Pentagon Police Use Violence Against Protesters
PENTAGON POLICE VIOLENCE AGAINST PEACEFUL PROTESTERS
CALLING FOR END TO WAR AND HALT TO DESTRUCTION OF THE
ENVIORNMENT
PENTAGON, WASHINGTON, DC
– On April 8, 2011 at approximately noon, 25 civilian
activists organized by the National Campaign for Nonviolent
Resistance arrived at the Pentagon to deliver a letter
asking for a meeting with Secretary of War Robert Gates in
order to discuss bringing an end to U.S. wars and the
destruction of the environment resulting from military
policies.
Within less than three minutes, with the activists peacefully requesting that the Secretary’s office receive their letter, Pentagon police officers swarmed the scene, violently moving the activists from the area. They were violently pushed and shoved, the activists said. Several activists reported that the police almost knocked them over. A number of individuals had their arms forcefully and painfully wrenched behind their backs. Eve Tetaz, 80, was pushed to the ground. As the officers pushed the citizens towards the police vans, they did not ever announce to any individuals that they were being arrested.
The protesters were taken to the Navy Annex for processing where they were given a warning for failure to obey a lawful order. Once the Pentagon Police had the names of all the activists, they searched their system and found that eight of the 25 had been arrested at the Pentagon in the past. Those eight individuals were then given a citation for “disorderly conduct”.
The
eight activists, David Barrows, Joy First, Alice Gerard,
Malachy Kilbride, Max Obuszewski, Ned Smith, Eve Tetaz, and
Paki Weiland will take their case to the courts on June 3,
2011. This action by the Pentagon Police was a blatant
violation of their First Amendment rights. The activists
were there within their legal rights, fulfilling their
Nuremberg obligations, standing in a public access area.
There was no disorderly conduct on the part of the
activists. Rather, the police acted in a violent and
unlawful manner towards the activists.
The citizen
activists were attempting to bring to the attention of the
Pentagon information on how the U.S. military uses more
petroleum than any other single entity in the world, and it
is responsible for releasing immeasurable amounts of lethal
toxic chemicals into the air, soil and water in the course
of maintaining military bases in the U.S. and around the
world.
The Pentagon engages in rampant death and
destruction in such countries as Afghanistan, Iraq, Pakistan
and Yemen and other parts of the world. Besides the toxic
chemicals, the military uses depleted uranium ammunition,
with disastrous, long-term harmful health effects on all who
inhale it and their offspring in the form of genetic
defects. Most recently this illegal weapon is suspected to
have been used in Libya. Thus, the activists were seeking a
meeting with the Secretary of Defense to discuss both the
excessive warmongering and the ecocide being committed
against Mother Earth by the Pentagon.
This action was
endorsed by the National Campaign for Nonviolent Resistance,
Climate SOS, Code Pink, Fellowship of Reconciliation, Jonah
House, National War Tax Resistance Coordinating Committee
(NWTRCC), Nukewatch, Peace Action, SOA Watch, Soulforce,
United National Anti-war Committee, Veterans for Peace,
Voices for Creative Nonviolence, War Is A
Crime.org, War Resisters League, Washington Peace
Center, Witness Against Torture, and Women's International
League for Peace and Freedom.
For more information,
contact the National Campaign for Nonviolent
Resistance
www.irqpledge.org joyfirst5@gmail.com