Filmmaker
Arrested At Pipeline Protest Facing 45 Years In Felony Charges
“They
threw the book at Deia for being a journalist.”
14
October, 2016
Emmy-winning
filmmaker Deia Schlosberg was arrested in North Dakota and
charged with three felonies on Thursday.
A
documentarian arrested while filming an oil pipeline protest on
Tuesday has been charged with three felony conspiracy charges ― and
could face decades in prison if convicted.
Deia
Schlosberg, the producer of the upcoming documentary “How
to Let Go of the World and Love All Things Climate Can’t Change,”
was detained while filming a protest against TransCanada’s Keystone
Pipeline in
Walhalla, North Dakota. Activists at the event, associated with the
group Climate
Direct Action,
shut down the pipeline, which carries oil from Canadian tar sands to
the U.S, for
about seven hours.
Two
of the protestors, Michael Foster and Samuel Jessup, were also
charged and Schlosberg’s equipment and footage from the event was
confiscated. Schlosberg said shortly after being released on
bond that she couldn’t comment on her arrest until she spoke to a
lawyer.
She
has been charged with three felonies: conspiracy to theft of
property, conspiracy to theft of services and conspiracy to tampering
with or damaging a public service. Together, the charges carry
45 years in maximum prison sentences.
Josh
Fox, the director of the film and two others related to fossil fuels,
including the Academy Award-nominated “Gasland,”
said Schlosberg wasn’t participating in the protest herself but
acting as filmmaker to document the event. Her arrest appears to
reflect a “deliberate” targeting of reporters, he said.
“They
have in my view violated the First Amendment,” Fox said, referring
to the state’s Pembina County Sheriff’s Department. “It’s
fucking scary, it knocks the wind of your sails, it throws you for a
loop. They threw the book at Deia for being a journalist.”
Ryan
Bialas, state’s attorney for Pembina County, told The Huffington
Post there was no such targeting and said the event at the pipeline
was “not a protest” but “a criminal action.”
“People
are free to come and protest as much as they want in my county, I
just ask they don’t damage any property in doing so,” Bialas said
in an email. He also noted his office has offered to return
Schlosberg’s equipment and footage and he has “no interest” in
keeping it.
The
arrest is the latest in a series of high-profile criminal charges
filed in North Dakota. Police
arrested actress Shailene Woodley and
27 others this week for trespassing while protesting the proposed
Dakota Access Pipeline.
And
authorities issued an arrest warrant for criminal trespassing for
Amy Goodmanof
Democracy Now! last month, who filmed a
thousands-strong Native
American-led protest in September, which was met with guards wielding
pepper spray and attack dogs.
Goodman
announced this week she
will surrender to authorities on
Monday “to fight this charge ... a clear violation of the
First Amendment.”
Fox
said the actions in North Dakota were “mind boggling” and he
hasn’t seen “any other state behave this way.”
“Normally
you get a warning,” he said, referencing other direct-action
protests. “In North Dakota, you don’t. If you were trespassing,
you leave and they arrest you anyway.”
He
has been circulating
a letter calling
for the charges against Schlosberg to be dropped. Signatories include
actress Daryl Hannah, musician Neil Young, activist Bill McKibben and
actor Mark Ruffalo.
Bialas
said he was unaware of the criminal action against both Woodley and
Goodman and that his office does “not “target activists,
journalists or media.”
I wish her a similar outcome as I had. North Dakota had carried the ball instead of Federal charges being laid for years in the 1980's and a harsher initial stance than Air Force bases in other states giving out "Ban and Bar letters" for the first occasion if it was a line crossing.
ReplyDeleteNorth Dakota was bringing sabotage charges against me. Salt supposedly destroys the fiber cloth used for the microwave sensors on missile silos. But all charges were dropped when we had a change of venue due to Judge Frank Kassanda's outburst due to his Alzheimers. Numerous district attorneys in NoDak had stated, no we will not lay charges against non-violent people, let the feds bring charges. All charges were dropped by NoDak and the feds never indicted.
Between the Homeland Security employees at Pembina and the employees at the USAF-SNIC radar base being such a large percentage of the counties poplutaion, a change of venue might not be a bad idea.
I wish her well.