Some War Protestors Jailed; Others Set Free
As Desiree Fairooz sat with her Code Pink colleagues waiting for lawmakers and Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to arrive for a recent House committee hearing, she had no plans, she said, to get arrested. "I already had a case pending."
But she couldn't resist the opportunity when Rice walked in nearly unguarded, and she rushed the Cabinet member with fake blood on her hands. As Fairooz was being hauled from the room, Capitol Police arrested two other women who'd been sitting near her but hadn't done anything yet.
You can see a video of the October 24th event here.
One of the enduring images of Capitol Hill culture is the anguished protester being hustled by authorities out of a congressional hearing room, often hurling insults at scowling lawmakers as they leave. But this familiar scene is shrouded by a couple of Washington mysteries: What triggers an arrest? And what happens next when someone gets busted?
As it happens, there's no simple answer to either question. Capitol Police say they give wide discretion to individual officers on whether an evicted protestor gets arrested. Protestors say arrests seem based on whim, rather than any consistent policy. The same goes for what follows: Sometimes protestors are let go with a fine. Sometimes they spend the night in the slammer. Sometimes they are simply taken to the hallway and told to beat it.
Protest on Capitol Hill, it turns out, is a crapshoot.
More and more people are willing to take the odds, as a prolonged and unpopular war is producing a surge in civil disobedience on the Hill.
For decades, disruptions came from a broad group of complainants and were generally one-shot affairs - against a vote here, a confirmation there, said Mark Goldstone, a First Amendment attorney who has represented Capitol protesters in several precedent-setting cases.
Over the last several years, said a half-dozen Capitol Police officers, the anti-war group Code Pink has largely dominated the congressional heckling scene. Other anti-war activists occasionally get arrested, as do protesters with single-issue groups, said Melissa Merz, a spokeswoman with the D.C. Office of the Attorney General. But none approach Code Pink's level.
"Code Pink - that's it," said one officer. "It's just them," said another. "That's all I've ever seen," said a plainclothes officer.
The group's ubiquitous presence and the Democrats' takeover of Congress have brought uncertainty to the proceedings. "The Capitol Police are looking for direction from the committee chairs and it's been all over the map," said Goldstone. "The old rules used to be that if you did anything you'd be hauled out and most likely prosecuted. It's not an absolute certainty [anymore] that you'll be arrested or prosecuted. The rules are definitely changing."
Democratic committee chairmen are often sympathetic to the protesters' causes, he said - a claim backed by several Capitol Police officers. "They don't want to act like they're totally against them, but there are rules," said an officer in the Rayburn House Office Building.
What those rules are, exactly, remains in question. Capitol Police Sgt. Kimberly Schneider couldn't shed much light on the arrest policy. "That's kind of tricky," she said when asked what it takes to get collared, saying that officers have much discretion.
Said four-time arrestee Fairooz: "We all are discombobulated."
Take the polar bears. In late October, protesters in white bear suits danced and sang outside House office buildings to protest inaction on global warming. The experienced group was trying to avoid arrest. "We'd do as much as we could and as soon as the police said 'move' or 'leave,' we moved and wandered around" outside the various buildings, said organizer Adam Eidinger.
It didn't work. The police said, "'Hell with it, arrest them,'" figured Eidinger, who was hauled off to jail with other polar bears.
Or take Code Pink's Mona Hall, who was jailed for shouting at Army Gen. David Petraeus when he testified on Capitol Hill in September. Lydia Vickers, clad in a pink cape, stood on a chair yelling at the general, but she wasn't arrested.
The decision of who to remove from the hearing room belongs to the chairman of the committee, although police can act first if a protester appears particularly dangerous. Once a protester is removed, however, the committee chairman doesn't have final authority in whether they are charged or simply escorted out.
That doesn't mean they can't try to intervene. House Judiciary Committee Chairman John Conyers Jr. (D-Mich.) asks police that protesters "not be arrested but removed," said a panel spokesman. When Capitol Police arrested former U.S. Army Col. Anne Wright for disrupting a March hearing on the FBI's use of "national security letters," the civil rights veteran sent a senior staffer to pay her fine and "made sure that no further action was taken."
In the Senate, Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.), who announces before nearly every hearing that he will brook no misbehavior, said he enforces strict discipline but is unaware of whether protesters are arrested after ejection.
"I will ask police to remove them if they're disruptive. What the police do after that is up to them," Leahy said. (Sen. Arlen Specter [R-Pa.] had the same up-to-the-cops policy when he was chairman of the panel.)"What does happen to them?" Leahy inquired.
Whatever the current rules, Goldstone thinks that the confrontation with Rice will trigger a backlash. That Fairooz could get so close "has really freaked out a lot of people," he said, predicting that Capitol Police will implement an "arrest-first strategy."
A Capitol Police sergeant, and several officers who spoke on background, agreed. "I think there probably will be more arrests. The things they're doing have started to get intolerable," said the sergeant.
For now, Wright's punishment - known as a "post and forfeit" - is common for people with no previous record, said Merz. Wright will have an arrest on her record but no conviction. Merz estimated she sees several hundred such cases a year.
Protesters with a history of arrests are more likely to be formally charged and held overnight in the city's central cell block.
And as the protester awaits trial, the court often slaps a "stay away" order on her, banning visits to the Capitol, Senate or House buildings. The ban can be lifted, however, with a specific invitation from a member of Congress for a particular hearing or meeting.
