Here's a guy for white leftists to get in touch with.

CB


http://metrotimes.com/mmj/war-and-memory-1.1183478

War and memory
Police and prosecutors' abuse of asset forfeiture laws criticized

By John Sinclair

Published: August 3, 2011
Print Email Twitter Facebook MySpace Stumble Digg
More Destinations

When I was coming up in Flint at the end of the 1950s and beginning of
the '60s, I used to hang out at the legendary Sweetie's Barbershop in
the city's north end. There my close pal Charles Leonard Boatwright
Jr. — better known as Junebug — would be doing hair in the style then
known as "fried, dyed and laid to the side."

I used to sit nodding out in a chair in the back, digging Gene Ammons
45s on the jukebox and listening to the cats talk, paying special
attention when they would refer to some of the many, many things that
were then well beyond my personal knowledge or experience.

What would really make my ears perk up was when someone's name would
come up and one cat would say, "Oh, man, I been knowing him for 40
years." This was inconceivable to me: I was just 20 myself, and this
figure represented twice my lifetime. It seemed impossibly far off,
but now 50 years have passed and I say it all the time, especially
this year, when I find myself celebrating the 40th anniversary of my
release from prison and cringing at the 40th birthday of the War on
Drugs.

A story I read recently in the Drug War Chronicle took me back over
those same 40 years to a law enforcement atrocity in Michigan that's
been all but forgotten in the dreadful annals of the War on Drugs: the
felony prosecution of a guy named Richard Songer for holding the Goose
Lake rock festival on his property outside of Jackson in the summer of
1970. Police and prosecutors claimed the venue was meant to be a place
where drugs could be sold and distributed.

Mark Deming commemorated the Goose Lake festival with a story in the
Metro Times ("Goose Lake memories," July 2, 2008) that explained: "The
Goose Lake festival was the brainchild of Richard Songer, a Southfield
native who'd made a fortune in construction, building many of
Michigan's highways, ramps and bridges. He purchased 350 acres near
Goose Lake, just outside Jackson, and in 1970, Songer, then 35 years
old, decided to transform the property into a park. He told the press:
'It's a dream of mine to put together some place for the young people
to go.'

"With that in mind, Songer planned to ... stage a series of concerts,
starting with a three-day rock festival to take place Aug. 7-9." But
the typically widespread ingestion of proscribed substances by
festivalgoers triggered a police response that set off a veritable law
enforcement conflagration culminating in Songer's prosecution as a
narcotics felon.

Songer was indicted in October 1970 by the Jackson County Citizens
Grand Jury and charged with aiding and abetting the sale of heroin and
marijuana, and having heroin and marijuana under his control without a
license. He was found not guilty by a jury in December 1971 after
undergoing a brutal felony prosecution that, under 1971 statutes,
would have resulted in a mandatory minimum 20-year sentence upon
conviction.

It was horrifying at the time to contemplate the persecution of Songer
for attempting to create an alternative concert venue, and I remember
breathing a big sigh of relief on his behalf when he was acquitted
right around the time I got out of prison myself.

Forty years later, it is even more horrifying to witness a similar
orgy of law enforcement zeal directed at a dread-locked bass player
named Jimmy Tebeau, a member of the Grateful Dead tribute band, the
Schwag; Tebeau established Camp Zoe in rural Missouri* in 2004 as a
camping and concert venue that has hosted numerous Schwagstock and
Spookstock festivals, as well as other events drawing thousands of
fans for weekends of outdoor fun in the sun.

Eapen Thampy, executive director of Americans for Forfeiture Reform*,
has been updating me with a steady stream of information about the
atrocity in Arkansas, which came to light last November when the DEA
and the Missouri Highway Patrol invaded Camp Zoe early in the morning
and, a week later, announced that they were initiating federal civil
asset forfeiture proceedings against the property because of alleged
rampant drug use and Tebeau's failure to put a halt to it.

According to Drug War Chronicle reporter Phillip Smith, the complaint
alleged that "over the past several years, law enforcement agents have
specifically observed the open sales of cocaine, marijuana, LSD
(acid), ecstasy, psilocybin mushrooms, opium and marijuana-laced food
products by individuals attending the music festival and made multiple
undercover purchases of illegal drugs."

The complaint further alleged that Tebeau and other Camp Zoe staff
members "were in the immediate area" when drug deals were going down
and "took no immediate action to prevent the activity." It added that
"undercover purchases have been made as recently as September 2010,"
but noted that the investigation stretched back to 2006 and included
evidence from "surveillance, undercover operations, source
information, bank records and interviews."

Most critically, Smith reports, the complaint alleges that Camp Zoe
was "knowingly opened, rented, leased, used or maintained for the
purpose of manufacturing, distributing or using controlled
substances." In other words, as Smith suggests, "the feds are arguing
that the purpose of Camp Zoe was not to be a concert venue, but a drug
den, and it could thus be lawfully seized, along with nearly $200,000
in cash they seized from the site and various bank accounts.

"But wait, it's even worse," Smith adds. "After stalling the asset
forfeiture proceedings for seven months ... and seeing that Tebeau was
not about to roll over for them, federal prosecutors got a criminal
indictment charging that Tebeau 'knowingly and intentionally profited
from and made available for use, with or without compensation, said
place for the purpose of unlawfully storing, distributing, or using
controlled substances.'"

"This is the sort of thing Soviet thugs did and that continues to
happen in Russia under Vladimir Putin," Eapen Thampy told Smith. "They
take a businessman, take his money, and take him to jail. I see this
as an attempt by rich and powerful law enforcement agencies to acquire
property or money they can turn into salaries or equipment."

Smith points out that Missouri law enforcement agencies profit
handsomely from asset forfeiture, especially when they partner with
the feds. "By law, funds seized by state and local law enforcement
agencies are supposed to go to the state education fund. But in 2000,
and every year since, schools have gotten 2 percent, with that figure
dropping to 1 percent in 2008 and 2009. Meanwhile the Justice
Department and state and local cops have raked in millions of dollars,
gobbling up the vast majority of funds that were supposed to go to
Missouri's schools."

"That charge [against Tebeau] is complete bullshit," Thampy adds. "If
they wanted to charge him with drug trafficking or drug possession,
those would be appropriate charges if they could prove them. But
charging him with running a drug premise says that he got this land
for the sole purpose of conducting drug transactions. It would be
putting it mildly to say this is an abuse of prosecutorial power."

Fellow Americans, how long will we put up with these abuses? They're
conducting this piratical activity in our names, and it's been going
this way for 40 years. Richard Songer beat his case in the end, and we
must pray that Jimmy Tebeau is equally vindicated. Stop the War on
Drugs!

 *Errata - The originally posted version of this article misidentified
the state as Arkansas and Eapen Thampy as an attorney.

> Email John Sinclair
_______________________________________________
pen-l mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.csuchico.edu/mailman/listinfo/pen-l

Reply via email to