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Tim DeChristopher Supporters Protest In Favor Of Utah Environmental Activist

Tim Dechristopher Supporters

By JENNIFER DOBNER   07/27/11 03:36 PM ET   AP

SALT LAKE CITY -- A sentencing hearing turned into a rally supporting an environmental activist who has become an antihero after disrupting a government auction of oil and gas leases near two national parks in Utah.

Protesters gathered around the courthouse and dozens were arrested Tuesday as Tim DeChristopher launched into a lengthy address urging others fight climate change by taking similar steps of civil disobedience.

But U.S. District Judge Dee Benson said there was no excuse for the 29-year-old former wilderness guide's blatant disrespect for the rule of law.

Benson sentenced DeChristopher to two years in prison on Tuesday, making him the first person to be prosecuted for failing to make good on bids at a lease auction of Utah public lands. He ran up bids on 13 parcels totaling more than 22,000 acres near Arches and Canyonlands national parks in 2008.

"My intent both at the time of the auction and now was to expose, embarrass and hold accountable the oil and gas industry, to the point that it cut into their $100 billion profits," DeChristopher told Benson.

DeChristopher said he would accept whatever punishment Benson imposed, but added that time in prison would not silence him or change his viewpoint.

"You have authority over my life, but not my principles. Those are mine," DeChristopher said. "I'll continue to confront the system that threatens our future."

DeChristopher also said that in a world where corporations have so much influence over government he believed that civil disobedience might be the only way to make change.

"This is what hope looks like from now on. This is what patriotism looks like. This is what love looks like," he said.

A courtroom packed with DeChristopher supporters broke into applause when he finished speaking to the judge.

Benson didn't silence them. But when they were done, he said that concerns over climate change don't justify breaking the law.

"I'm not saying there isn't a place for civil disobedience," the judge said. "But it can't be the order of the day."

Benson said one of the great myths of the case was that he had no choice but to try and derail the government auction.

"Mr. DeChristopher had many other lawful ways to go against or protest the auction," Benson said.

Benson also gave DeChristopher a $10,000 fine and three years of probation.

After the sentencing, DeChristopher supporters in Benson's courtroom broke into song and one person shouted, "This is not justice."

The case has elevated DeChristopher to folk hero status. Since his arrest, DeChristopher has become a vocal advocate for the environmental movement and encouraged others to match his actions.

Outside the downtown courthouse, a protest gathering of about 100 people draped in orange sashes blocked the doors to the courthouse, many of them crying and shouting.

Protesters used plastic ties around their wrists to form a human chain that moved into the streets, blocking car and light rail traffic, police spokeswoman Lara Jones said.

Police arrested 26 people and hauled them off to jail off on a bus, she said.

Federal prosecutors didn't ask Benson for the 10-year maximum, but advocated for a significant sentence that would serve as a deterrent to others.

They said a U.S. Probation Office report, which recommended a sentence less than the maximum, underestimated the harm caused when DeChristopher ran up the price of the parcels, pushing the bids beyond the reach of other buyers in December 2008.

He ended up with $1.7 million in leases. DeChristopher could not pay for the leases and his actions cost some angry oilmen hundreds of thousands of dollars in higher bids for other parcels.

Assistant U.S. Attorney John Huber said the sentence was a significant enough deterrent.

"If a sentence was perceived as too light or inconsequential, it could be seen as a reasonable price to pay to grab the limelight or gain fame," Huber said.

The case has become a symbol of solidarity for environmentalists, including celebrities like Robert Redford and Daryl Hannah. Peter Yarrow of the folk trio Peter, Paul and Mary, led a sing-a-long and rally outside the courthouse in the hours leading up to the hearing.

The event was organized by DeChristopher's nonprofit group, Peaceful Uprising.

Carlos Martins, a college student at the protest rally, said after the sentencing that "they gave him that sentence to deter us, but they're proving that by making civil disobedience impossible, they're making violent actions inevitable."

Defense attorney Ron Yengich said he met with DeChristopher after the sentencing and that he was doing fine. Yengich compared his client's actions to the likes of Gandhi and Rosa Parks.

"He understands that part of the roots of civil disobedience are that some people go to prison ... the problem is we only impose the rule of law on people like Tim DeChristopher," Yengich said. "We never impose the rule of law on people who steal from poor people, destroy the banking systems or destroy the earth."

___

Associated Press writer Josh Loftin contributed to this report.

