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Forum Post: Lynching Law being used to arrest protestors and demonstrators

Posted 12 years ago on Jan. 17, 2012, 11:34 p.m. EST by AllianceForPeace (40)
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Time for all of you to wake up and start using your right to bear arms because this peaceful demonstrations are not going anywhere when the government can just turn around and start using 50 year old laws in their favor to put Occupy's peaceful demonstrators and protestors behind bars! They are trying to scare everyone now.

By Kari Huus, msnbc.com Sergio Ballesteros, 30, has been involved in Occupy LA since the movement had its California launch in October. But this week, his activism took an abrupt turn when he was arrested on a felony charge — lynching. Under the California penal code, lynching is “taking by means of a riot of any person from the lawful custody of any peace officer," where "riot" is defined as two or more people threatening violence or disturbing the peace. The original purpose of the legal code section 405a was to protect defendants in police custody from vigilante mobs — especially black defendants from racist groups. advertisement

Whether its use in this case will be upheld by California’s courts is uncertain. But the felony charge — which carries a potential four-year prison sentence — is the kind of accusation that can change the landscape for would-be demonstrators. Occupy protesters bring their discontent to Congress "Felonies really heighten the stakes for the protesters," said Baher Azmy, legal director at Center for Constitutional Rights in New York. "I think in situations where there are mass demonstrations and a confrontation between protesters and police, one always has to be on the lookout for exaggerated interpretations of legal rules that attempt to punish or squelch the protesters." Ballesteros, a teacher-turned-social-activist, was one of two people arrested during an "art walk" in downtown Los Angeles on Thursday. He and other Occupy LA activists — maybe 200, he said — had joined the procession to bring their message about social injustice to the thousands of gallery-goers. One protester who was playing a drum was arrested after stepping off the curb into the street. Ballesteros said that in doing so, the drummer was joining hundreds of other people who could not fit on the crowded sidewalk. Occupy protesters underwhelmed by senator's staff Ballesteros said he was across the street when he saw the arrest — which he said looked excessively rough -- and it was “startling.” Under legal advice, Ballesteros is not providing additional detail, but apparently he objected — in some fashion — to the arrest. A video of the crowded scene posted on YouTube shows Ballesteros on the ground, being handcuffed. He was booked into jail on a felony charge, the Los Angeles Police department confirmed, and released on $50,000 bail early Tuesday morning. 'I can't go out and express myself' Ballesteros is not the first protester to face this 1933 California law. Occupy Oakland activist Tiffany Tran, 23, was arrested Dec. 30 and charged with "lynching." At an arraignment four days later, prosecutors opted not to file the charges, the San Francisco Bay Guardian reported. They could change their minds until the one-year statute of limitations expires. advertisement

"Now I feel I can’t go out and express myself as I should be able to," Tran told the paper. Houston DA turns up the heat on Occupy activists In the handful of protest cases in which lynching has been used as a charge in the past, it later has been dropped. However, in one case, a court concluded that “lynching” could include “a person who takes part in a riot leading to his escape from custody." Most states have laws against lynching — largely drafted to prevent white supremacists and other vigilante groups from using violence against African Americans and white people who supported them. Hundreds of lynchings of this sort took place in the late 1800s through the mid-1900s. Trying to silence him? Ballesteros, who spoke to msnbc.com on Monday, said that he does not believe he will be convicted of lynching. “They don’t have much,” he said of the case against him. He also faces a misdemeanor charge for his arrest Nov. 30, when he was among more than 200 people who defied eviction from an encampment on the grounds of Los Angeles' City Hall. There was an arraignment for protesters arrested that day, but they were told no charges yet had been filed. “They have a year to do so,” said Ballesteros. "Now they certainly will. It’s obvious. It’s all political.”

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[-] 2 points by OccupyNews (1220) 12 years ago

This is interesting. Normally when people confront police brutality, they are innocently standing by and see something wrong and take video or yell or something.

In this instance, because they are part of a protest, if they come to the aid of someone else being arrested, no matter what the reason, they can be labeled an enemy combatant.

The lesson may be to document the treatment and then use that at a later date rather than be brought up on trumped up charges.

[-] 1 points by rayolite (461) 12 years ago

“They have a year to do so,” said Ballesteros. "Now they certainly will. It’s obvious. It’s all political.”

I've seen civil actions dismissed that were very significant to the well being of millions of Americans with the judge stating that "the court was not the proper place to decide political issues" because the case involved enforcing state laws of mental health care upon municipalities.