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Showing posts with label Bidder 70. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bidder 70. Show all posts

Saturday, November 9, 2013

"We Have to Be the Carbon Tax" — an Interview With Tim DeChristopher

by Peter RughWaging NonViolence | Interview, Truth Out, November 7, 2013

If you walk along Manhattan’s West Side Highway, upon the long strip of bike lanes and greenery between the Hudson River and the droning automobiles, you’ll come to a fresh patch of pavement that’s a stone’s throw away from the Pier 51 Playground. You can’t tell by the look of it, but beneath the new asphalt hundreds of millions of cubic feet-worth of natural gas are flowing.

While the national climate movement has focused on the transnational Keystone XL pipeline, this tiny site has been the object of a more-than-two-year local battle over the first natural gas pipeline to enter New York City in 40 years. Objecting to the high radon content of the fracked gas and the risk of explosion this pipeline carries, my friends and I waged a campaign of legal challenges and protests against its operator, Spectra Energy Corporation.

Despite our best efforts, however, the pipeline went live on Friday. The following day, we gathered for one last act of defiance, bringing all seven lanes of the West Side Highway to a standstill.

“They built a pipeline, we built a movement,” said Clare Donahue, a Manhattanite who has dedicated the last three years of her life to stopping Spectra, as she and a dozen others were being arrested. The banner they had strewn across the highway read, “Shut down this pipeline.” But it may as well have read “Shut down all pipelines” because everyone there knew that this was just one battle in the greater war against fossil fuels.

It just so happened that among those present was Tim DeChristopher, an environmental activist who came to notoriety in 2008 when he disrupted a Bureau of Land Management oil and gas lease auction in Utah. DeChristopher spent 21 months in jail after bidding on land to keep it out of the hands of drillers — a story that served as inspiration for many people working within the climate movement today.

On my walk to the final Spectra pipeline protest, I spoke with DeChristopher about moving forward after a loss like this, and the larger struggle against fossil fuels.

There’s a debate within the climate movement right now over whether too much focus is being placed on the Keystone XL pipeline at the expense oflocal struggles. How do struggles like this one against the Spectra pipelinerelate to the larger struggle against fossil fuels?

We don’t need to decrease the emphasis on the Keystone XL, but we need to increase the emphasis on all these local struggles. We’re at a point where every single fossil fuel development should be fought — every pipeline, every bit of infrastructure. We don’t have a national energy plan or a climate plan that seriously takes into consideration the impact of burning fossil fuels. There’s no pipeline under consideration that has had a true cost analysis, where corporations have said, “Based on a carbon tax that makes us pay for the full consequences of our actions, it’s worth it. We think it’s worth it for us to build this pipeline.” There’s no fossil fuel development project that’s in that situation.

Until we have that national legislation, that national response to the climate crisis, every single fossil fuel development project should be fought. It should be fought in a way that acknowledges that lack of an overall climate response and puts pressure on the corporations that are standing in the way of that. The very same corporations that are pushing all these fossil fuel development projects are the same ones standing in the way of any coherent climate response.

Their attitude is “We don’t have to worry about those things. Those are externalities.” But at the same time efforts to factor in those costs have been market-based. Carbon trading schemes have been wrought with fraud.

Cap and trade was never a climate plan. Shell and DuPont wrote the cap and trade bill, and used the Sierra Club and World Wildlife Fund and everybody else involved in the U.S. Climate Action Partnership as a front group. Cap and trade was a corporate welfare bill.
The way to put a price on carbon is with a carbon tax. Cap and trade was designed as a way to avoid carbon pricing. For moving forward and creating a truly sustainable economy, I object to the monetization of everything. That’s the current approach to externalities. That basically tries to put a value on human life.

And commodify every molecule of water.

Yes. I disagree with that, and I think there’s a better way to move forward with a truly sustainable economy. But when it comes to fossil fuels and fossil fuel development, the monetization of those externalities is enough. That monetization isn’t going to get us all the way to a sustainable economy, but it will be enough to kill fossil fuels. If they have to pay anywhere near the true costs they’re done. They’re off the table and renewable energy suddenly looks like the only option.

It speaks to the necessity of a global movement. I’ve read criticism of carbon taxing that says if we tax carbon here, fossil fuel companies will simply look elsewhere. Are you concerned about that?