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SALT LAKE CITY -- A sentencing hearing turned into a rally supporting an environmental activist who has become an antihero after disrupting a government auction of oil and gas leases near two national...
SALT LAKE CITY -- A sentencing hearing turned into a rally supporting an environmental activist who has become an antihero after disrupting a government auction of oil and gas leases near two national...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PlayTOE
Morals evolved due to cooperative group living
02:49 PM on 08/21/2011
What can you do?
Become part of the action
sign one of the free Tim DeChristopher petitions (you can find several on Google)
For one on facebook link to
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Free-Tim-DeChristopher/194544743933335
11:52 AM on 08/15/2011
It's time to end corporate personhood, one more reason.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
suzukimom
06:57 PM on 08/05/2011
This story should have been on the front page, not the crap that is there all the time anymore which is why I spend less and less time at Huffington Post.
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singsingsing
it's not easy being green
09:04 AM on 08/03/2011
It is really quite simple, this man is a true hero. He obviously thought the whole thing through and weighed the costs to himself. I'll wager he sleeps like a baby in prison. I wish I had his smarts. He has shown Progressives a way for future actions. I can only say THANK YOU Mr. DeChristopher.
03:20 PM on 07/28/2011
Justice is only for little people.  When BP and Massey Energy ignore safety laws and it results in the d e a t h s of many people and enormous damage to the environment, there is no punishment.  It's time we started holding judges and juries accountable for their corruption.
03:19 PM on 07/28/2011
Our justice system is completely corrupted by corporations.  The proof is the fact that environmental activists get jail time for merely breaking the law at an auction (a minor offense) but BP executives don't get ANY PUNISHMENT AT ALL for the worst environmental disaster in US history, which included the crimes of criminal negligence and m u r d e r.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jack Haesly
08:19 PM on 07/27/2011
This is about the most outrageous sentence I have heard of in a while. George W. Bush can start illegal wars which killed an estimated 1 million civilian Iraq citizens, even bankrupting America, and he gets to retire in high style in Dallas even building a library to his brand of treachery and political criminality.
Meanwhile some jerk Utah judge will not hear DeChristopher's reasons for his civil disobedience? Does not the judge realize the act was to protect all American citizen's interests, including the judge's, from the tactics and the continuing rape of our earth by the oil companies? Think rape is a harsh word to use here? Take a close look at our Gulf Coast or West Texas oil wastelands then answer that question.
A token fine would have been in order, but ten years and $10,000. Give me a break. That, in my mind's eye, is true criminality on the part of the judge.
11:20 AM on 07/28/2011
agree with you and just as angry
He got two years according to the article, I'm assuming that in your anger you made a typo!
something not mentioned in this article is he was being convicted because he was bidding fraudulantly with no intent to pay, however the judge didnot allow the defense lawyers to show that Tim with full intent tried to raise the money to purchase the permits.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
aligatorhardt
I DO NOT pity the fool
02:43 AM on 07/29/2011
What a travesty, when evidence is denied to the jury. This judge deserves impeachment.
11:55 AM on 08/15/2011
Good message, Jack.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
thrugreeneyez
06:58 PM on 07/27/2011
Dechristopher is a hero!!!!!
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
06:12 PM on 07/27/2011
"But U.S. District Judge Dee Benson said there was no excuse for the 29-year-old former wilderness guide's blatant disrespect for the rule of law."

What RUBBISH. There WAS an 'excuse' but the Judge refused to allow it. Besides which, the auctions themselves were illegal and later tossed out.

On top of that, DeChristopher raised the $ to COVER HIS BIDS, but the judge didn't allow that either.

This judge is in the pocket of someone and let us not forget, this happened under Bush's DoJ but it was OBAMA peops that prosecuted.
03:25 PM on 07/27/2011
In Utah if you're Mormon or anti -science and reasoning and commit a crime against the Big Government you're either not prosecuted or if you are and found guilty given probation. How dare someone not a practicing member of the LDS Church commit a non redneck crime against the Feds? This is where you see the extreme hypocrisy of Utah best in action.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MFM008
I have a headache.
04:18 PM on 07/27/2011
you forgot republican. This judge was appointed by Bush #1. The Gov is a goppie. Im afraid they wont even let him out for good behaviour.
11:44 PM on 07/27/2011
My oversight. You're right the extreme judicial double standard aplies to all non Republicans as well in Utah. Some of the others they let of the hook in Utah are repeat offenders like in the Indian Artifact Looting.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert Fanney
Scribbler
03:19 PM on 07/27/2011
Civil disobedience through non-violent protest. Tim is doing the right thing and should be celebrated -- not sentenced. Mark Twain and many other great Americans would be proud.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
KarlaElisa
The atmosphere is Toxic
11:57 AM on 08/14/2011
i WANT to favorite your comment but HP ONLY seems to want me to give you badges. And despite having given you one, I still am not allowed to favorite this statement. Just wanted you to know.
03:07 PM on 07/27/2011
Rule of law except for Big Money.
Look at all the banksters on Wall Street that got two years in jail. Oh yeah, there aren't any.
02:10 PM on 07/27/2011
I tweeted this, but it hasn't registered....