_http://www.natural-rights.org_ (http://www.natural-rights.org/) 
Activists Seek  to Evict Souter From Home
AP 21 January 2006


CONCORD, N.H. -  Angered by a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that sided 
with a Connecticut city  that wanted to seize homes for economic 
development, a group of activists is  trying to get one of the 
justices who voted for the decision evicted from  his own home.

The group, led by a California man, wants Justice David  Souter's home 
seized for the purpose of building an inn called "Lost Liberty  Hotel."

They submitted enough petition signatures  - only 25 were  needed - 
to bring the matter before voters in March. This weekend, they're  
descending on Souter's hometown, the central New Hampshire town of  
Weare, population 8,500, to rally for support.

"This is in the  tradition of the Boston Tea Party and the Pine Tree Riot,"

organizer  Logan Darrow Clements said, referring to the riot that took 
place during the  winter of 1771-1772, when colonists in Weare beat up 
officials appointed by  King George III who fined them for logging 
white pines without  approval.

"All we're trying to do  is put an end to eminent domain  abuse," 
Clements said, by having those who advocate or facilitate it   "live 
under it, so they understand why it needs to end."

Bill  Quigley, Weare deputy police chief, said if protesters show up, 
they're  going to be told to stay across the street  from a dirt road 
that leads  to Souter's brown farmhouse, which is more than 200 years 
old. It isn't  known if Souter will be home.

"They're obviously not going to be  allowed  on Justice Souter's 
property,"  he said.

"There's  no reason for anybody to go down that road unless they live 
on that road,  and we know the residents that live there. The last 
time (Clements) showed  up, they had a total of about three or four 
people who showed up to listen  to him."

Clements, of Los Angeles, said he's never tried to contact  Souter.

"The justice doesn't have any comment about it," Kathy Arberg, a  
Supreme Court spokeswoman, said about the protesters' cause.

The  petition asks whether the town  should take Souter's land for  
development  as an inn; whether to set up a trust fund  to accept  
donations for legal expenses; and whether to set up a second trust  
fund  to accept donations  to compensate Souter for taking his  land.
The matter goes to voters on March 14.

Clements said  participants  planned to meet at Weare Town Hall on 
Saturday morning  and divide into teams to go door-to-door to get more 
petition signatures. He  also wants to distribute copies of the 
Supreme Court's decision, Kelo vs.  City of New London, to residents.

The court said New London, Conn., could  seize homeowners' property to 
develop a hotel, convention center, office  space and condominiums 
next to Pfizer Inc.'s new research  headquarters.

The city argued that tax revenues and new jobs from the  development 
would benefit the public. The Pfizer complex was built, but  seven 
homeowners challenged the rest of the development in court. The  
Supreme Court's ruling against them prompted many states, including 
New  Hampshire, to examine their eminent domain laws.

State Rep. Neal Kurk, a  Weare resident who is sponsoring two pieces 
of eminent domain legislation in  New Hampshire, said he expects the 
group's proposal to be defeated  overwhelmingly.

"Most people here see this as an act of revenge and an  improper 
attack on the judicial system,"

Kurk said.

"You don't  go after a judge personally because you disagree 
with his  judgments."

Weare-based Committee for the Preservation of Natural  Rights:
<http://www.natural-rights.org/lostlibertyinn.htm>Lost Liberty  Inn Project

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