home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Message-ID: <199803120734.XAA22150@smtp.cwnet.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"
- Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
-
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
- March 11, 1998
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- WOODLAND JUDGE TOSSES OUT UC DAVIS CHARGES AGAINST 5 ACTIVISTS
-
- WOODLAND, CA û Yolo County Municipal/Superior Court Judge Thomas Warriner
- Wednesday dismissed all charges against five people who were tried under a
- controversial "University Libel Law."
-
- Judge Warriner û after two days of pre-trial hearings and before a jury
- could be selected û ruled that key elements of the statute could not be
- proven "beyond a reasonable doubt" before "any" jury by the District Attorney.
-
- The five were arrested after they held a news conference at the University
- of California, Davis on April 21, 1997 critical of the university's use of
- excessive force at an animal rights demonstration on April 20, 1997.
-
- The Judge had also been asked to rule on whether the County's use of Penal
- Code Section 626.6 was misapplied because the law states, specifically, that
- it cannot be used to "impinge on constitutionally-protected activities."
- The law could be used to prosecute anyone û including the news media û who
- come onto state campuses, whether they've broken any other law or not.
-
- However, he noted that the activists, and possibly even the police "without
- a map" could not ascertain where UC Davis property begins or ends, and
- therefore, could not have broken the statute. The judge never had to rule on
- the constitutionality aspect of the statute.
-
- A series of four more trials of 29 people arrested at the demonstration on
- April 20, 1997 begins next Tuesday.
-
- "Despite the efforts of UC Davis and the District Attorney's Office, free
- speech is, for now, still alive and well in Yolo County," said John Paul
- Goodwin, who represented himself in the case. "We consider this a victory,
- not just for us, but for the Bill of Rights and every American."
-
- Charges were dismissed against Goodwin, 25, of Dallas; David Wilson, 20, of
- Salt Lake City; Sheila Laracy, 51, of Sacramento; Peter Leone, 29, and
- Jonathan Paul, 32, of Williams, OR. They faced up to 6 months in jail, and
- fines up to $500, if convicted.
- -30-
-
-
- ________________________
- Legal Aide Offices Of
- Activist Civil Liberties Committee
- PO Box 19515
- Sacramento, CA 95819
- Telephone: (916) 452-7179
- Fax: (916) 454-6150
-
- Date: Thu, 12 Mar 1998 00:11:58
- From: David J Knowles <dknowles@dowco.com>
- To: ar-news@envirolink.org
- Subject: [CA] Wolves die as we think they live: big and bad
- Message-ID: <3.0.3.16.19980312001158.39ef572c@dowco.com>
- Mime-Version: 1.0
- Content-Type: text/plain; charset="us-ascii"
-
- >From The Vancouver Sun - Tuesday, March 10th, 1998
-
- [posted with permission of author]
-
- By Nicholas Read
-
- News of a snowmobile slaughter says to me that the humane Canadian trapper
- is a fiction.
-
- When Alison Beale, executive director of the taxpayer-subsidized Fur
- Institute of Canada, heard that 460 wolves had been run down with
- snowmobiles in the Northwest Territories, she told reporters that it was a
- "question of efficiency" and if the NWT government approved of hunting
- wolves from snowmobiles it must be all right.
-
- Last week, after biologists and conservationists expressed outrage at the
- kill, she was more circumspect.
-
- She refused any comment, saying only that she and the institute needed more
- information.
-
- The Institute's favourite fairytale is that trapping in Canada has become
- less cruel. It speaks piously now of more humane traps, and during the "fur
- is back" hysteria of recent months, has boasted that the bad old days of
- leghold traps are over.
-
- This is nonsense. Leghold traps are still used widely throughout Canada,
- and the Canadian government shows no sign of aboloshing them. Still, the
- institute likes to pretend.
-
- But 460 wolves run to exhaustion by trappers on snowmobiles is beyond
- anyone's pale - even, it appears, the institute's.
-
- The territory's wildlife minister, Stephen Kakfwi, is practising damage
- control. After the kill was reported last month, he told the Globe & Mail
- that his government had no intention of banning snowmobile hunting of
- wolves. Then he told me that hunting from snowmobiles was already illegal,
- and that he was very angry that no newspaper had reported that.
-
- However, he added that while it was illegal to harass an animal to death
-