Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War with Birthdays in August

anarchistbdayThis is obviously a bit late, but it’s still worth writing to folks to wish them a happy birthday, even if it’s belated.

Here is the list of Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War with a birthday in August. Please take the time write them – wishing them well on their birthdays.

BILL DUNNE
10916-086 / P.O. Box 2068
Inez, KY 41224
USP Big Sandy
August 3
(Anti-Authoritarian Political Prisoner)

DEBBIE SIMS AFRICA
OO6307 / 451 Fullerton Ave
Cambridge Springs, PA 16403-1238
August 04, 1956
(MOVE Member)

OJORE NURU LUTALO
59860 / PO 861
SBI# 0000901548
Trenton, NJ 08625
August 6th
(Anarchist Political Prisoner)

DR. MUTULU SHAKUR
83205-012
P.O. Box 8500
Florence, CO 81226
Florence ADMAX
August 8, 1950
(BLA POW)

RENE GONZALEZ
58738-004
P.O. Box 7007
Marianna, FL 32447-7007
FCI Marianna
August 13, 1956
(Cuban 5 Political Prisoner)

HANIF SHABAZZ BEY
#295933
P.O. Box 860
Oakwood, Virginia 24631
Keen Mountain Correctional Center
August 16, 1950
(Virgin Island 5 Political Prisoner)

RUBEN CAMPA
#58733-004 / P.O. Box 33
Terre Haute, IN 47808
FCI Terre Haute
August 18, 1963
(Cuban 5 Political Prisoner)

MALIKI LATINE
#81-A-4469 / Box 2000
Dannemora, New York 12929
August 23, 1949
(Black Panther Political Prisoner)

RUSSELL MAROON SHOATS
AF-3855
175 Proggress Dr.
Waynesburg, PA 15370
August 23, 1943
(BLA POW)

RONALD REED
#219531
5329 Osgood Avenue North
Stillwater, Minnesota 55082-1117
August 31, 1950
(Black Liberation Political Prisoner)

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Fort Hood Soldier Faces Jail time for Opposing War

From Latina.com:
War resister, Victor Agosto
Victor Agosto, a 24-year-old soldier with the III Corps, found himself in military court on Wednesday for disobeying orders that would have sent him to Afghanistan. He was sentenced to 30 days in jail and demoted to private. Rather than refusing to go overseas, Agosto just never went to the office that takes care of the deployment paperwork, which the Army only considers a minor offense. If he had directly refused an order to deploy the repercussions would have been much more severe.

So what made this Army man have a change of heart regarding the war? A 13-month stint in Iraq, sitting behind a computer. “I realized that the war in Iraq had nothing to do with making Americans safer,” Agosto told The Associated Press “After I got back, I started feeling guilty about my part in the occupation.”

When Agosto found out that he wasn’t being discharged in June as he had expected, but would be deployed to Afghanistan instead, he stopped obeying orders and became active in local antiwar protests. Agosto told the court that he believed the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan violated international law. “He’s not opposed to all wars; he is opposed to this war, because it is not a war of self-defense,” his lawyer James M. Barnum told the NY Times. About 20 antiwar protesters that were present at the hearing cheered Agosto on as he was taken to jail.

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Bash Back! Being Sued by the Alliance Defense Fund, the Time to Fundraise is Now!

In the fall of 2008, the Lansing, Michigan chapter of national queer and trans anarchist group Bash Back! descended upon anti-queer mega church Mount Hope in two strategically placed groups of disruptionists. The first of these groups diverted the attention of security, pink and black blocked up and waving sings which read such things as “Dykes of the Damned” and “Satanic Trannys 666”. Inside, others waited patiently in their best Sunday drag until at once they rose, interrupting the service with cries of “Jesus was a homo!”, a banner drop from the balcony that said “It’s Okay to Be Gay! Bash Back!”, queer kiss ins, over a thousand strewn fliers with queer positive content aimed to console potentially queer youth of the church, and pulled fire alarms. Afterwards, a communique was written proclaiming “So long as bigots kill us in the streets this pack of wolves will continue to BASH BACK!”

Cross country chapters and cells of Bash Back! have since emerged at a rapid and steady pace. Several churches have been attacked, spray painted and glued shut, transphobes have been beat down, the officer responsible for the brutal beating of trans womyn Duanna Johnson who was shot and killed in the process of suing the Memphis Police Department has been sent caskets and death threats, corporate pride events have been stormed, a queer and trans squat has been opened in response to the disproportionate rate of queer and trans homelessness, dance parties have spilled out of convergences transforming the trains of Chicago into queer fucking, crowd surfing and graffiti writing modes of public transportation, which then spilled into the streets along with a couple trashcans and newsstands leading to four arrests and several unarrests. And to top it off they state that they “know you call us terrorists because our very existence terrorizes you. This makes us proud but you ain’t seen nothing yet.”

