I'm in amazement if this is true.  I decided to send it just in case it
is...

M.



        Check this out folks.  And people like Nengle try to call militia
members "paranoid":



 Sunday August 06, @03:35AM
 ZNet
 Released R2K Prisoners Hold Press conference
 By John Tarleton

 A half-dozen recently released R2K prisoners held an emotional press
 conference Saturday afternoon. They described repeated instances of
 police brutality and neglect during their time in custody. The
 extraordinary bails (as high as $1 million) being levied against
 protesters also came under fire.
 "I think these bails are meant to stifle dissent," said Paul Hesnekker
 of the R2K Legal Team. "It's part of an attempt to criminalize
 political activism in this country."

 Jimmy Graham, a legal observer for the National Lawyers Guild, was
 arrested when he tried to film a group of police officers who had
 ambushed a young woman wearing a Rainbow-colored bandanna. She was
 suffering an asthma attack and vomiting. When Graham told her she would
 be o.k., the police began slamming his head into the wall. He would
 later be charged with four misdemeanors: failure to disperse, disorderly
 conduct, obstruction of a highway and obstruction of justice.

 "I foolishly thought I wouldn't be arrested because I was a legal
 observer," Graham said. "I thought the yellow hat would give me at
 least a little bit of protection."

 Graham was taken to the hospital for treatment of his head wounds. He
 was told by a police officer that he would be charged with aggravated
 assault of an officer for having done so.

 Later, after he was discharged to the 23rd precinct station, Graham was
 placed in a jail cell that had no running water with which he could
 wash his wounds. Fellow prisoners used wawa tea cartons to pass along
 water to Graham before they were confiscated by guards.

 Jordan, a labor organizer from New York city, said that it was common
 at the Roundhouse for five or six prisoners to be held in a single
 5'x7' cell with one metal cot. Joseph Rogers, a local Quaker activist,
 said prisoners were subject to random beatings. "It didn't really
 matter if you were cooperating," he said. "They still treated you with
 brutality."

 Jessica Mammarella, a sophomore at Temple University, was one of
 78 "puppetistas" arrested Tuesday at the puppet warehouse on 41st and
 Haverford Avenue. She said she was placed on a boiling hot bus for hours
 without water before the police gave the 32 arrestees on board a 16 oz.
 water bottle to share. Later, as it began raining, Mammarella was able
 to stick her middle and index fingers through a slit in the bus window.
 The rainwater ran down her arm and people took turns drinking it as it
 trickled off her elbow. When people were too weak to get up, others
 would cup their hands beneath Mammarella's elbows and carry the rusty-
 tasting water to their friends.

 "You guys don't think about it," she said. "But it felt great to be
 able to drink water."

 Mammarella faces nine misdemeanor charges. She posted a $1,500 bond,
 which came out of tuition money she had saved for the fall semester.

 "I feel so righteous," she said. "We did nothing wrong. Our puppets
 will be seen" * *

 ZNet
 http://www.lbbs.org/ZNETTOPnoanimation.html


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"Few of us can easily surrender our belief that society 
must somehow make sense.  The thought that the state has 
lost it's mind, and is punishing so many innocent people 
is intolerable. So the evidence has to be internally 
denied."
                                 Arthur Miller

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