Showing posts with label Timothy DeChristopher. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Timothy DeChristopher. Show all posts

Friday, January 15, 2016

Quaker observer to the Delta Five Trial

Delta_5_Trial (1 of 4)500x750This  is a picture of my friend Abby up in the tripod with my friend Patrick chained to the front leg, and my colleague Liz at the back left next to Jackie and to the right is Mike on Sept 2. 2014.  This week on most days of the weeks I joined about a 100 other supporters in attending the trial of the "Delta 5".  (Delta for the train yard their action took place in, and the scientific word for change.)   You see in my state the fossil fuel industry is trying to put record amounts of coal, oil and gas through our state on trains and pipelines in a desperate effort to get it to port.  The "carbon corridor" is opposed by the activist community because it would bring several times the amount of carbon to market than the long opposed and now dead XL pipeline would have thus posing a deadly climate threat.  Therefore, my friends constructed this tripod and sat in it for 8 hours blocking an exploding oil train.   We call them exploding oil trains because since they started in 2010 traveling with the more explosive crude Bakken shale (not the regular oil that use to ship) there have been regular derailments and explosions of these trains.  The most disturbing was the fireball that became the small town of Lac Megantic in Canada that incinerated 47 souls almost immediately and took out the downtown center of the town.  At least 3 of these trains roll through downtown Seattle under our city core everyday threatening to make it its own 911 catastrophe if one ever goes up.

When I first saw this photo it was small enough I could not see Abby's face, but the message of the sign so characteristically reaching out to the workers while opposing the trains, and smiling face and energy made me think "oh that person reminds me of Abby."  Hours later I was to realize why...because it was Abby.  So this week was their trial.

Last week they had submitted a brief asking to be able to use the defense of necessity.  The judge first said No in a 25 page brief.   But they asked him to reconsider.  Lawyers said this would never happen that judges don't reverse themselves.  After 20 minutes in his chambers the judge came out and said:  "I have recently in a talk said Judges need to use more humility.  I am going to allow necessity".   Necessity is an ancient defense that defendants in civil disobedience trials often try to use but are rarely granted.  It basically says:  It was necessary to break the law to prevent a greater harm."  This was a historic trial because it was the first time in the US that the necessity defense was allowed for a climate case.

The first day was spent on jury selection and opening statements.  I was disturbed as I always am by the farce of a "jury of your peers" since both the prosecutor and the defense were allowed to ask them questions "to get to know them" that included questions about their beliefs about protests, etc.  These values based questions quickly identified the left from the right and then out of a jury pool of 60 through a fixed number of exclusions it was widowed down to 6 jurors.

On the second day of the trial the prosecution speed through it case only calling half the witnesses they had said they would - primarily police and BNSF workers who identified the defendants as present on the tracks.  Then 4 of the defendants gave powerful opening statements explaining why they had acted as they had.  Unlike other cases I have seen for civil disobedience where the defendants are not allowed to say why they did any of the things they did because it is deemed not relevant, because of the necessity defense they were allowed to explain themselves.

The third day, possibly the most powerful 3 expert witnesses testified: Eric DePlace from Siteline explaining the whole carbon corridor situation, Richard Gammon a retired climatologist from UW who talked about just how urgent and dire the situation of climate change is, and then Abby who had not spoken the day before spoke.   Abby, so at home on top an 18 foot metal tripod talking by phone to reporters...suffered panic attacks while on the stand.  It was painful at times to watch her struggle to get out what she wanted to say, and yet still she managed to tell them of the years of intense activism she had done to try to stop climate change, relationships she had forged with rail workers and even show a letter she had received from Barrack Obama answering one from her.  She told of the profound impact it had on her to learn of the whistle blower who testified the next day and how when a train derailed (thankfully not leaking or blowing up) 1 mile from her daughter's school (thus in the blast zone) she knew it was the last straw for her.  The final expert was Fred Millar, a rail safety expert who spoke powerfully about how unsafe these trains are and how if they burn all the fire fighters can do is get out of the way.