Capitol Police think that the stay-away orders could reduce the number of protests. "A bunch of their ringleaders have 'stay aways,' so maybe the others might decide not to come by," said a police sergeant. But Fairooz was under a "stay away" order when she confronted Rice; a letter she carried allowed her entry.
Once the case goes to court, a protester who pleads guilty "very rarely" gets jail time, said U.S. Attorney's Office spokesman Channing Phillips. Those who plead not guilty, said Goldstone, don't often fare well, but there is an exception: "We have a higher likelihood of winning the case if it's a D.C. issue," he said, citing cases where local activists were demonstrating in favor of D.C. statehood.
Sometimes Goldstone relies on "the tourist standard." He helped establish this legal threshold in the late 1980s while defending activists who played dead on the Capitol Rotunda floor to protest aid to the Nicaraguan contras.
Simply stated, the tourist standard says that if the disruption caused by a group of protesters is roughly comparable to that caused by a group of gabbing tourists, then the protesters are within their right to express themselves. If they go beyond that standard? Guilty.
Or not. "I've been doing this 23 years, and I still can't figure it out," said Goldstone.
© 2007 Politico.com
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10 Comments so far
Show AllProtestors aren't making a dent in the corruption of our government and all the peace marches go unsung due to the media's lack of interest. The only recourse now is to hit them in the pocket book. Stop paying taxes on a broad scale.
"...The Capitol Police are looking for direction from the committee chairs..." What is this? The police should enforce the law fairly and impartially, not look after politicians' interests. I take it everyone here is familiar with Naomi Wolf's recent posts - see http://www.commondreams.org/archive/2007/11/05/5018/ - there's also a video of her giving a lecture last week in Seattle on Google/Youtube that is well worth watching, even though dear Naomi can get a bit marmy.
Liberty is surrendered one brick at a time. The freedom to protest is more than just the freedom to speak; it is the freedom to shout. We give it up at our peril.
Hearings should never be a place for physical demonstrations. Buttons and t-shirts should be allowed. Anything that might be deemed a physican threat to attendees should not. Just because the demonstrator knows that s/he is not a physical threat doesn't mean anybody else does. Nobody, not even Condi, should be stalked or harassed.
One of the things that the "free" "democratic" USA hated about The Soviet Union/Communists...the blatant squashing of any disent/public protest.
The only difference now between US an them, is THEY had the KGB.
Grappa, they are going to be left with what is happening with my 17 yr old daughter, group /////UNCLASSIFIED////// group emails from recruiter's AKA: Pigs That Want To Send My Daughter Away To Get Murdered.
My personal email address, addressing her, and there lies and money, that to the impoverished, make them jump at the chance.
Repeated requests from these kidnapper's of our chidren, as to where they got MY personal email address and try to kill my girl, albeit
//////UNCLASSIFIED//////, as all of these emails are marked, they target 17 year olds and refuse to tell me how they got MY email address. I suppose another one of our right's was deleted when I took a pee!
The first thug forgot to BC the send to list and now I have all of these poor kid's email addresses and a letter telling them the truth of what will happen if they join, it is clearly marked //////UNCLASSIFIED//////, I am USAF disabled Vet, I know what these recruiters do. They will never, ever, ever get my 17 year old daughter, I assured them of that.
Thank goodness for all of the PINK's with advice for a comrade without arms. I am afraid to wear any pink, Homeland Security will be at my door, right quick, being husband that is Muslim, a PINK, help VETS4PEACE and in Paris, I'll meet and protest with the Ladie's in Black. What a Christmas, can't wait. Maybe, I'll just stay in Europe where I'm not wanted, probably more wanted there then in the US, come to think.....
What really pisses me off; I have two grandsons who, when you look them in the eyes you see the sparkle of young life. What kind of a world are these rulers, idiots going to leave them?
True, no one is above the law, that being said Condolezza Rice should be doing community service for the rest of her life. Maybe pulling weeds at Arlington Cemetary would be a good job for her.
Pelosi, like Bush, is apparently a crypto-neocon. Inactions (i.e. no impeachment) speak louder than words or party banners.
Desiree Fairooz is a brave and patriotic American.
She held her hands up to the wrong person.
It does NO GOOD at all to hold your hands up to a fascist. They've already sold themselves and the country down the river for a few nickels.
The person that needs red hands in her face is Nancy Pelosi. Her utter failure to do her job has resulted in many more troop and Iraqi deaths.
Ms. Fairooz should concentrate her valiant effort on the ones that might still be able to be reached. The ones that have been completely corrupted are gone and not worth the time.
These are symbolic actions: worth doing, and I'm grateful to those who are willing to do them, but ultimately easy to ignore.
The only thing Congressmembers really care about is getting re-elected. If you want to put real pressure on them, you have to run against them - in the real election. Primary challenges are a nuisance, and once in a while they lose, but they don't challenge the party's hold on that seat. (Remember Lieberman?)
Run against them in the main election. That's what the Oregon Green Party is doing: challenging all 5 Oregon House members with peace movement candidates. And the idea is spreading across the country - it's what Cindy Sheehan is doing (she might win: she's a dream candidate), and other Green Parties. If the Democrats continue as they have been, refusing to challenge Bush in any effective way, they may well lose the next election, and there may well be Green Party Congresspeople.
It's the one thing they really care about.