War Tax Resister Reports to Federal Prison

(From Larry Dansinger, Maine War Tax Resource Center, via NWTRCC.org)

About 40-50 people rallied in Bangor, Maine, in support of war tax resister Frank Donnelly on June 14, 2010. Donnelly, who had pled guilty in 2009 to tax fraud, appeared in court and was sentenced to one year and one day in prison. He self-reported to the federal prison at Estill, North Carolina on July 26 to serve his sentence.

Frank Donnelly on sentencing day

Frank Donnelly is not a typical war tax resister, most of whom try to express their values of nonviolence directly to the IRS. Some send letters to the IRS, some fill out a return but do not pay, and some don’t file at all. Donnelly knew he could not pay for war, but he did that by under- reporting his income. The IRS interpreted that as tax fraud and prosecuted him in federal criminal court.

His statement to the court was simple; he declared that he should have presented his war tax resistance differently, more openly. But, he was clear his refusal to pay sprung from his opposition to all wars.

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~ from Skenäs Prison, Sweden, by Martin Smedjeback

SERVING TIME FOR PEACE IN SWEDEN

17th of June, 2010

I am led into the central office of the prison Skenäs outside of Norrköping. Two guards help me to carry my stuff.  “It looks like you are moving in here!” says one guard. “That’s exactly what I am doing, temporary anyway,” says I. “Do you have your sentence papers with you?” asks another guard. “Yes,” I answer and hand them the papers which say that I was convicted to four months in prison. I am asked to step out and wait while they handle some of my paperwork. I take a seat on the stairs. The sun is shining. I start reading yesterday’s paper. Two inmates come out from their dorms.  Sitting on a bench on the other side of the yard, one of them shouts to me, ”Are you new here?” “Yes,” I shout back. “What are you in for?” he continues. ”Criminal damage,” I answer. “What have you destroyed?”  “Bazookas,” I answer.

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Louis Vitale, Richard Sauder both out of jail

Fr. Louis Vitale completed a six month prison sentence for trespass at Ft. Benning, Georgia, on Friday, July 23.  He walked out of the federal prison at Lompoc, California.

Read about Vitale’s November 2009 arrest here.

Also on July 23, Richard Sauder was convicted in federal court in Minot, North Dakota, of trespassing at a nuclear missile silo last April.  He was sentenced to time served, 100 days, and released.  Sauder spent most of his time on federal hold at the Heart of America Correctional and Treatment Center in Rugby North Dakota.

Sauder wrote to the Nuclear Resister:

I want to thank everyone who wrote to me in jail to voice their support. It was very meaningful to me. Jail is a very isolating place and a psychopathic, harsh environment, so letters of support are and were an extremely welcome and vital tie with the outside. I also want to thank all who wrote to the jail administration to express concerns about the poor diet. The jail security chief informed me after my release that the food service company that prepares the inmates’ meals does so at a cost of 60 cents per inmate per meal. And that one factoid speaks volumes about the unpleasant conditions at the heart of America.

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British War Refuser Joe Glenton Released

Read the full report and view an interview with Joe at  www.counterfire.org

Joe Glenton, the soldier who refused to return to fight in Afghanistan and who spoke out against the war, was released from military prison yesterday.

Joe Glenton on release

Joe Glenton on release

He was greeted by around 30 supporters and dozens of reporters outside the Military Corrective Training Centre in Colchester.  Some of his supporters had waited over an hour and a half in the pouring rain to pay tribute to the brave stand Joe Glenton took.
They cheered and applauded as Joe Glenton walked out of the gates alongside his wife, Clare Glenton, and his mother, Sue Glenton.
This gathering marked the culmination of the fortnightly protests held by Colchester Stop the War to protest at Joe’s imprisonment and to celebrate Joe’s courage in speaking out.

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EDO Decommissioners Acquitted; Elijah Smith Released

(from smashedo.org.uk)

Elijah Smith, decommissioner of EDO MBM/ITT, is free after a year and a half in Jail. Well Done Elijah!