On the 4th day Mike Elliot a former BNSF employee told about being fired for checking the breaks of his train. (the Lac Megantic explosion took place because the breaks failed and the train, unmanned moved forward till it derailed and exploded.)  Then Dr. Frank James testified about the health impacts from the trains - how 1 to 2% of the oil does not make it from its original location to its destination because the train leaks all along the way and how carcinogenic the oil is - studies linking it to cancer.  The case had been laid out so powerfully that one began to wonder how the jury could possibly find them guilty.   But there were several twists ahead.

After lunch the judge explained to everyone's surprise that he was not going to allow the necessity defense.   He explained there were 4 legs - the first 3 he felt were met: 1) that there was a threat greater than the threats caused by breaking the law 2) that you were not the cause of the threat  3) that the threat was a real and compelling one.  But the 4th one he said was not met was that you had exhausted all possible legal remedies.   This one aggravates me because while you could again call 911 while a building was burning rather than break in to get someone...there is not time.   We are in just such a burning building where there is not time for the slow and tortured path of legislative change.

The mood of the supporters in the court room was somber indeed as the judge read a very narrow set of instructions to the jury, telling them they could consider none of the expert witnesses and essentially eviscerating their defense.  Defining the two charges against them of trespass and obstructing a train.  Telling them they could not act out of emotion, but that they needed to put all emotion aside (Ahhh that old Decartian frame which has so bent and destroyed our world - that mind and body, that heart and mind are separate.) The prosecutor basically said in his closing you can do nothing but find them guilty, they all admitted they trespassed and reading again from the narrow and confining jury instructions.   However, the defense attorney, Peter Goldstein was very skillful in opening up the idea that if the founding fathers had not broken the rules of Britain we would not have a free US, that there are times for dissent and that no one would have said to Mr. Jefferson on the stand "why did you not petition the parliament more."   He then also pointed doubt on to the idea that the trains were obstructed and to the idea that their intent was not to break the law but to use free speech.   The jurors later told us this gave them the toe hold they were desperately looking for to set the protesters free of at least that charge.  The prosecutor again repeated that they had no choice, but to convict before they went to chose a foreperson before ending for the day.

Today the jury took about 90 minutes.   I was quite surprised to hear the verdict read out of not guilty on the charge of obstructing the train and guilty of trespass for all 5.   They proceed to sentencing after the jury was relieved of duty and after the prosecutor said what he was asking for there was a break so the defendants could confer with their lawyers.   But then the most magical thing of all happened 3 of the jurors came in the hall to talk to the defendants and insisted on staying for the sentencing to see what would happen to the defendants that they had come to care about.   They told us how they had not wanted to find them guilty of anything and felt they were good people trying to act to protect everyone.  They said how emotional it was for them and how hard it was to put aside their emotions.  They hugged the defendants (see below) and this amazing bit of dialogue is captured and posted on 350Seattle.org's web site under the date of 1/15/16.  (story continue below)
Defendant & 350 Seattle member Abby Brockway with two of the jurors after the trial.
For me what happened in the hall was so magical as to take away the sting of the judge giving the sentence the prosecutor asked for 90 days suspended for two years of probation, plus fines.  I have to say that these 5 defendants while not Quaker, are gentle and loving people who conducted themselves in such a manner and required the supporters to treat everyone in the whole court house with nothing but respect and kindness.   The judge, unlike all previous judges I have encountered also treated everyone in the courthouse with kindness and respect.   Thus the environment of  the entire trial was unlike any CD trial I have ever been to.  Even the judge spoke of learning from the defendants and respecting that they were acting because political solutions were coming to slow.  He however still felt he had to prevent "further crime" by putting them on a long probation.

We Quakers talk of speaking to that of God in others and the power of that to transform the world "let us see what love can do".   This for me was a week of witnessing exactly that.  The response of the jurors (including to promise to become active against climate change). was for me a very powerful example of Love and Truth transforming hearts even against the oppressive power of the state.

Tuesday, February 18, 2014

Which One are You?

