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Three activists charged with trespassing, criminal mischief
By ELOISE OGDEN, Regional Editor [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Minot Daily News [North Dakota], June 22, 2006

Three nuclear protesters arrested Tuesday at a Minuteman III missile
launch facility west of Garrison when they unlawfully entered the area,
remain in the McLean County Jail in Washburn Wednesday.

The three, Greg Boertje-Obed, 51, and Michael Walli, 57, both military
veterans from Duluth, Minn., and Carl Kabat, 72, a retired priest from St.
Louis, made their initial appearance in Washburn Wednesday afternoon
before South Central District Judge Bruce Romanick.

McLean County Sheriff Don Charging said the three are being charged with
criminal trespass and criminal mischief, both Class A misdemeanors, and
bond was set at $500 each. He said the FBI is involved in the case and
federal charges are pending.

On Wednesday, Col. Sandra Finan, commander of the 91st Space Wing at Minot
AFB held a news conference for local media regarding the incident at the
missile site.

The space wing operates, maintains and controls 150 Minuteman III missiles
in underground launch facilities in northwest and north-central North
Dakota.

The missile site that the three men entered is located about 30 miles west
of Garrison and just northwest of the White Shield community in McLean
County. The site is about 75 miles southwest of Minot AFB.

Finan said the three individuals unlawfully entered the Echo-9 missile
launch facility at about 10 a.m. Tuesday.

“The individuals used bolt cutters (to cut the lock) to gain access to the
site. Once inside, they attempted to destroy government property using
hammers and by posting graffiti,” Finan said. More specifically, she said
they “took a hammer and beat on some of the external components, then they
sprayed graffiti in several different locations and hung some signs.”

The Wisconsin-based Nukewatch group, of which the three men are
volunteers, reported the three men entered the missile silo area and
painted “It's a sin to build a nuclear weapon” on the face of the hardened
silo cover and poured their blood on the missile lid.”

Finan said the launch facilities are unmanned, remote sites that are
directly monitored 24-hours a day, seven-days a week by Air Force
personnel in launch control centers.

She said as soon as the individuals entered the missile launch facility
area, “we (LCC personnel) knew.”

“As soon as that happened we sent our security forces to see what was
happening. Security forces arrived, found the three individuals on site,
detained them and then waited for the sheriff to arrive,” Finan said.

Finan said the missiles housed in these facilities are in hardened
underground silos protected by multiple layers of security. She said more
than 700 security forces airmen “can and will respond at a moment's notice
to any security violation.”

“Yesterday the system worked as designed,” Finan said. “Within minutes,
our security forces were on scene and had detained the individuals until
local law enforcement arrived and took custody. The individuals were taken
from the area and brought to the McLean County Jail.

In statements on Web sites, the nuclear protesters said their actions
Tuesday at the missile site took the missile off-line and it couldn't be
used.

Finan said Wednesday that is not true.

“At no time was the underground missile's safety, security or readiness
affected in any way,” she said.

Sheriff Don Charging said the three men were wearing clown suits when they
arrived at the jail in Washburn.

In a statement on a Web site, the three men said, “We dress as clowns to
show that humor and laughter are key elements in the struggle to transform
the structures of destruction and death.”

A photograph of the three dressed in clown outfits at the fence of the E-9
missile site is shown on a Web site.

Authorities are seeking a fourth person or others who apparently dropped
off the men at the site and took the photo which is posted on the Web
site. That individual or individuals was not at the missile site and there
was no vehicle there.

Bonnie Urfer, Nukewatch co-director at its headquarters in Luck, Wis.,
said the organization is not a membership organization but has volunteers,
including Boertje-Obed, Walli and Kabat. She said the organization
supports the three men's actions in North Dakota.

She said the reason, according to statements from the three men arrested,
that they entered the missile silo area is “they feel as if the building
of nuclear weapons is a sin against God and criminal according to national
law....”

She said there was not any specific event or reason that the three
Nukewatch volunteers visited the North Dakota missile silo at this time.

Urfer, who has been with Nukewatch for 20 years, said peace activists are
aware of what can happen when they go to an area to protest. “I think
people who do disarmament tactics know what to expect,” she said.

Urfer said Nukewatch was more active in North Dakota in the 1980s when the
group was publishing “Nuclear Heartland,” a book on the missile silos in
North Dakota and mapping their locations.

She said Nukewatch promotes getting rid of all nuclear weapons in the
United States. She said she thinks the United States should set an example
for other nations, but with having “7,000 ready to go – not a way to set
an example,” she said.

Urfer did not know of any immediate plans for other activities of
Nukewatch in North Dakota – “only in conjunction with any trials or
subsequent court proceedings,” she said.

Finan said at the news conference, “The men and women of the 91st Space
Wing are deeply committed to our national security mission and we will
ensure that all property that is under our responsibility is protected in
the interest of the nation.”

“When folks violate that security, it is our responsibility to ensure that
our national strategic deterrent forces are ready all the time and that
they are safe and secure. And we will execute that mission,” she said.

The incident remains under investigation.

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