No. If you look at any of the carbon tax plans that are on the table, they’re all taxed at the source in this country — at the wellhead, at the mine, or at the border as a tariff on fossil fuel or fossil fuel-intensive goods like concrete and steel.

But if Shell wanted to keep extracting it could, for example, go to Azerbaijan. Production would increase elsewhere.

Most of the plans out there would impose a tax on goods imported from any country that doesn’t have a carbon tax of its own that meets ours. What that would set up is a situation where if a country wanted to do business with the United States they could either not have a carbon tax and allow that carbon tax to be collected at our borders where it would go into our coffers or they could impose that tax themselves and it would go into their coffers. For any country that’s involved in global trade, where the United States by far is the biggest consumer, that’s going to be an easy decision for them.

Yes, they could go and drill in Azerbaijan or wherever, but Azerbaijan is not burning that oil. They’re not the ones consuming it. It’s all mostly destined for Western markets.

What about countries like Venezuela that are dependent on oil? That’s their curse, but also one of their bargaining chips against U.S. imperialism.

Coming from a state [West Virginia] where we are told that we are dependent on coal for our economy, I firmly reject the notion that the only way to put food on the table is to condemn other people to an unlivable world. People have a lot more potential than that. Making sure that those people don’t have any other options is part of the economic model of fossil fuel development. Whether it’s in Venezuela or West Virginia, the only way they’re going to convince people to poison their water or blow-up their backyards is to make sure they have no other options. Keeping people oppressed with limited options is a core part of the fossil fuel economy.

What, in your mind, are some of the underlying root social causes behind climate change?

A big part of it is consumer culture — the idea that we should be meeting all of our human and emotional needs with the ever increasing consumption of material goods. If our opposition — the structure of institutions and governments — can be said to have a weapon, by and large their weapon is the tool of alienation. They use alienation to make people easier to exploit by isolating them from one another. Alienation breaks people’s spirits, it breaks apart communities and it breaks people apart from one another. When people are alienated from others they try to find their satisfaction in consuming more and more goods. Alienated consumers make better consumers. If they created a void that could actually be filled by material goods it wouldn’t be an effective strategy for very long.

So the Spectra pipeline has been built now. There’s been a strong grassroots fight against it, but there’s gas going through it anyway. What do people do when movements lose a struggle?

Fighting that struggle is always important, to let corporations and their pawns in government know that there will be a struggle with every one of these projects they want to push through and to make that a part of the cost of doing business. Until there is a carbon tax that accounts for the externality of climate change, we have to be the carbon tax and impose that cost of doing business on the fossil fuel industry.

In addition, the energy from fighting this pipeline is being rolled into the energy needed to fight the Rockaway pipeline, to fight liquid natural gas ports, to fight fracking upstate. There has been a lot of great movement-building done as part of this effort. It has engaged people who might not have been paying attention except for the fact that this thing went through their neighborhood or by the playground where their kids play. Now these people can stand together to fight these impacts everywhere else. That’s what it will ultimately take: People going beyond just their backyard issues and standing as a united front against the fossil fuel industry. If people are only fighting battles in their backyard, they’re always going to lose those. If they don’t stand up in a bigger way, then they’re just waiting for their turn.

That’s part of the reason why New Yorkers need to fight projects like this. Not only for the threats that they pose for local communities — radon and the risk of explosion — that directly impact them, but because New York, as a state, as of this point, has decided that fracking is not appropriate within its borders. There is still that moratorium, which hopefully will last. Yet, they’re using fracked gas from Pennsylvania. If that’s the position New York is taking, that it’s okay to frack in someone else’s backyard, but we don’t really want it here, then New York is just waiting for their turn to get fracked. If they’re not standing up to it when the gas industry is trying to feed them Pennsylvania’s gas, then when Pennsylvania runs out of gas they’re going to come after New York. That’s unless there’s a coordinated effort to stand up to the fossil fuel industry with every one of these battles.

