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Couple in anti-Bush T-shirts were arrested at president�s speech 
By Tara Tuckwiller
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

A husband and wife who wore anti-Bush T-shirts to the president�s Fourth of July 
appearance aren�t going down without a fight: They will be represented by lawyers from 
the American Civil Liberties Union as they contest the trespassing charges against 
them Thursday morning in Charleston Municipal Court.

Police took Nicole and Jeff Rank away in handcuffs from the event, which was billed as 
a presidential appearance, not a campaign rally. They were wearing T-shirts that read, 
�Love America, Hate Bush.�

Spectators who wore pro-Bush T-shirts and Bush-Cheney campaign buttons were allowed to 
stay.

�We weren�t doing anything wrong,� said Jeff Rank. The couple, who said they had 
tickets just like everybody else, said they simply stood around the Capitol steps with 
the rest of the spectators.

�We sang the national anthem,� Rank said.

The Ranks hardly fit the image of rabble-rousers. Jeff Rank, 29, has a master�s degree 
in oceanography. Nicole Rank, 30, has degrees in biological science and marine 
biology. They have been married for seven years.

Nicole Rank arrived in Charleston soon after the Memorial Day floods. She was working 
as deputy environmental liaison officer for the Federal Emergency Management Agency, 
making sure cities and counties obeyed federal environmental laws as they repaired 
roads and bridges.

After police arrested the Ranks, fingerprinted them and took their mug shots, FEMA 
told Nicole Rank she was no longer needed in West Virginia.

�I have not been fired per se,� she said. �But I was released from this job. And when 
they release you from a job, you no longer get paid.�

The Ranks started to go home to Corpus Christi, Texas, but they only got as far as 
Roanoke, Va., when it occurred to them that they might not be able to contest their 
arrest if they weren�t in Charleston on their court date. A phone call confirmed their 
suspicions. So they turned around.

�We�ve been living in motels ever since,� said Jeff Rank, who spent Tuesday evening in 
his motel room with his wife, their cocker spaniel Feinman, and their marmalade cat 
Rowr.

�It�s extremely difficult [financially]. We can only afford to do this for so long.�

But they had to stay and fight the charges, he said, �because we didn�t think we were 
guilty.�

Since Bush took office in early 2001, people have been banned from displaying 
anti-Bush messages at dozens of Bush appearances across the country. In September, the 
ACLU filed a federal lawsuit against the Secret Service, seeking an injunction against 
the Bush administration for segregating protesters at his public appearances.

The Secret Service agreed that such censorship was wrong, said Witold Walczak, one of 
the lawyers that filed the lawsuit.

�They had an internal memo dated September 2002, saying they couldn�t treat protesters 
differently or worse� than anyone else at a presidential appearance, Walczak said. 
�The judge said any agent responsible for doing so could be held liable for damages.�

The Secret Service had been telling local police to sequester anyone displaying an 
anti-administration message, usually in areas completely out of sight and earshot of 
Bush. Because the Secret Service agreed with the ACLU that it shouldn�t be doing that, 
the judge dismissed the case.

�Prior to filing our suit in September, we�d get a couple of confirmed �protest zone� 
complaints every month,� Walczak said. �After we filed, there were practically none. 
We had two documented incidents between September and March: one in Little Rock, Ark., 
and one in Knoxville, Tenn.�

But now, lawyers like Walczak are carefully monitoring cases like the Ranks� � and two 
similar incidents recently in Pennsylvania.

�We�re trying to assess what is going on at these appearances ... whether these 
�protest zones� are resuming,� he said.

�We are continuing to monitor all campaign events by both Republican and Democratic 
candidates. We�re prepared to go back into court if we see discrimination occurring.�

Because Bush�s Fourth of July stop in Charleston was billed as an official 
presidential visit, not a campaign rally, �That makes it an even more glaring 
violation of the First Amendment,� said Andrew Schneider, executive director of the 
ACLU of West Virginia.

�It�s an Orwellian way to keep speech out of sight of those the speech is intended to 
critique ... We want to nip this in the bud before it becomes a habit of future 
administrations.�

A Bush spokesman did not return a telephone call seeking comment on the necessity of 
the �free speech zone.�

To contact staff writer Tara Tuckwiller, use e-mail or call 348-5189. 

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