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U.S. Plowshares Imprisoned resistingTrident-2Grandmothers, 2 JesuitPriests& aNun

Ciaron Plowshares/ Giuseppe Conlon House/ London Catholic Worker | 29.03.2011 05:43 | Anti-militarism | World

* You can send a letter or postcard of solidarity for redirection to any of the individiual anti-war prisoners Ane Montgomery, Bill Bischel, Susan Crane, Lynne Greenwald, Steve Kelly c/- Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent Action
16159 Clear Creek Road NW Poulsbo, WA 98370 U.S.A.
*Folks at Ground Zero wil add the Fed prison numbers and redirect to the prison,

"Two Grandmothers, Two Priests and a Nun go onto a Nuclear Base:
Prison for Peacemakers in Tacoma WA"
By Bill Quigley.

(Bill is Legal Director of the Center for Constitutional Rights and a
law professor at Loyola University New Orleans. Bill is part of the
legal team supporting the defendants and was in Tacoma for the
sentencing. You can learn more about the defendants at
disarmnowplowshares.wordpress.com.

Two grandmothers, two priests and a nun were sentenced in federal
court in Tacoma, WA Monday March 28, 2011, for confronting hundreds of
US nuclear weapons stockpiled for use by the deadly Trident
submarines.

Sentenced were: Sr. Anne Montgomery, 83, a Sacred Heart sister from
New York, who was ordered to serve 2 months in federal prison and 4
months electronic home confinement; Fr. Bill Bischel, 81, a Jesuit
priest from Tacoma Washington, ordered to serve 3 months in prison and
6 months electronic home confinement; Susan Crane, 67, a member of the
Jonah House community in Baltimore, Maryland, ordered to serve 15
months in federal prison; Lynne Greenwald, 60, a nurse from Bremerton
Washington, ordered to serve 6 months in federal prison; and Fr. Steve
Kelly, 60, a Jesuit priest from Oakland California, ordered to serve
15 months in federal prison. They were also ordered to pay $5300 each
and serve an additional year in supervised probation. Bischel and
Greenwald are active members of the Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent
Action, a community resisting Trident nuclear weapons since 1977.

What did they do?

Seattle Times: “Old vs. Navy,” Bill Bichsel, SJ
 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=63B_PaQatco

In the darkness of All Souls night, November 2, 2009, the five quietly
cut through a chain link perimeter fence topped with barbed wire.

Carefully stepping through the hole in the fence, they entered into
the Kitsap-Bangor Navy Base outside of Tacoma Washington – home to
hundreds of nuclear warheads used in the eight Trident submarines
based there.

Walking undetected through the heavily guarded base for hours, they
covered nearly four miles before they came to where the nuclear
missiles are stored.

The storage area was lit up by floodlights. Dozens of small gray
bunkers – about the size of double car garages - were ringed by two
more chain link fences topped with taut barbed wire.

USE OF DEADLY FORCE AUTHORIZED one sign boldly proclaimed. Another
said WARNING RESTRICTED AREA and was decorated with skull and
crossbones.

This was it – the heart of the US Trident Pacific nuclear weapon
program. Nuclear weapons were stored in the bunkers inside the
double fence line.

Wire cutters cut through these fences as well. There they unfurled
hand painted banners which said “Disarm Now Plowshares: Trident
Illegal and Immoral”, knelt to pray and waited to be arrested as dawn
broke.

What were they protesting against?

Each of the eight Trident submarines has 24 nuclear missiles on it.
The Ground Zero community explains that each of the 24 missiles on one
submarine have multiple warheads in it and each warhead has thirty
times the destructive power of the weapon used on Hiroshima. One
fully loaded Trident submarine carries 192 warheads, each designed to
explode with the power of 475 kilotons of TNT force. If detonated at
ground level each would blow out a crater nearly half a mile wide and
several hundred feet deep.

The bunker area where they were arrested is where the extra missiles are stored.

In December 2010, the five went on trial before a jury in federal
court in Tacoma charged with felony damage to government property,
conspiracy and trespass.

But before the trial began the court told the defendants what they
could and could not do in court. Evidence of the medical consequences
of nuclear weapons? Not allowed. Evidence that first strike nuclear
weapons are illegal under US and international law? Not allowed.
Evidence that there were massive international nonviolent action
campaigns against Trident missiles where juries acquitted protestors?
Not allowed. The defense of necessity where violating a small law,
like breaking down a door, is allowed where the actions are taken to
prevent a greater harm, like saving a child trapped in a burning
building? Not allowed.

Most of the jurors appeared baffled when defendants admitted what they
did in their opening statements. They remained baffled when questions
about nuclear weapons were objected to by the prosecutor and excluded
by the court. The court and the prosecutor repeatedly focused the
jury on their position that this was a trial about a fence.
Defendants tried valiantly to point to the elephant in the room – the
hundreds of nuclear weapons.

Each defendant gave an opening and closing statement explaining, as
much as they were allowed, why they risked deadly force to expose the
US nuclear arsenal.

Sojourner Truth was discussed as were Rosa Parks, Gandhi, and Martin
Luther King.

The resistance of the defendants was in the spirit of the civil rights
movement, the labor movement, the suffragist movement, the abolition
of slavery movement.

Crowds packed the courtroom each of the five days of trial. Each
night there was a potluck and a discussion of nuclear weapons by
medical, legal and international experts who came for the trial but
who were largely muted by the prosecution and the court.

While the jury held out over the weekend, ultimately, the activists
were convicted.

Hundreds packed the courthouse today supporting the defendants. The
judge acknowledged the good work of each defendant, admitted that
prison was unlikely to deter them from further actions, but said he
was bound to uphold the law otherwise anarchy would break out and take
down society.

The prosecutors asked the judge to send all the defendants to federal
prison plus three years supervised probation plus pay over five
thousand dollars. The specific jail time asked for ranged from 3
years for Fr. Kelly, 30 months for Susan Crane, Lynne Greenwald, 7
months in jail plus 7 months home confinement, Sr. Anne Montgomery and
Fr. Bill Bichsel, 6 months jail plus 6 months home confinement.

Each of the defendants went right into prison from the courtroom as
the spectators sang to them. Outside the courthouse, other activists
pledged to confront the Trident in whatever way is necessary to stop
the illegal and immoral weapons of mass destruction.

For more info go to:  http://disarmnowplowshares.wordpress.com/

Or contact:
Leonard Eiger (U.S.A.),
+ 1 425-445-2190,

Ground Zero Center for Nonviolent Action
16159 Clear Creek Road NW Poulsbo, WA 98370
U.S.A.

Related Link:  http://disarmnowplowshares.wordpress.com/

Ciaron Plowshares/ Giuseppe Conlon House/ London Catholic Worker
- e-mail: dublincatholicworkerATyahoo.co.uk
- Homepage: http://www.craftech.com/~dcpledge/brandywine/plow/Chronology.html