Thursday, February 14, 2013

The New Abolitionists: Global warming is the great moral crisis of our time


Why the climate-justice movement must embrace its radicalism to fight it
by WEN STEPHENSON, The Phoenix, February 12, 2013


FEAT_CLIMATE-Headline_PosterTreatment
I want to say a word for radicalism — for the role of the radical in building a movement to confront climate change, the most urgent crisis human beings have ever faced. I want to start with two scenes, and two speakers, who embody the imperatives, and the limitations, of the moment in which we find ourselves.
July 26, 2011. Inside a federal courtroom in Salt Lake City, Utah, a 30-year-old climate activist named  Tim DeChristopher is sentenced to two years in prison and a $10,000 fine for disrupting a Bureau of Land Management auction of oil and gas leases back in December 2008. Registered as Bidder #70, he managed to win bids worth $1.8 million for some 22,000 acres of public land near Canyonlands National Park — bids he had no way of paying. He had acted spontaneously, on his conscience, engaged in nonviolent resistance to the heedless new extraction of fossil fuels that are catastrophically heating the planet and threatening innumerable innocent lives.
Weeks before his sentencing, DeChristopher  told Rolling Stone's Jeff Goodell: "I'm a climate-justice activist. . . . We want a radically different world. We want a healthy, just world." But first, he said, "we need to get the fossil fuel industry out of the way. First we've got to overthrow the corporate power that is running our government." He understands what that requires. "It will involve confrontation and it will involve sacrifice."
At his sentencing, standing before the federal judge, DeChristopher concludes a long, eloquent  statement that spreads across the Internet and galvanizes a growing climate-justice movement:
FEAT_CLIMATE_Tim_DeChristopher_Courthouse_July26-2011_SaltLakeCity_cJonathanMauer
Tim DeChristopher
"This is not going away. At this point of unimaginable threats on the horizon, this is what hope looks like. In these times of a morally bankrupt government that has sold out its principles, this is what patriotism looks like. With countless lives on the line, this is what love looks like, and it will only grow. The choice you are making today is what side are you on."
A month after DeChristopher speaks those words, the largest civil-disobedience action in a generation begins in front of the White House, where 1,253 climate activists are arrested protesting the Keystone XL pipeline, the project that would tap the second-largest carbon deposit on Earth. (This  Sunday, February 17, 2013, tens of thousands more will converge on Washington to demand that Barack Obama reject the pipeline once and for all.)
November 4, 2012. It's the Sunday before Election Day, a week after Hurricane Sandy's hellish landfall, and Congressman Ed Markey stands before a capacity crowd inside the Town Hall of Arlington, Massachusetts. Hundreds of constituents have gathered on 48 hours notice for what the congressman has billed as an "emergency meeting" on climate change. Flanked by Kevin Knobloch, president of the Union of Concerned Scientists, and Mindy Lubber, representing $11 trillion in assets as the director of the Investor Network on Climate Risk, Markey displays satellite photos of Boston illustrating that huge sections of the city — like the entire Back Bay — would be underwater if Sandy had hit the Hub instead of New York and New Jersey.
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http://thephoenix.com/Boston/news/151670-new-abolitionists-global-warming-is-the-great/


Thursday, December 6, 2012

Tim DeChristopher: Feds prohibit social justice work during


Climate Activist DeChristopher Barred From "Social Justice" Work

Climate activist Tim DeChristopher at a February 2011 protest in Salt Lake City
Blue Marble readers will recall the story of Tim DeChristopher, a Utah climate activist who posed as a bidder at a December 2008 Bureau of Land Management auction. DeChristopher was the highest bidder on thousands of acres of public land, much of which bordered national parks and monuments. The 27-year-old bid $1.79 million on more than 22,000 acres that he had no intention of actually buying. The government took a hard line on his act of protest, bringing him up on felony charges for mucking up the auction. DeChristopher ended up with a two-year prison sentence and a $10,000 fine.
After serving 15 months in federal prison, DeChristopher is now living in a halfway house. (He's eligible for parole in April.) He's also allowed to work and intended to take a job with the social justice program at the local First Unitarian Church. But the feds intervened, the Deseret News reports:
DeChristopher had been offered a job with the church's social justice ministry, which would include working with cases of race discrimination, sex discrimination or other injustices that fall contrary to Unitarian beliefs.
"The Bureau of Prisons official who interviewed Tim indicated he would not be allowed to work at the Unitarian church because it involved social justice and that was what part of what his crime was," [DeChristopher's attorney Patrick] Shea said.
Yes, that's right—DeChristopher is barred from doing anything that might be construed as acting against injustice, because that's the whole reason they put him in jail in the first place. The newspaper reports that he's taken a job as a clerk at a bookstore instead.
http://www.motherjones.com/blue-marble/2012/12/climate-activist-barred-social-justice-work

