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'BUSH LIES, PEOPLE DIE' -
CODEPINK's June Brashares, 40, being hustled off the RNC convention floor
by two political operatives. |
In her opening statements in jury room 5 of Manhattan Criminal Court Tuesday,
Assistant District Attorney Jessica Troy said: "This is not a case about
politics."
However, everything about the case suggested otherwise.
On one side of the courtroom sat protester June Brashares, 41, who unfurled
an anti-Bush banner during his acceptance speech. Brashares is on trial for
kicking two political operatives who dragged her out of Madison Square Garden,
injuring one.
On the other were the two plaintiffs, Shaun Flanigan, 27, who works for a Republican
assemblyman in California, and John Peschong, 43, who is employed by a public
relations firm with close ties to the Republican Party and who himself was a
former employee for the Republican National Committee.
On its face, it is a case about a handful of misdemeanors, a pair of shoes
and an anti-Bush bedsheet. But for Brasheres' attorney Robert Gottlieb, it is
a question of free speech. In his opening remarks, he said his client was targeted
by political partisans for her message, and wrongfully removed from an event
she was legitimately credentialed to attend.
He said despite all the other people "hooting and hollering" during
the festivities that night, everyone was allowed to go home "happy."
"Except for one person," he added. "One person who left in shackles
and handcuffs and is incredibly charged with a crime."
On the night of Sept. 2 both Peschong and Flanigan were what are known as floor
whips, political operatives who help choreograph the convention.
"Anything that wasn't pre-approved by the RNC wasn't allowed on the convention,"
Peschong said.
So, when Brashares, who was standing on California Governor Pete Wilson's chair,
unfurled a white bedsheet with the words "Bush Lies People Die," both
men said they recognized that it wasn't an RNC-authorized sign.
Flanigan testified that as he got into a tug-of-war with Brashares over the
sign, she was pulled off the chair and then braced herself on all fours. While
he tried to lift her up by the arms, Flanigan said she reared back and kicked
him in the left leg. He said he thought it was that kick that created a deep
gash in his leg.
Peschong said he arrived seconds later and helped rush her out of the main
hall.
Both men testified that the ensuing chant of "four more years," which
interrupted Bush's speech, was also part of the script. They said the floor
whips were told to stir up a chant to drown out any protester.
One central question in the case hangs on whether Brashares was wearing a pair
of two inch black pumps. The prosecution believes it is the heel of the shoe
that caused the gash. Gottlieb said Brashares took them off to stand on the
chair.
Brashares is one of 50 defendants to go to trial. If found guilty, she face
up to a year in jail.
Gottlieb said Brashares was offered a deal by the Manhattan district attorney's
office to plead guilty to a disorderly conduct. She refused.
"She didn't do anything wrong," he said.
During his questioning of Peschong, Gottlieb asked the floor whip: "This
convention, it took place in America, right?"
Before he could answer, Troy stood up and objected.
Judge A. Kirke Bartley, Jr. sustained the objection before she could sit down.