08/07/06
"Information
Clearing House" -- -- Sitting at the computer, wearing my official
Electronic Monitoring Ankle Bracelet is certainly better
than sitting in jail…but it still does a pretty good job of
reminding you you're now in the criminal class.
On August
4, Lucas County Common Pleas Judge Charles Wittenberg
sentenced me for two felony convictions I got for
spraypainting “Troops Out Now!” on a highway overpass on
January 1 of this year. Part of the sentence includes 60
days under house arrest, tethered to the 1,050 sq. ft. of my
home in Toledo like it has one of those “invisible fences”
for dogs at the front and back doors. The ankle bracelet
($60.00 weekly service fee) communicates with a black box
($40.00 installation fee) tied into the phone line to a
company in Indiana that monitors the whole business by
computer. I wonder how many and who are my fellow
“monitorees” so served by B.I. Inc., and whether I should
buy some stock. Incarceration in its various forms is
clearly America’s growth industry.
During the
jury trial July 18-19, my attorney, Terry Lodge, and I did
our best to put the war on trial and the prosecutors of
course did their best to narrow it to criminal vandalism –
and “possession of criminal tools,” of course. Below you
can read the letter I wrote the judge. He read it into the
record prior to pronouncing his sentence.
News
coverage of the arrest, trial, conviction and sentencing
generated thousands of times more discussion and debate on
the war than all the times I’ve politely held a sign by the
side of the road. A video clip of the overpass, taken by
WTOL TV before the transportation department hurriedly
covered the offensive slogan, ran numerous times on days of
my arrest, trial, conviction and sentencing. My first
public art installation – fluorescent orange oil on concrete
– was seen numerous times by many thousands of viewers.
Newspaper editorials, letters to the editor and news
articles added significantly to the debate.
At every
opportunity, when asked why I did it or why I didn’t plead
to misdemeanor charges, I explained politely that, “There’s
a war on, you know! We’re complicit in war crimes; in a war
of aggression; in the killing and maiming of thousands. We
have to do more than write Congress. This is one more
nonviolent way I can speak out against this criminal war and
uphold international law.”
I don’t
regret painting “Troops Out Now!” on that overpass, nor
taking it to trial. Now’s it’s time to pay the price as so
many good peace warriors before me have done. Compared to
what hell the people in Iraq and our soldiers go through
every day, and compared to the level of repression we’ll
experience if we don’t reverse America’s slide into fascism,
my sentence is a minor inconvenience. Like I said, it’s
better than being in jail. It just makes me wonder what the
penalty would have been for writing “Mike loves Sue” instead
of “Troops Out Now!”?
****************
Mike Ferner
2975 113th St.
Toledo, Ohio 43611
August 2,
2006
Judge
Charles Wittenberg
Lucas
County Court of Common Pleas
Toledo,
Ohio
Dear Judge
Wittenberg,
This letter contains the statements that I would make prior
to sentencing on August 4 in your courtroom. But since some
of what I have to say might influence your deliberations, it
seems appropriate that I get this to you ahead of time.
The article I wrote for the Blade’s Saturday Essay back in
January, explaining why I painted “Troops Out Now” on the
overpass was included in the official file of my case that
was before you, and I noticed that you asked the potential
jurors if they remembered reading it in the paper. So I
won’t repeat the descriptions of the casualties I treated as
a hospital corpsman. As I said on the witness stand in your
courtroom, those images stay with me always. As a fellow
Veteran For Peace member explained to me, “You can’t ‘unsee’
what you’ve seen.”
I know that the young men in that Navy hospital 35 years
ago, just like the young American soldiers and the civilians
I met in Iraq were, and are, being killed and maimed for a
preposterous lie.
On March 8 of this year, I was arrested by the U.S. Capitol
Police for disrupting a House Appropriations Committee
hearing for reading the names of G.I.s and Iraqis killed in
this war. When the County Prosecutor read of that arrest in
the Blade, he moved for a ruling that I had violated the
terms of my bond. You denied his motion and I am grateful
that you did.
What was not reported in that
story was what I told the Appropriations Committee as the
police led me away.
In a voice loud enough for
every committee member to hear, I told them they were making
Americans less safe, not more; that they were violating
federal law,
the Geneva Conventions and the Nuremberg Principles; waging
a war of aggression; committing crimes against peace and
crimes against humanity.
A chill should run through
our very soul, Judge Wittenberg, as we remember when those
words were first used to indict another nation's war making,
a nation over which we once sat in judgment. Indeed, U.S.
Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson, the chief
prosecutor at the Nuremberg Tribunals, acknowledged clearly
in his opening statement, “…let me make clear that while
this law is first applied against German aggressors, the law
includes, and if it is to serve a useful purpose it must
condemn aggression by any other nations, including those
which sit here now in judgment.”
Judge Wittenberg, by the very
action which brought me before your court you know that I
oppose the war in
Iraq. But it is more than just opposition to this war that
motivated my action. I believe
that
as a citizen of this
nation, I am complicit in the crimes of this government.
Because of that
complicity, I must speak out against this monstrous war in
every nonviolent way possible. I must add my voice to the
thousands of others trying to awaken America's conscience
and bring this war to an end.
Your Honor, I also believe
that every citizen of this country must look into their
heart and decide if they too are complicit in their
government’s war making. Those who decide in the
affirmative must take every opportunity to awaken America’s
conscience, no matter how uncomfortable it makes
them. Our discomfort
is hardly a match for the suffering borne by the victims of
this war. We
owe it to them to rise above our discomfort; to make the
most of opportunities presented to us to speak out.
Judge, you have now before
you such an opportunity. As D.C. Superior Court Senior
Judge Stephen Milliken ruled on March 28 when we went before
him for disrupting the House Appropriations Committee
hearing: “Sentenced to time served;” as the jury in the
“Pitstop Plowshares” case in Ireland on July 25 acquitted
five activists for nonviolently disarming a U.S. Navy
warplane at Shannon Airport
; as 20 German judges sat down to
blockade a U.S. Air Force base in Germany
, more and more people at many levels
of the world’s judicial systems are taking seriously their
opportunities to speak out against war.
Finally, Your Honor, it is
important that I inform you of my decision to not pay
further restitution or a fine in this case.
The decision to not pay
additional restitution is easily explained, since the judge
in the Sylvania Municipal Court has already ordered my
brother to pay the entire $3,600 ODOT claims it will cost to
repaint the Central Ave. overpass on U.S. 23.
I have decided not to pay a
fine in this case because by painting “Troops Out Now!” on
the overpass I was in fact upholding international law –
demanding our young men and women be brought home from what
history will certainly judge to be a war of aggression.
Not only do I deny my action
was criminal, it was done to help stop a far greater
criminal action. If you agree, I respectfully ask that you
sentence me to time served (January 1-2, 2006). If you do
not agree, I respectfully add that you will have to put me
behind bars to compel my cooperation. My mind, however,
will remain free to protest the criminal systems that allow
us to wage a war of aggression on Iraq.
If my decisions place you in
an uncomfortable position, Judge, I apologize, just as I
told jurors on July 18 after they convicted me that I
regretted any inconvenience or expense the trial caused
them.
Thank you for this opportunity to explain my actions.
Most sincerely,
Mike Ferner
####
Ferner is a
writer and member of Veterans For Peace. You can keep up
with the latest addition to America’s burgeoning criminal
population at
www.mikeferner.org .
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