Thursday, March 29, 2012

Tim DeChristopher Moved Out of Isolation Unit, Back Into Minimum Security

Tim DeChristopher Moved Out of Isolation Unit, Back Into Minimum Security

A quick update on the facepalmingly absurd news from yesterday on how imprisonedTim DeChristopher got moved into an isolation unit pending completion of an investigation into one of his emails: Apparently he's been moved back into the minimum security part of the prison.
Peaceful Uprising has just posted on Facebook:
BREAKING: Tim DeChristopher just got moved back to the MINIMUM SECURITY CAMP -- late on the night of Wed March 28th, after the prison received thousands of phone calls... from YOU! Thanks for the overwhelming outpouring of support and for such effective public pressure. JOY & RESOLVE!
As is usual, if you're muttering to yourself, "Who the f$!k is Tim DeChristopher?" check out the related links to get up to speed.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Rolling Stone: Jailed climate hero, Tim DeChristopher, thrown in the hole

Jailed climate hero, Tim DeChristopher, thrown in the hole
 
by Jeff Goodell, Rolling Stone Magazine, March 28, 2012
tim dechristopher
Tim DeChristopher
AP Photo/Douglas C. Pizac, File
"Have you ever read Franz Kafka’s The Trial?"
That is the first thing that Patrick Shea, a member of jailed climate activist Tim DeChristopher’s legal defense team, says to me when I call him this morning to ask him about reports that DeChristopher has been pulled out of his minimum security camp at Herlong federal prison in California and thrown into isolated confinement in an 8 x 10-foot cell. His latest crime?  Sending an email to a colleague with a "threat" to give back a $25,000 donation to his legal defense fund because DeChristopher, one of the most principled people I have ever encountered, discovered that his donor was exporting U.S. manufacturing jobs. 
If you don’t know the backstory to DeChristopher’s imprisonment, you can read about it here. (Short version: He was sentenced to two years in prison last July for having nonviolently disrupted a federal auction of oil and gas leases in 2008.) This case was a sham before it took this latest turn.  If there were any justice in the world, DeChristopher would have been pardoned before he ever set foot in jail.  The fact that it is now possible he will serve out the rest of his sentence in a tiny cell with only one break a week to go outside is an outrage, and one that should have everyone who cares about justice and the abuse of political power in America marching in the streets.
According to Shea, a veteran lawyer and director of the federal Bureau of Land Management during the Clinton administration, this is what happened to DeChristopher: On March 5, he wrote an email to Dylan Schneider, the treasurer and volunteer coordinator at Peaceful Uprising, a climate activism group co-founded by DeChristopher. In the email (you can read the whole thing below), DeChristopher discusses the fact that an unnamed corporate donor who contributed to his legal defense fund is exporting U.S. manufacturing jobs and laying off workers.  DeChristopher is not happy: "I feel like I have some influence and hence some responsibility to do something," he writes.  "If they are saving money by screwing their workers, I can’t in good conscience accept some of that money."   He then says that he plans to send a letter to the owner of the company that made the donation, explaining why it bothers him.  He writes, "This letter will include a threat to wage a campaign against them if they don’t reverse course and keep the plants open."
Let's be clear about what DeChristopher is doing here: He's threatening to give back a $25,000 donation because the donor's company is exporting jobs, thus tainting the donation in his eyes.  Is this the action of a dangerous criminal?
According to Shea, five days later, on March 9th, DeChristopher was pulled out of his minimum-security camp and told he was being moved to a cell in Herlong’s Special Housing Unit (SHU).  "When Tim asked why," Shea explains, "he was told that a U.S. Congressman had called and told prison officials that he was threatening people outside of prison."  With that, he hauled off to the SHU, where he has been ever since.  He shares his 8 x 10 cell with another man and, according to Shea, has been allowed outside the tiny cell only four times for brief periods of exercise in what Shea describes as "a dog kennel."
I asked Shea how a letter to a colleague threatening to give back a donation could have caused DeChristopher this kind of trouble.  "Prison officials have special software they use to scan emails," Shea says.  "They picked up on the word 'threat.'  If I had to guess what happened next, the content of the email was described by someone in the Bureau of Prisons to someone else, probably someone who had worked for the Bureau in Washington, D.C., and the congressman was asked to call the Bureau and demand an investigation. Shortly thereafter, the congressional staff called back on behalf of a congressman and requested an investigation, and that was it.  Tim was hauled off the SHU."
I asked Shea if he knew the name of the congressman who called.  "I do not," he says.  "I only know this because the prison official who hauled Tim out of the camp told him a congressman had called."
How is it that a call from a congressman – some oil-funded hack, no doubt – can get DeChristopher thrown in the hole? How can giving money back – money donated to your legal defense fund, no less! – be considered a threat?  "Under federal rules, you are not allowed to organize political action from within the prison," Shea explains.  Of course, all DeChristopher did was write a letter discussing the idea, but when you’re deemed an enemy of Big Oil and their cronies in D.C., that is enough.  It’s the 21st century equivalent of being a Cold War Soviet spy.
The worst of it, Shea says, is that because DeChristopher is being held under investigation, he is in a Kafka-esque limbo – there are no time limits for when the investigation must start or end, and no appeals to his case are allowed until the investigation concludes. 
"He is essentially a political prisoner," says Shea.
Moral outrage aside, DeChristopher’s treatment also brings up First Amendment issues: If you go to jail, do you lose the right of free speech?  "Under these rules," Shea asks, "Would Martin Luther King’s 'Letter from a Birmingham Jail' have been allowed?  I think the answer is an obvious 'no.'  And what does that say about the kind of country we’ve become?"
As for how DeChristopher is handling isolation, Shea sounds worried.  "I saw Tim last Sunday," he says.  "He’s sullen and angry."  DeChristopher is allowed very little exercise or fresh air, Shea says, and his cell mate talks all the time and is driving him nuts.  He is allowed five books – among them is a history of liberal religion in America.  When he is released, he told Shea, he wants to attend Harvard Divinity School and become a Unitarian minister.  But right now, that’s still a long way off.  "I’ve been visiting prisoners for more than 30 years, and I get concerned when they get that beady-eyed look," Shea says.  "And Tim has it."
Tim DeChristopher E-mail


