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  • Archive: December 15th, 2011

    VICTIMS OF OCTOBER 11 MASS ARREST APPEAR IN COURT TO FIGHT CHARGES

    PRESS CONFERECE Friday, Decmeber 16, 2011, 8:15 a.m. Boston Municipal Court, 24 New Chardon St., Boston

    In the early hours of October 11, 2011, the Boston Police, acting on Mayor Menino’s orders to clear an Occupy Boston encampment from the Rose Kennedy Greenway, arrested and removed 142 peacefully assembled participants and supporters of the movement, plus one journalist and one National Lawyers Guild (NLG) Legal Observer. Those arrested were charged with the crimes of trespassing and unlawful assembly.

    At their arraignments, many arrestees chose to accept the District Attorney’s offer to convert their criminal charges to a civil infraction and to pay a fine. Twenty individuals rejected this offer and pled not guilty to the charges. Nineteen of them will be in court on Dec. 16th for a pretrial conference. Lawyers from the Massachusetts chapter of the National Lawyers Guild are representing the group in their fight against these criminal charges.

    Those in court on Friday reject the contention that they committed any crimes, and maintain that the police raid and mass arrest on the morning of October 11th was a violation of their constitutional rights of free speech and peaceable assembly. The criminal charge of trespassing is untenable in light of the fact that the Rose Kennedy Greenway Conservancy had allowed Occupy Boston to be present on the Greenway. Further, the 2008 legistlative act which authorizes the Conservancy—a private, non-profit organization formed under the aegis of and responsible to the public, taxpayer-funded, Massachusetts Department of Transportation—to oversee and manage the space where the arrests occurred, mandates that “the greenway shall be treated as a public park and a traditional open public forum without limiting free speech” (Acts and Resolves of Massachusetts 2008, Ch. 308, Sec. 3a). As such, the allegation that individuals gathering in support of a cause were, in fact, doing anything other than exactly what this city space was designed for, is unsupportable. The October 11th protest was a peaceable assembly of activists exercising their constitutional right of free speech. The fact that these rights were violated is intolerable. That these rights were violated in Boston, a city that prides itself on a longstanding rejection of tyranny in favor of liberty, is profoundly disconcerting. Arrests of those who legally assemble to exercise their First Amendment rights must not happen again.

    What Occupy Boston is up to this weekend!

    Many people have asked, “what are our next steps?” and “what are you doing, now that there’s no camp?” The answer is: a lot! Here’s a round-up of this weekend’s actions, trainings, and events, courtesy of the outreach working group. For more details — including locations and descriptions — please read to the bottom of this entire post. Thanks!

    FRIDAY, DECEMBER 16

    8:15 am — Courtroom Solidarity and Press Conference

    12 pm — Home for the Holidays: City Life Press Conference and Tenant Speak-out

    5-7 pm — Rally to Support Liberté Locke, Starbucks Union Organizer

    6-8:30 pm — Occupy Boston Community Forum: Addressing Space and Housing Issues

    6-9 pm — Ocupemos el Barrio Meeting

    SATURDAY, DECEMBER 17

    10-5 pm — Non-violent Direct Action Training @ Spontaneous Celebrations, 45 Danforth Street,  Jamaica Plain

    12-6 pm — #D17 Actions: 12pm “Pro-Corporate” Rally, ~2pm Picnic, ~4pm Occupy Boston Tea Party (all meet at the Parkman Bandstand on the Commons)

    2 pm — Occupy Boston Community Forum: Thinking about Next Steps @ Encuentro Cinco, 33 Harrison, Boston (Chinatown T stop) NB: This is notat St. Paul’s.