You are perhaps familiar with the kind of Bible study which asks us to take a particular story in the Bible and imagine that we are each of the individuals in the story to more deeply understand the story.  So for example, in Luke 10 we are asked to consider what it is like to be Mary enjoying having Jesus in her home and hanging on his every word and what it is like to be Martha working hard in the kitchen to make everything perfect for a meal with Jesus, but resentful of doing all the work.  And we are asked to think what it is like to be Jesus observing these two sisters, and telling Martha to concentrate on what is important.  (So then male person how does food get on the table?)

This weekend I went to a symposium entitled Transformation without Apocalypse.  ( A complete aside here would be my complete horror at realizing that there are people who actually welcoming our planet heading over the climate change cliff because they believe this is the way to the Apocalypse and second coming.  I cannot believe that a loving God would ever want us to commit planetary Genocide!) The symposium was about Climate Change and had speakers: Timothy DeChristopher, Joanna Macy, Kathleen Dean Moore, Sarah Van Gelder, Ursula LeGuinn, etc.  A true smorgasbord for the soul.

If you do not know who Timothy DeChristopher is, he is a young man who at the end of the Bush Presidency attended an auction in UT where beautiful public lands were being auctioned off to be mined.  He entered the auction with no particular plan in place but then was asked if he was there to bid, so accepted a bidding paddle (number 70).  He saw a woman he knew from his church at the back of the room, and she began to cry at the sadness of all these lands being destroyed.  Suddenly Timothy began to bid.   Ultimately he won 22,000 acres of land for 1.8 million dollars!  The only thing was he did not own 1.8 million dollars and bidding without the ability to pay is a federal felony for which he was arrested and released on bail. Ultimately he was convicted of two felony counts and sentenced to two years in jail.  The incoming Obama administration investigated and found the auctions had been illegal because the proper environmental impact statements had not been done.  Bush officials were simply rushing to sell the lands while they still could.  The land therefore that Timothy bid on was safe forever.  The Obama administration did not, however, stop his prosecution.  Timothy is considered by many to be a climate hero and in fact a very moving movie entitled Bidder 70 has been done about his story.  I recommend it if this story intrigues you.

But I find myself asking those Bible Study questions:  What would it be like to be one of the other bidders in the room, sent by oil companies to buy land to exploit?  Would you feel anything about your task?  Or only concern for succeeding and winning favor in your company?  What would you feel about this mysterious bidder that keeps winning parcel after parcel seemingly from a bottomless purse?  What would it be like to be the auctioneer?  Do you ever feel bad about what is being sold?  Or have you trained yourself to have no feelings about that which is sold because it is just a job?

What would it be like to be the weeping woman who comes in feeling powerless, only able to be witness to the destruction of the holy?  What would you feel as you recognize Timothy and see him begin to bid?  Are your prayers answered?  How do you feel as they take him away in handcuffs?  Do you feel guilty....like the famous exchange between Thoreau and Emerson where Emerson comes to visit Thoreau in jail for not paying his war taxes.  Emerson asking "David what are you doing in here?"  and Thoreau responds:  "Henry, what are you doing out there?"  Do you weeping woman wonder what you are doing out there free on the street as they take away Timothy who has acted upon your pain?

What does it feel like to be Timothy drawn to this troubling situation, suddenly seeing an action he can take?  Lead by God? Lead by Conscience? Taking an action that will change his life forever? And if all of these people had been listening, like in a Meeting for worship, where was the Creator's voice in the room?  Was The Holy One speaking to one or all of these characters?  Does God speak through a woman's tears or a spontaneous moment of inspiration?

At the symposium this past weekend Timothy's call was for us to tell the truth more plainly, to not white wash the truth of how bad our situation is.  He also said that we will all have to make sacrifices, that we cannot fight Climate Change and live the same comfortable lives we have been living.  Kathleen Dean Moore who spoke after him made a slightly different and yet profound addition to this point.  She said:  "People don't want to have to make sacrifices to save the climate, and yet what they are overlooking is that we are already making sacrifices; huge unacceptable sacrifices.  We are in the process of sacrificing a liveable planet; we are sacrificing future generations lives.  So really the question is which sacrifices do we want to make?"

So which person are you?  The auctioneer, the other bidders living in business as usual?  Or are you the weeping woman, sad but powerless, or are you Timothy DeChristopher, willing to take life changing actions?
Which sacrifices are you willing to make?