http://www.rollingstone.com/politics/blogs/national-affairs/jailed-climate-hero-tim-dechristopher-thrown-in-the-hole-20120328

Breaking: Tim DeChristopher Placed in Isolated Confinement

Breaking: Tim DeChristopher Placed in Isolated Confinement

Photo by Ryan Suffern, Suckatash Productions
(Download a PDF of our press release here) On the evening of Friday March 9th, Tim DeChristopher was summarily removed from the minimum security camp, where he has been held since September 2011, and moved into the FCI Herlong’s Special Housing Unit (SHU). Tim was informed by  Lieutenant Weirich that he was being moved to the SHU because an unidentified congressman had called from Washington, DC, complaining of an email that Tim had sent to a friend. Tim was inquiring about the reported business practices of one of his legal fund contributors, threatening to return the money if their values no longer aligned with his own.  According to Prison officials, Tim will continue to be held in isolated confinement pending an investigation. There is no definite timeline for inmates being held in the SHU — often times they await months for the conclusion of an investigation.
In the SHU, Tim’s movement and communications are severely restricted. In the past two weeks, he has been allowed out of his 8 x 10 cell (which he shares with one other inmate) four times, each time for less than an hour. The SHU could have been designed by Franz Kafka. Tim is allowed one book in his cell, and four in his property locker.  His writing means are restricted to a thin ink cartridge which makes correspondence extremely difficult.  He can still receive mail from the outside, but has no other form of communication other than 15 minutes of phone calls per month.
Peaceful Uprising found Tim’s conviction and sentence to two years of prison time outrageous enough, and people all over the US demonstrated their dismay at this injustice through widespread solidarity actions.  But now, Tim is being effectively thrown in the hole for no good reason we can see, other than to further restrict his communication. We are witnessing, once again, the hidden power of public and appointed officials in Washington, DC, to inflict cruel and unusual punishment on Tim because of his courageous stand in confronting injustice and speaking truth to power.
We firmly believe the only way Tim will be returned to the minimum security camp he’s been housed in for the last six months is to place outside pressure on elected and appointed officials in Washington, DC, specifically the Bureau of Prisons (BOP) and members of Congress charged with overseeing the BOP.   Peaceful Uprising wishes to express their solidarity with Tim by making this national call to action, asking Tim’s supporters to call officials at the Federal Correctional Institution in Herlong, CA, the Bureau of Prisons in Washington, DC, and members of Congress that sit on the subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism and Homeland Security, demanding that they immediately return Tim to the minimum security camp from which he came.