    SUNDAY, DECEMBER 18

    11:30 am – 2:30 pm — Roadmap Planning Meeting @ Encuentro 5, 33 Harrison Ave, Chinatown

    12-5 pm — Direct Action Strategy and Action Planning @Community Church, 565 Boylston Street, Boston

    1:30-4 pm — Occupy Boston Action Summit @ Encuentro 5, 33 Harrison Ave, Chinatown

    MONDAY, DECEMBER 19

    12 pm — Occupy our Homes: Rally and March against HUD eviction requirements

    Continue reading “What Occupy Boston is up to this weekend!” »

    HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS: OCCUPY BOSTON TO SPEAK AT PRESS CONFERENCE & MARCH WITH CITY LIFE/VIDA URBANA

    City Life / Vida Urbana and the Bank Tenants Association, with support from Occupy Boston, will hold a press conference and tenant speak out at 12 noon on Friday, December 16, 2011 at 40 Fowler Street in Dorchester, MA 02121. The press conference will introduce the St. Simon family who will move into 40 Fowler, as well as testimonials from families who have successfully gotten their homes back about foreclosure.

    Home foreclosures have dominated the American landscape since the start of the recession. Through no fault of their own, families have been losing their homes and livelihoods. This is far too commonplace in America and has a disproportionate effect on low-income neighborhoods and communities of color.   City Life’s ongoing work demonstrates the willingness of families to remain in their homes despite the pressure of the banks and those in power.
    In addition to the press conference, Occupy Boston will join with City Life / Vida Urbana for an “Occupy our Homes” rally and march on Monday, December 19, 2011 at 12 noon at 10 Causeway St. in Boston, the Boston Regional Office of HUD. This rally is being called to bring visibility to the HUD eviction requirements.

    City Life / Vida Urbana, community activists, and local families oppose the HUD requirements that allow commercial banks to evict foreclosure victims who have FHA-insured mortgagers before the property is transferred to HUD.  This policy forces the foreclosing lender to evict in order to get their insurance, even when they could otherwise afford to stay in the property.

    Occupy Boston is encouraging community members, families, students, activists, and victims of the foreclosure crisis to join City Life / Vida Urbana, the Bank Tenants Association, and Occupy Boston at these two important events. For more information visit http://clvu.org/ or https://www.occupyboston.org/

     

    The OB Media Rundown for 12/15/2011

    Occupy Everywhere

    Just hours after a 5 am police raid cleared Dewey’s tent city – Occupiers braved the cold to regroup at the Boston Common bandstand. On Sunday, they met there again to get down to business, planning a new strategy: Occupy Everywhere.
    Already, neighborhood Occupy outposts are popping up from Allston to the suburbs. In Boston this week, more than a dozen well-attended working groups met each day. Without the burden of maintaining the campsite, the focus has been on action, and lots of it.

    Whatever else Occupy was, it was a home to people who now need new accommodations – but the passion and resolve of Occupiers is intact.

    http://thephoenix.com/Boston/news/131316-occupy-everywhere/

    Occupy Boston camp raided

    “While Occupy Boston protesters may be exercising their expressive rights during the protest, they have no privilege under the First Amendment to seize and hold the land on which they sit,” McIntyre declared in her decision. “The act of occupation, this court has determined as a matter of law, is not speech. Nor is it immune from criminal prosecution for trespass or other crimes.”
    It should also be noted that on December 8, there were two right-wing bigots who attempted to disrupt our General Assembly by telling us that we should leave. There were only the latest in a line of wreckers and police provocateurs who have attempted to disrupt our General Assemblies over the weeks. Fortunately, our chanting was able to drown them out, and they left early.

    http://socialistworker.org/2011/12/15/occupy-boston-camp-raided

    Judge rules that Occupy Movement protesters are common trespassers

    For interest to our real estate readers, the Judge balanced the City?s property rights vs. the protesters First Amendment speech rights. The judge ultimately concluded that the “occupation” as practiced by the Occupy Boston protesters – physically taking over the public park from the City and to the exclusion of others – was a classic trespass and not a First Amendment right.

    http://www.boston.com/realestate/news/blogs/renow/2011/12/judge_rules_tha.html

    Continue reading “The OB Media Rundown for 12/15/2011” »

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