Environmental
activists face up to ten years in prison for glitter-covered banner
RT,
17
December, 2013
Oklahoma
City police charged two activists on Friday for enacting a “terrorism
hoax” after the pair unfurled a banner covered in glitter at a
fossil-fuel company’s headquarters. Authorities took the glitter as
evidence of a possible biochemical attack.
About
a dozen environmental activists with the Great Plains Tar Sands
Resistance group demonstrated Friday at Devon Tower, headquarters of
Devon Energy. They were there to protest the company’s fracking
practices, its role in producing Canadian tar sands and its ties to
TransCanada, the energy behemoth constructing the contentious
crude-oil Keystone XL pipeline.
Activists
blocked the doors to the building as two others, Stefan Warner and
Moriah Stephenson, hung two banners from the second floor of Devon
Tower’s atrium. One banner featured The
Hunger Games
“mockingjay”
symbol and the text, “the
odds are never in our favor.”
Police
arrested two other activists for trespassing while Warner and
Stephenson received trumped-up charges of perpetuating a faux
bioterrorism assault. In Oklahoma, a conviction for a “terrorist
hoax”
- defined as "the willful
conduct to simulate an act of terrorism"
- is punishable with a prison sentence of up to 10 years.
Oklahoma
City Police Department spokesman Capt. Dexter Nelson said Devon Tower
security worried the “unknown
substance”
falling from the banners might be a toxin because of "the
covert way [the protesters] presented themselves… A lot were
dressed as somewhat transient-looking individuals. Some were wearing
all black.”
"Inside
the banners was a lot of black powder substance, later determined to
be glitter,”
he told Mother Jones.
Nelson
said responding police officers on the scene called it a “biochemical
assault.”
“Even
the FBI responded,”
he said.
A
spokesman for Devon Energy did not comment to Mother Jones. Devon
currently has plans to target Texas’ Eagle Ford Shale for gas
extraction using hydraulic fracking - the highly controversial
process
of injecting water, sand, and various chemicals into layers of rock
in hopes of releasing oil and gas deep underground.
Attorney
for the activists Doug Parr called the seldom-used “terrorism
hoax”
statute an inappropriate charge for the activists.
"I've
represented any number of political activists in Oklahoma for 35
years,"
Parr said. "This is the
first time I am aware of that anyone has been arrested on
terrorism-related charges for protest activity."
Parr
pointed to TransCanada’s outsized influence in pushing law
enforcement to use terrorism-related charges against nonviolent
activists in the South and Midwest who have slowed progress of the
Keystone XL.
In
June, activists of the group Bold Nebraska used an open records
request to reveal TransCanada PowerPoint presentations aimed at law
enforcement officials in which the pipeline company encouraged
arresting Keystone XL protesters on terror charges. Part of one
presentation suggested police could contact district attorneys for
"information regarding
the applicability of state or federal anti-terrorism laws prohibiting
sabotage or terroristic acts against critical infrastructures"
regarding the activities of nonviolent environmental protesters. One
presentation dated April 2012 was designed specifically for the FBI.
TransCanada
stood behind the presentations, citing disruptive landowner
demonstrations along the $5.3-billion pipeline’s route in Oklahoma
and Texas.
Attorney
Parr says while he was on the scene at Devon Tower on Friday, he
overheard an officer there, Maj. Steve McCool, request guidance by
phone regarding how banner-droppers Warner and Stephenson could be
charged under Oklahoma’s anti-terrorism statute.
Oklahoma
City Police spokesman Nelson said an officer would consult a city or
district attorney about such charges. "Who
they contacted, I wouldn't know,"
he said.
TransCanada
did not comment, according to Mother Jones.
Warner
said “there was no chaos or
panic”
when he and Stephenson released the banners, which were promptly
removed by Devon Tower employees.
"It
was anticlimactic and boring until the cops overreacted,"
Warner said.
Warner
said he told police on the scene that the banner contained glitter,
yet police responded to him that they still wanted to test the
“unknown substance.”
Though Nelson said the protesters would not talk to police at the
scene.
Warner,
who has been arrested before for protesting, said the charges show
increasingly aggressive intimidation tactics by law enforcement - at
the urging of energy companies - against environmental demonstrators.
"It's
scary,"
Warner said. "These
companies want to make it seem like they're benevolent neighbors and
no harm comes from their activities… To do that, they're trying to
criminalize dissent."
TransCanada
has begun pumping oil into the southern
leg of the Keystone XL pipeline, a company spokesman announced last
week. However, it remains to be seen whether President Obama will
actually approve
the project, which spans from Alberta, Canada, to the Gulf Coast of
Texas.
Since
the southern section of the pipeline - in Oklahoma and Texas - does
not cross international borders, it does not need Obama’s approval.
The
President is expected to make his decision on Keystone XL’s
cross-border construction by mid-March.
Canadian
Prime Minister Stephen Harper said in September that he “won’t
take no for an answer”
on the pipeline, although current and former Obama administration
officials have made comments indicating that Harper may have to prove
his assertion.
Great
Plains Tar Sands Resistance said the banner used Friday in Oklahoma
City featured imagery from the film The Hunger Games “to
highlight the parallel between industrial sacrifice zones in real
life, and the resource colonies (Districts) that are subjected to
state and economic violence in the series.”
Protests
have occurred on the pipeline’s route and elsewhere, as activists
and landowners have often teamed up to oppose TransCanada and the
collusion of private and public entities to chill dissent.
Another
activist present at the Devon demonstration alluded to such
steamrolling tactics, especially used in the resource-rich area along
Keystone XL’s southern leg.
“I’m
opposed to the industry’s blatant disregard for human wellbeing in
the pursuit of profit,” said Cory Mathis, according to the Great
Plains Tar Sands Resistance website. “These industries poison
countless communities, often deceive and coerce folks into signing
contracts, and when that doesn’t work, they use eminent domain to
steal the land. Texas and Oklahoma have long been considered
sacrifice zones for the oil and gas industry, and people have for the
most part learned to roll over and accept the sicknesses and health
issues that come with the temporary and unsustainable boost in
employment.”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.