Journalist
faces 21 years in jail for recording police
The
journalist behind a popular activism site is facing 21 years in
prison for publishing conversations with law enforcement officials
that he says were on-the-record while investigating a police
brutality case in the state of New Hampshire.
RT,
8
August, 2012
Adam
“Ademo” Mueller is awaiting trial after being charged with three
felony counts of wiretapping; if convicted, he could be sentenced to
7-years in jail for each instance.
Mueller,
a journalist who is also the founder of CopBlock.org, is maintaining
his innocence in a case that has quickly garnered the supports from
fellow activists who say the defendant has been targeted for trying
to hold members of law enforcement accountable.
By
running CopBlock, Mueller has created an online outlet to release
information about law enforcement officers that may not make it to
the mainstream media. His attempt at showcasing what incident in
particular he found a problem with his put the next two decades of
his life in question, though.
Mueller
was indicted following a report he filed in response to an incident
at a Manchester, NH high school last year that ended with 17-year-old
Frank W. Harrington being slammed face-first into a table and
detained for disorderly conduct and resisting arrest. Video footage
of a school police officer picking up Harrington and assaulting him
were leaked to Mueller, who followed up on his own and attempted to
interview a Manchester police captain, the Manchester High School
West principal and a school secretary as part of his investigation
into the incident. Mueller later used samples of those recorded phone
interviews in a video report of the incident that he published to his
website, and although he says he identified himself as a member of
the media when approaching those officials for comment, he has been
charged with felony wiretapping for allegedly putting those
conversations on tape without expressed permission.
“Why
am I in jail with a guy who beats up his wife and gets a one-year
sentence from the state, but I’m facing 21 years for filming
somebody?” Mueller told Judge Kenneth Brown while appearing in
court last week, CNN reports.
The
father of Harrington tells reporters with CopBlock that he opposes
the charges as well. “No matter what, nobody’s child should be
abused like that in school,” he says.
Mueller
has been offered a two-year suspended sentence as part of a plea
deal, but he tells his supporters that he refuses to cooperate with
them by agreeing to play games.
"Here's
how I see the offer: it's a stellar deal if I actually thought what I
had done was wrong," Mueller writes on CopBlock.org. "First,
I can't go against my principles and sign a deal that says I
acknowledge my actions as wrong or illegal. Second, I'm not a
hypocrite. How can I advocate refusing plea deals and sign one
myself? I don't judge anyone who has taken pleas because each
case/charge is different. Third, I am confident I can show a jury,
with facts and logic, that I shouldn't be caged for my actions….
Let the circus begin!"
The
New Hampshire Union Leader reports that around two dozen protesters
surrounded the Hillsborough County Superior Court on Monday to show
their support for Mueller. Fellow activists informed potential jurors
reporting to the courthouse that under a just-passed jury
nullification legislation, jurors can find defendants not guilty
based on their own conscience rather than established laws.
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