She will serve six months for photographing a
protest of an airfield in upstate New York where
missions are carried out.
By Bill Moyers
January 21,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
"Bill
Moyers" -
Mary Anne
Grady Flores is in jail today and American citizens
everywhere can surely breathe a sigh of relief that
we are safe from her criminal behavior at least for
the next six months.
That’s the length of the sentence this 59-year-old
peace activist in upstate New York began on Tuesday
— one day after the United States honored Dr. Martin
Luther King, Jr., for his commitment to nonviolent
civil disobedience. If he were here today, the
martyred Dr. King would surely be shaking his head
that America still has a problem with
peaceful dissenters of conscience.
And what
exactly did Grady Flores do to warrant spending the
next six months in jail? She photographed a peaceful
protest outside Hancock Field Air National Guard
Base near Syracuse, New York. The base is where the
US trains pilots to launch drone strikes in the
Middle East, particularly in Afghanistan, Pakistan
and Yemen. It wasn’t a crime for her to be taking
pictures of the demonstration, but when she briefly
and unintentionally — yes, unintentionally — stepped
onto a road that belongs to the base, she violated
what authorities called “an order of protection,”
which had been issued in 2012 to forbid protesters
from approaching the home or workplace of Col. Earl
Evans, a commander of the 174th Attack Wing of the
Air National Guard. She had never met Evans, never
threatened him, never showed any intention of
harming him.
Nonetheless, a town justice, David Gideon, issued
the order to “protect” the Colonel from the
activists. That’s right — the commander of a major
military operation, piloting drones on lethal
missions half-way around the world, requested a
court order of protection against a group of mostly
gray-haired demonstrators whom he had never met. In
stepping briefly on the roadway at the base, Grady
Flores violated that order, despite the fact that,
as she says, “We weren’t at the security gate. We
were out at the roadway.”
Now get
this: The order issued by Judge Gideon was of the
sort commonly used against victims of sexual or
domestic abuse. “The legal terms ‘victim’ and
‘witness’ have been expanded in this case in a way
that’s new and unique in the state of New York,”
said attorney Lance Salisbury at a press
conference yesterday before Grady Flores was hauled
off to jail.
Grady
Flores had protested outside the base before. She
belongs to The Upstate Coalition to Ground the
Drones and End the Wars, which has criticized the
drone program since 2010, calling for a change in
policy to uphold life and law.
President
Obama and the Pentagon insist that using drones in
pursuit of terrorists causes minimal civilian
casualties and protects American troops, but Grady
Flores takes issue with that justification. She told
us she had been moved, in particular, by reports of
the staggering numbers of civilians killed by US
drones, and she says her fears were confirmed by
documents recently leaked to journalists at The
Intercept revealing that
during one five-month stretch, 90 percent of
those killed in one part of Northeastern Afghanistan
were not the intended target.
Grady
Flores says she was also shaken by the 2013
testimony before Congress of a family from Pakistan
that had suffered a drone strike in North
Waziristan. A grandmother of three herself, Grady
Flores listened as Rafiq ur Rehman
recounted his mother’s death in the presence of
her grandchildren. “She was out in the fields
picking okra with the kids around and a drone strike
happened, and she was sent to four winds… now the
kids live in terror,” Grady Flores recalls.
“That’s why
citizens are at the gates of Hancock,” says Grady
Flores. “That’s why we’re there.”
Grady
Flores was arrested in 2012, when she and 16 others
blocked the entrance to the base, prompting the
request from the military for the order of
protection. When she was arrested again a year later
— not for protesting herself but for stepping on the
road outside the base and taking pictures of others
who were protesting — she was found to be in
violation of that protection order. And the
protestors she was photographing?
They were acquitted.
Justice
David Gideon threw the book at her. He sentenced her
to a year, claiming in his five-page ruling that he
didn’t buy her First Amendment argument. Instead, he
thought she “was willing to ‘break the law’ to seek
publicity for her cause.” After an appeal, her
sentence was shortened to six months.
Before she
went to jail yesterday she told us: “I asked my
grandchildren, ‘Do you know where I’m going?’ and
they said, ‘yeah, you’re going to jail, Nana.’” She
told us that it is difficult to leave her
88-year-old mother who is ailing, but that her
mother appreciates her carrying on in the tradition
of Dr. Martin Luther King and the iconic Catholic
activist Dorothy Day, with whom her mother once
worked. Day famously said, “No one has a right to
sit down and feel hopeless. There is too much work
to do.”
Grady
Flores says her mother’s good-bye shared that
sentiment, “Mom said to me, ‘I’ll pray for you, I’ll
be with you in that cell.’ She said it in a whisper,
but she’s grateful that I’m continuing the work.”
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