Authorities
allege that demonstrators carried out more than $100,000 worth of property
damage and endangered police officers.
"There
were plenty of people who [aren't now defendants] who were harshly sprayed,
pushed and shocked and scared by exploding devices," Lemkey recalled.
"The
atmosphere was in the air was very much established by police and their arsenal
of tools. That continued to happen even while people were kettled," she
said, referring to a police tactic that involves confining demonstrators to a
small area.
Rights
groups and watchdogs subsequently denounced the police officers' use of force
against demonstrators and others during the demonstration.
Last
month, six people who made up the first batch of defendants, who were facing
charges that could have put them in prison for up to 51 years, were found not
guilty on all counts.
After
that verdict, the District of Columbia US Attorney's Office released a
statement expressing its appreciation of the jury's "close examination of
the individual conduct and intent of each defendant during this trial".
"In
the remaining pending cases, we look forward to the same rigorous review for
each defendant," the statement said.
Describing
the first trial's verdict as "a hopeful sign", ACLU-DC senior lawyer
Scott Michelman said Americans "will still have to grapple with the
chilling effect of the prosecutors' actions".
"We
shouldn't pretend that now six people have been acquitted and its full speed
ahead for the first amendment and no one has paid a price and no speech has
been chilled," he told .
"Even
those acquitted, they spent months and months dealing with anxiety and
defending themselves, with this cloud hanging over their heads."
For
her part, Lemkey hopes the not guilty verdict of the first trial will inspire
broader solidarity with the remaining defendants.
"I
hope that the success that was had with the first trial ripples out and reaches
people and causes them to engage with the case," Lemkey said.
"I
think that people need that sense of hope, and there is a very interesting
fight going on that they could be a part of as people who protest against the
Trump administration, racism, sexism and inequality."
SOURCE:
AL JAZEERA
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