TAKE ACTION NOW.


Photo by Ryan Suffern, Suckatash Productions
And get THIS:
It has come to our attention that William Koch entered into an antitrust settlement where his company, Gunnison Energy, and SG Interest, a Texas energy company, conspired to orchestrate the bidding at a BLM oil and gas lease auction in Colorado. They memorialized this conspiracy in a memorandum of understanding that was subsequently revealed by a whistleblower.  The Department of Justice settled the matter by having each company pay a $275,000 fine, and allowed the conspirators to retain their successful BLM oil and gas leases, without any personal consequences.  Tim was charged with conspiring to defeat the Act that created the auction (a felony) and for making false statements to the Government (also a felony). These oil and gas companies actually conspired to defeat an identical BLM auction, and made false statements to the Government (according to the Department of Justice). No Oil and Gas executive was charged with felonies and thrown in jail. They were given a token slap on the wrist and went back to drilling. Tim, a peaceful protester, who simply embarrassed the BLM by catching them making big mistakes, is now in a TINY CELL because someone from CONGRESS wants to keep him even quieter? WTF is going on here??
This is not justice, it is political persecution.
Join us in stopping it. TAKE ACTION & DEMAND:
“Tim DeChristopher inmate #16156-081 be immediately removed from the Special Housing Unit (SHU) and placed back in the Minimum Security Camp at FCI Herlong.”
FCI Herlong
530-827-8000
Richard B. Ives, WARDEN
Eloisa DeBruler, Public Information Officer
Bureau of Prisons (BOP) Central Office
202-307-3198
Charles E. Samuels, Jr.
Director
United States House Judiciary Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security
PRIORITY CONGRESSIONAL MEMBERS TO CALL:
Jim Sensenbrenner, WI, Chairman of Subcommittee
(202) 225-5101
Louie Gohmert, TX, Vice Chairman of Subcommittee
(202) 225-3035
Jason Chaffetz, UT
DC: (202) 225-7751
A PRESS CONFERENCE with Tim’s Legal Defense Team
…will be held on Thursday, March 29th, at 1:30pm in front of the  Salt Lake City Frank E. Moss Federal Courthouse, 350 South Main St.
We need your support to continue confronting injustice and to build a healthy a just world.
Make a non tax-deductible gift to Tim’s legal defense fund or a tax-deductible donation to support PeaceUp.
http://www.peacefuluprising.org/breaking-tim-dechristopher-placed-in-isolated-confinement-20120327

Bidder 70, Tim DeChristopher, placed in solitary confinement

Tim DeChristopher placed in solitary confinement

by Ben Winslow, Fox13News, Salt Lake City, March 28, 2012
03-28-deChristopher-Tim
SALT LAKE CITY — Environmental activist Tim DeChristopher has been placed in solitary confinement, his supporters claim.
In a posting on a website for the group DeChristopher founded, Peaceful Uprising said he was placed in isolation earlier this month because of a complaint by an “unidentified congressman” who ordered an investigation into an e-mail DeChristopher had reportedly sent.
“Tim was inquiring about the reported business practices of one of his contributors, threatening to return the money if their values no longer aligned with his own,” the group wrote on peacefuluprising.org
“According to Prison officials, Tim will continue to be held in isolated confinement pending an investigation. There is no definite timeline for inmates being held in the SHU — often times they await months for the conclusion of an investigation.”
Peaceful Uprising said DeChristopher’s communication and movement has been severely restricted. The group was launching a campaign to pressure the Bureau of Prisons to remove him from isolated confinement.
“Tim is being effectively thrown in the hole for no good reason we can see, other than to further restrict his communication. We are witnessing, once again, the hidden power of public and appointed officials in Washington, DC, to inflict cruel and unusual punishment on Tim because of his courageous stand in confronting injustice and speaking truth to power,” the group wrote.
DeChristopher’s attorneys planned a news conference Thursday to discuss his move to isolated confinement, Peaceful Uprising said.
DeChristopher was sentenced to two years in federal prison for sabotaging a BLM oil and gas auction of land near some of Utah’s most famous landmarks. He registered as “Bidder 70″ and drove up the prices of the parcels, prosecutors claimed.
DeChristopher’s defense team countered that he did it to call attention to the issue of climate change.