Yet as the queerest hours of the night are lit by the fuschia flames of insurrection and liberation, and as the candle lit vigils of the soon to be past erupt into wild infernos which reach urgently into the sky, we must not forget that there are also sirens wailing in the not so distant background.

Bash Back! has received the attention of endless right wing wingnuts, the Ku Klux Klan, disapproving assimilationsist gays, the FBI, Bill O Reily and the Alliance Defense Fund, who are a right wing rights group that is currently in the process of suing over 20 subpeonaed, alleged Bash Back! members in connection to the action at Mount Hope Church. Bash Back!’s response? “Bash Back! and radical transfolk/queers cannot and will not be intimidated. Some of us face life and death on a daily basis. This lawsuit ain’t shit.”

Even so, with resistance comes repression. And while there is such an overwhelming, immediate need to bring the entire atrocity known as the prison industrial complex to it’s heartless fucking knees, their is also an urgency in keeping gender variant populations free and out of the transphobic, gender binary segregated cages of the state. So let’s get fucking organized! Solidarity means attack. It also means fundraise! Legal expenses are unreal, but networks of support and creativity can warm hearts and give queers in kourt a fighting chance. Organize a benefit show! Play one! Distro! Have a bake sale! A secret cafe! Donate online by searching Bash Back Legal Defense Fund at fundable.com.

Let us join the wolf pack, have each other’s backs. Sing our howling warcries to the moon, and continue to make clear that queer and trans oppression is part of a system of oppression, and that no part of that system will be spared the fierceness of our fury!

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Court: California Prisons Must Cut Prisoner Population by 40,000

From the New York Times:

A panel of federal judges ordered the California prison system on Tuesday to reduce its inmate population of 150,000 by 40,000 — roughly 27 percent — within two years.

The judges said that reducing prison crowding in California was the only way to change what they called an unconstitutional prison health care system that causes one unnecessary death a week.

In a scathing 184-page order, the judges said state officials had failed to comply with previous orders to fix the prison health care system and reduce crowding.

The judges left it to state officials to come up with a specific plan within 45 days, saying there was “no need for the state to release presently incarcerated inmates indiscriminately in order to comply with our order.” They recommended remedies including imprisoning fewer nonviolent criminals and reducing the number of technical parole violators.

The order is the largest state prison reduction ever imposed by a federal court over the objection of state officials, legal experts said.
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Korea: Ssangyong occupation has ended after many police inflicted casualties

Once the fierce fighting ended yesterday (August 5, 2009), 100 strikers left the occupation throughout the night (many out of disgust at the ruthlessness of the state and company’s violence). At the end of the negotiations last week, management’s last offer was 60% of the workers would accept voluntary retirement (or termination) with 40% taking an unpaid furlough until they’re called back. Negotiations began today at 11:00 a.m., with the union now agreeing to retirement for 52%, with 48% for the furlough. The strike is over and the occupiers will leave the factory any minute.Fighting Korean striker
Libcom coverage

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Korea: Factory occupation evolves into street war

“The final battle will come shortly. Serious injuries occurred today. The only remaining occupied factory building is the paint department, with about 500 strikers defending it. The cops have taken control of all the rest of the surrounding buildings. The crackdown on the strikers has been extremely brutal.”

Police attack Korean striker

More info:
Libcom News
Infoshop News Coverage

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Anarchist Jeff Monson could face jail time


Professional MMA fighter and anarchist Jeff Monson faces potential jail time when sentenced this October in connection to a graffiti incident in November 2008.

Anarchist grappler and MMA fighter Jeff Monson could face jail time over an alleged November 2008 graffiti incident on the Capitol Building and an army recruitment centre in Olympia, Washington, USA. Monson, who has used his high-profile to discuss anarchist politics, was arrested initially in January. Authorities claim that the graffiti, which included circle-As, a peace symbol and phrases such as “no poverty” and “no war”, cost a ridiculous $19,000 to clean-up.

Monson has used fight press-conferences to criticise the US military presence in Iraq, and has been vocal about his wish to see the state and class society abolished. Monson had been involved with IWW in his home state, and earlier this year, took time out before his fight at Cage Wars in Belfast to talk to local anarchists and fight fans about sport and politics. In previous years Jeff has met with anarchists in Manchester Solidarity Federation and CNT-Vignoles in Paris.

