Occupy protesters drop legal battle against city of Boston
The plaintiffs in the Occupy Boston lawsuit against the city filed a voluntary dismissal today, putting an end to their quest for legal permission to reside on Dewey Square. The lawsuit, originally filed last month, was an attempt to ensure that the Occupy Boston protesters would not be evicted from the camp by police. Two weeks ago, Suffolk Superior Court Judge Frances McIntyre decided that the group did not have a constitutional right to live on the public park. According to the statement from Urszula Masny-Latos, the executive director of the National Lawyers Guild, the four plaintiffs from Occupy Boston decided not to appeal the decision because their fight for social justice would be hampered by “slow-moving long-term litigation.” http://tinyurl.com/6np7oor Occupy Wall Street: Where did all the money go? An evaluation of financial data provided by several Occupy movements across the country, together with an analysis by WePay, the protesters’ favored donation site, offers a picture of the kind of people supporting the movement and how the money has been spent so far. In Boston – where supporters have given more than $100,000 – finance working-group member Greg Murphy said that in addition to stripping the movement of a central space to interact with the public, the movement’s Dec. 10 eviction has had a financial toll of $200 to $1,500 in daily cash donations that used to come in on site. ‘Occupy Four Corners’ keeps beating drum loudly on the foreclosure front Five and a half miles from Dewey Square, a small crowd gathered on Fowler Street in Dorchester on a windy Friday afternoon. The forty people represented a range of young and old, a mix of those from the Four Corners neighborhood and those from outside it. While the ousted occupants of a trapezoid-shaped Financial District parcel once filled with tents consider their next steps, some members of the controversial movement known as “Occupy Boston” are joining up with City Life/Vida Urbana, a tenant advocacy group that has similar aims. Bryan MacCormack, a 22-year-old Northeastern University student, is one of them. |