Elijah Smith, free after 18 months in prison for diarmament action

All Decommissioners acquitted -Resisting War Crimes is Officially not a Crime

The EDO Decommissioners have all walked free after unanimous acquittals following the three week trial which concluded on Friday (2nd July) at Hove Crown Court. What began as a trial of the Decommissioners effectively ended up with the Brighton arms manufacturer, and the war crimes of the Israeli state, in the dock.

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Igor Sutyagin Freed in “Spy” Swap

After serving more than ten years of a 15-year sentence for espionage, Russian arms researcher

Igor Sutyagin in London

Igor Sutyagin was freed today in what is being reported as the largest spy swap between the United States and Russia since the end of the Cold War.

Sutyagin was not a spy, but reportedly shared sensitive information about Russian nuclear weapons from public sources with a London firm.  His research drew the unwelcome attention of the FSB, Russia’s secret police successor to the Soviet KGB.  His case was taken up by human rights organizations, and the U.S. State Department declared he was a political prisoner.

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Resistance for a Nuclear Free Future – Report on the July 3-5, 2010 Gathering and Action

Report from the Nuclear Resister, Nukewatch, and the Oak Ridge Environmental Peace Alliance

Federal arrest. Photo by Felice Cohen-Joppa

The weekend was bookended by a lot of hugging — starting Friday evening in front of the registration table as old friends reunited, and ending Monday afternoon outside the Clinton, Tennessee jail as prisoners were released into the hot July sun to await trial. In between, it was a powerful celebration of nonviolent resistance marking the thirtieth anniversaries of Nukewatch, the Nuclear Resister, and the first Plowshares disarmament action.

There was music, there was talking, there were puppets and Fourth-of-July burgers and watermelon. And on Monday morning, July 5, a new Declaration of Independence was delivered at the gates of the Y12 Nuclear Weapons Complex in Oak Ridge, after which thirteen people crossed the property line and twenty-three more stretched a long banner across the road to block the entrance to the bomb plant.

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Protesters Arrested at Nuke-Parts Plant in Kansas City

Published on Sunday, June 20, 2010 by CommonDreams.org
by Jane Stoever and Ann Suellentrop

The National Nuclear Security Administration’s Kansas City Plant, managed by Honeywell to help make nuclear weapons, became the scene of civil disobedience for the first time June 18. Four people were arrested when they blocked the employees’ entrance to the plant, while about 35 supporters blocked the plant’s front driveway.

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Twenty-Four Anti-Torture Activists Acquitted

Memorial for slain torture victims, Capitol Rotunda. Beth Brockman photo

On Monday, June 14, twenty-four activists with Witness Against Torture were acquitted in Washington, D.C. Superior Court of charges of “unlawful entry with disorderly conduct.” The charges stemmed from demonstrations at the US Capitol on January 21,2010 – the date by which President Obama had promised the closure of the Guantanamo detention camp.

Defendant Joy First wrote about the trial:

The trial was scheduled to start at 9:30 am. Once we were seated in the courtroom, there were some preliminary matters to deal with before the trial started. Most notably, Bill Quigley argued a motion we had entered for an acquittal, but if we were not acquitted he argued that we would be allowed to use international law and the necessity defense.

I hadn’t been feeling too anxious up till then, but when we sat down in the courtroom and the judge began dealing with some of the preliminary matters, I could feel the anxiety rising in my stomach and moving up to my chest.

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Bonhoeffer Four trial – not guilty!

Jacob Bolton, Jessica Morrison, Simon Moyle, and Simon Reeves and supporters outside Geelong Court

At 6am on March 31, two people used boogy boards to paddle to the Swan Island SAS base near Queenscliff, Victoria, Australia, while two others blocked the main entrance. Once there they pushed the emergency stop button for the main Satellite Communications  dish, and closed the base for the day.
It is believed they were directly interfering with the SAS role in warfighting in Afghanistan.
The four were charged with trespass and went to court last Wednesday 16th June.

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