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Tim DeChristopher, Utah Environmental Activist, Appealing 2011 Conviction

AP  |  By Posted: 05/09/2012 2:35 pm

SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — An environmental activist is asking a federal appeals court to overturn his two-year prison sentence for disrupting an auction of drilling parcels on public lands near Utah's national parks.

Defense lawyers argue that Tim DeChristopher was wrongly convicted at a federal trial in Salt Lake City last summer. They say DeChristopher lacked criminal intent and was acting in civil disobedience to disrupt an auction of wilderness lands he believed was illegal. The judge refused to allow the former college student to offer that testimony.

Arguments are set for Thursday before the 10th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in Denver.

DeChristopher acted in bad faith and his conviction should stand, prosecutors said in papers filed with the appeals court in January.

He signed a bid form acknowledging liability for any failure to pay, and when his bidding raised suspicions, he told an agent for the U.S. Bureau of Land Management that he had no money but was trying to drive up prices for oilmen, the government asserts.

"DeChristopher never provided any evidence that the auction itself was invalid in any way," the U.S. Attorney's Office in Salt Lake City argued in in a 52-page brief. He ended up winning 14 drilling parcels for nearly $1.8 million.

His lawyers say he was singled out for prosecution because of his honesty, and that the government never took action against bidders at other auctions who failed to pay or bounced checks for their parcels.

He is nearly halfway through his sentence at a remote federal prison in northern California and won't be released for Thursday's hearing, said Pat Shea, one of his lawyers and director of the Bureau of Land Management for two years during the Clinton administration.

DeChristopher told his lawyer recently that he will be transferred May 19 to a federal prison in Littleton, Colo., a request he made at sentencing to be closer to his parents and a sister. The government isn't explaining why it reversed course, Shea said.

"The Lord and the Bureau of Prisons work in mysterious ways," he said.

DeChristopher is considered a folk hero in the environmental community for sabotaging the auction and accepting the consequences. He says he plans to continue a life of social activism after prison as a minister. Shea and other supporters are encouraging the economics major to study for a graduate exam and apply for Harvard Divinity School in 2013.

His lawyers argue DeChristopher stepped inside the auction with no specific plan to disrupt the bidding after being offered a bidder's paddle by an auction official.

The defense team cited U.S. District Court Judge Dee Benson's statements at sentencing to assert DeChristopher was wrongly prosecuted for political reasons.

Benson said, "If this hadn't been a continuing trail of statements by Mr. DeChristopher about his advocacy, as he calls it civil disobedience, and that he will continue to fight, and 'I am prepared to go to prison,' then others are going to have to be prepared to go with me, that causes me to feel under the sentencing laws before me that a term of imprisonment is required."

The two-year sentence was a year longer that the defense team expected, Shea said.

Also on HuffPost:

FOLLOW GREEN

DENVER (AP) — An environmental activist who disrupted an oil and gas auction for land near Utah's national parks did so in protest, bringing attention to parcels that shouldn't have been for sale, h...
DENVER (AP) — An environmental activist who disrupted an oil and gas auction for land near Utah's national parks did so in protest, bringing attention to parcels that shouldn't have been for sale, h...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
towerofpower11
09:42 AM on 05/12/2012
Did you here, "Tim DeChristopher is going to be released prison and they are giving him a full pardon". oops! that was just my paddel waving in the air, Am I bad.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
towerofpower11
03:17 PM on 05/10/2012
He wanted justice and he got justice.
12:33 PM on 05/10/2012
If we really examine this story, then real message is this. Government and corporations are that same all around the world. Americans like to feel safe and believe that somehow we and our freedoms are immune to corruption and control. Somehow its always the communist countries or middle east that are so much worse. The actions of these officials and many other circumstances related to public protest are sending Americans a message. Fear us. Don't make noise or you too will be incarcerated. And we are afraid. Afraid to stand up, afraid of our fellow humans on the street and at the grocery. We are choosing to be controlled by the media and a climate of fear.
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12:31 PM on 05/10/2012
wonder if he is experiencing what Pres Obama spoke about yesterday
oil patch
if you voted obama, you are to blame
10:57 AM on 05/10/2012
He engaged in criminal fraud, whether he felt like it was a righteous cause is a moot point...the Taliban feels that their cause is righteous.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JeanRR
01:01 PM on 05/10/2012
If you engage in activism for what you believe is a righteous cause, you should be willing to take the consequences for your action. This is how it works.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PlayTOE
Morals evolved due to cooperative group living
06:29 AM on 05/10/2012
Prison for protecting the environment from an unscrupulous government.
If anyone deserves a presidential pardon, Tim DeChristopher deserves one.
10:27 AM on 05/10/2012
Agreed- given that the auction itself turned out to be illegal and improper, his actions BARELY even qualify as Civil Disobedience.

Once more we see the unbelievable double standard between corporations and actual Persons- corporations enjoy our rights and privileges, but not our liabilities and legal and moral accountability.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
flyingaspidistra
War is not the answer
06:06 AM on 05/10/2012
Not the first great man to serve time for his convictions but I hope he is released as soon as possible!
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Conspiracy2Riot
Go ahead, try and eat that fiat currency
01:01 AM on 05/10/2012
Hoping to high heaven Tim is released early. He's an amazing man.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
olitenup
07:17 PM on 05/09/2012
Vast miscarriage of justice. How much money did big oil/gas pay the DA and the judge?
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Watersisland
Broadcasting from somewhere in the Caribbean
06:59 PM on 05/09/2012
That he was prosecuted and sentenced but that others that bounced checks or failed to pay were never persued blatently exposes this as sheer and unfair retrubution.
06:40 PM on 05/09/2012
Two years for trying to help save National Park lands from the greedy oil companies who care not about the environment! Unfair, unjust and downright mean.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Roosevelt Democrat
06:16 PM on 05/09/2012
I suppose he told his friends, "Well it seemed like a good idea at the time!"
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Conspiracy2Riot
Go ahead, try and eat that fiat currency
01:00 AM on 05/10/2012
I'm sure he still believes it was a good idea because it was.

What happened to him and the evidence not allowed at trial was outrageous. He raised a serious wad of money to pay the leases and they wouldn't allow him to PLUS the judge did not allow that tidbit into testimony as well.

And ALL of the leases bid and purchased that day were tossed out because it WAS an illegal giveaway under Bush. It'd have happened if not for this man.

And it was Obama's DoJ that pursued this...they could have dropped the charges.
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towerofpower11
06:16 PM on 05/10/2012
You just can't buy your way out of a serious crime? Then he would be guilty of pay off's or bribing. Anyway you want to dice this incident is, he is guilty.
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niko73
Dem belly full but we hungry
12:18 PM on 05/11/2012
No. Nothing about that lease sale was illegal. Unethical in many people's opinion, yes. But not illegal.

The Office of Inspector General investigated the lease sale and found it was legal. Some apects were poorly done, for sure, but not illegal. Google "OIG Investigative Report BLM Utah Lease Sale" (no quotes) and click on the first link to read the report for yourself.