In court on July 29, Monson, currently on a seven-fight winning streak after defeating Jimmy Arbriz last month, pleaded guilty to malicious mischief in the Capitol Building case (which itself carries a maximum penalty of a $20,000 fine and 10 years jail) and entered an ‘Alford plea’ for graffiti at the Lacey armed services recruitment centre. An Alford plea means he maintains he did not commit the graffiti act but acknowledges that enough evidence exists that would convince a jury. Prosecutors are recommending Monson pay a fine of $21,894 in restitution as part of the plea deal, and serve a 90-day jail sentence. Sentencing is scheduled for October 1st.

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How Leonard Peltier Could Leave Prison by August 18

By Harvey Wasserman

For a formidable and growing global community of supporters, the prospect of Native American activist Leonard Peltier finally leaving prison inspires a longing that cuts to the depths of the soul.

So Peltier’s first parole hearing of the Obama Era — on Tuesday, July 28 — inspired hope of an intensity that will have a major impact on the new presidency. A decision must come from the Federal Parole Commission within three weeks. His attorney is calling for a surge of public support that would create an irresistible political climate for Leonard’s release.
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Three German “autonomes” refuse to speak to Judge Fragnoli concerning the “Tarnac Affair”

Two autonomes from Berlin and another from Hamburg received summons to appear as material witnesses on 16 and 17 July, respectively, in the so-called Tarnac Affair. They were summoned to give testimony against nine comrades (the “Tarnac 9”) in the framework of a major series of investigations in Paris. In November 2008, nine people were arrested in France on the basis of anti-terrorist laws following the sabotage of the railroad network when nuclear waste was going to be transported during a strike by French railroad workers.

Demonstrations were organized in Berlin and Hamburg on the occasion of the summons.

In Berlin, the 50 people who met before the French Embassy were surprised to see a yellow, high-spirited ape the height of a human being — an orangutan — with a placard against the transport of nuclear wastes attached to it ass. The orangutan joined in the demonstration and, in a clearly female voice, spoke up. A quarter of an hour later, while preparing to leave the demonstration, the ape was arrested. Perhaps the sensible reader won’t be surprised: under the disguise was one of the witnesses. She was taken to the headquarters of the federal police for the Tempelhof region, where she was detained for several hours. The participants in the demonstration took the same route to support the people who had been questioned.

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Dispatch from Prison – Jeffrey Free Luers

July 20, 2009

Last week I went to my first “release class”. It is odd that when you come to prison you go to classes about how to do time, how to avoid conflict with staff and inmates, how to avoid disease, sexual assault and other pitfalls.

Then just before you leave you go to classes to relearn how to be free. In between the two, you forget that you were even a part of the free world. Relationships by mail become normal; you are accustomed to rarely, if ever, seeing you loved ones. Violence is a way of life; you have no privacy and constant oversight. Then one day a computer program spits out your name because it has calculated that you only have X amount of days left and you need to take release classes so that you can adjust to a completely different world with different expectations.

I’m fortunate, I don’t need these classes, but many people do.

No, my challenges will not come from reentering society. I have not lost myself in here. I have amazing support and will be coming home to my family and friends, my own place, a job, and school. Life is ready and waiting for me. My challenges will be reconciling that I have spent nearly a decade of my life in prison.

I know that I have achieved a lot from behind these walls. That the strength of my support, my contributions to eco-activism and the media work I’ve done from prison are a testament to my accomplishments. It is these reasons that I carry my head high. I know that despite the hardships and obstacles I have fulfilled my duty to myself, my family, my beliefs, and this struggle.

I remain proud of the actions that brought me to prison. I am proud of my conduct as a political prisoner, never wavering in my integrity.

But it is difficult to come to terms with having sacrificed so much of my life only to return and find the battle still being waged. Our struggle to stop human-induced climate change, pollution, and environmental destruction is far from over. Our struggle for social justice, human liberation, and animal rights is far from complete.

From time to time each of us must redefine our commitment and contributions to activism. We are not always capable of giving 110%. What matters is that we continue to give what we can.

After my release you may not find me on the front lines battling tooth and nail to win. But whether in or out of prison I’ll never stop standing up for what is right and doing my part to make this world a little better.

I’ve given, hell, my life to these struggles I see no reason to stop there.

-Jeffrey Free Luers

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