news release
from
BARNEY
FRANK
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Peter Kovar (202) 225-5931
Dorothy Reichard (617) 332-3920
Members Of Congress Urge John
Ashcroft
To Drop Criminal Prosecution Of South Carolina Protester For Carrying An
Anti-Bush Sign Outside Designated Zone
Rep.
Barney Frank (D-MA) announced that eleven Members of the House of
Representatives, including many leaders on the House Judiciary Committee and
the House Select Committee on Homeland Security, sent a letter to Attorney
General John Ashcroft today, urging him to drop the Federal criminal
prosecution of a South Carolina man who attended a Bush speech at an airport
and refused to give up his sign reading, “No more war for oil.” In addition
to Mr. Frank, signers on the letter include Ron Paul (R-TX), John Conyers
(D-MI), James R. Langevin (D-RI), Loretta Sanchez (D-CA), Edward J. Markey
(D-MA), Howard L. Berman (D-CA), William D. Delahunt (D-MA), Zoe Lofgren
(D-CA), Jerrold Nadler (D-NY) and Melvin L. Watt (D-NC).
According to reports from protestor Brett Bursey and the press, police
officers arrested Mr. Bursey for standing with thousands of Republicans
welcoming the President at a Columbia, South Carolina airport because Mr.
Bursey refused to change or put down his sign. Mr. Bursey reports he was
told that if he wanted to protest the President, he would have to go to the
designated protest site half a mile away near a highway and outside the
sight and hearing of the President. “It’s the content of your sign,”
officials said.
Mr. Bursey was arrested and charged by the South Carolina police with
trespassing. When that charge was soon dropped by South Carolina
authorities, Mr. Bursey was then indicted by United States Attorney J. Strom
Thurmond, Jr. for violation of a federal law that allows the Secret Service
to restrict access to areas visited by the President. If Mr. Bursey is
convicted in the non-jury trial that Mr. Thurmond is seeking, Mr. Bursey
faces up to six months in prison and a $5,000 fine.
In the letter to Ashcroft released today, the Members of Congress called the
prosecution of Mr. Bursey for carrying his sign outside the designated free
speech zone “a threat to the freedom of expression we should all be
defending”:
“As we read the First Amendment to the Constitution, the United States is a
‘free speech zone’. In the United States, free speech is the rule, not the
exception, and citizens’ rights to express it do not depend on their doing
it in a way the President finds politically amenable . . . . We ask that you
make it clear that we have no interest as a government in “zoning”
Constitutional freedoms, and that being politically annoying to the
President of the United States is not a criminal offense. This prosecution
smacks of the use of the Sedition Acts two hundred years ago to protect the
President from political discomfort. It was wrong then and it is wrong now.
We urge you to drop this prosecution based so clearly on the political views
being expressed by the individual who is being prosecuted.”
A copy of the letter is attached.
#####
May 27, 2003
The Honorable John Ashcroft
Attorney General
Department Of Justice
950 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20530
Dear Mr. Attorney General,
Respecting as we do the roles assigned to the Legislative and Executive
Branches by the Constitution, we do not usually comment on pending
individual prosecutions. But where important national policy issues are
directly implicated in decisions to prosecute, we believe it is our
responsibility to express our views. And we feel very strongly that the
decision by your department to charge Brett Bursey under Section 1752
(a)(1)(ii) of Title 18 of the U.S. Code is greatly mistaken, and is in fact
a threat to the freedom of expression we should all be defending.
Of course it is a primary duty of the Secret Service to protect the
President, but there is no plausible argument that can be made that Mr.
Bursey was threatening the President by holding a sign which the President
found politically offensive. Mr. Bursey reports that he was told that he had
to either put down his sign or leave the area – in other words, it was not
his presence in the area but his presence holding a sign that was expressing
a political viewpoint critical of the President that caused his arrest. The
fact that Mr. Bursey was told to go to the “free speech zone” demonstrates
how mistaken the Justice Department’s position is in this regard.
As we read the First Amendment to the Constitution, the United States is a
“free speech zone”. In the United States, free speech is the rule, not the
exception, and citizens’ rights to express it do not depend on their doing
it in a way that the President finds politically amenable. It is extremely
relevant that the State dropped the trespassing charges, and that the U.S.
Attorney, Mr. Thurmond, then brought this serious charge. Perhaps the
problem was trying to convict Mr. Bursey of trespassing when he was standing
on public property and doing nothing unlawful. But the State’s decision to
drop the charge should have been a model for the federal government, rather
than an occasion for the federal government instituting a serious criminal
prosecution of an individual whose “crime” was engaging in free speech
outside of what law enforcement officials decided was the appropriate
“zone”. We ask that you make it clear that we have no interest as a
government in “zoning” Constitutional freedoms, and that being politically
annoying to the President of the United States is not a criminal offense.
This prosecution smacks of the use of the Sedition Acts two hundred years
ago to protect the President from political discomfort. It was wrong then
and it is wrong now. We urge you to drop this prosecution based so clearly
on the political views being expressed by the individual who is being
prosecuted.
Barney Frank
Ron Paul
John Conyers
James R. Langevin
Loretta Sanchez
Zoe Lofgren
Edward J. Markey
Howard L. Berman
Jerrold Nadler
Melvin L. Watt
William D. Delahunt
#####

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