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UNC-CH protesters reject plea deals

Tuesday, June 2, 2009
(Updated 9:30 am)

CHAPEL HILL — Charges against seven campus protesters will be heard in September after one had her case continued and the others rejected plea agreements Monday.

Haley Koch, a Morehead-Cain scholar at UNC-Chapel Hill, faces a charge of disturbing the peace at a protest against former Colorado Congressman Tom Tancredo's speech April 14.

She and another student held a banner in front of Riley Matheson, president of the campus chapter of Youth for Western Civilization, as he introduced Tancredo, a staunch opponent of mass immigration.

Her case and those of six other protesters in a second campus incident now will be heard Sept. 14.

The other defendants protested at an April 22 speech by former U.S. Rep. Virgil Goode of Virginia, who also favors stricter immigration policies.

Assistant District Attorney Jeff Nieman offered to dismiss the charges of five of the six Goode defendants after six months if they stayed off the UNC-CH campus, committed no other crimes, performed 24 hours of community service and paid a $200 community service fee.

That "deferred prosecution" arrangement would have required them to admit guilt, which the protesters rejected.

''A lot of the defendants feel that they're not guilty, and so taking a plea would be dishonest," said Michael Bandes, 25, who spoke on behalf of the group.

Bandes had a prior criminal record and was offered a plea agreement that would have required him paying a $100 fine plus court costs. He rejected that.

''It's important not to just let the university get this over with quickly and win," said Bandes. "Just because you own this town doesn't mean you can just do whatever you want here.

''They're allowing a white supremacist group in our community, and we're just supposed to sit down and take it," he said.

Koch said UNC-CH Chancellor Holden Thorp called her last week, urging her to take the deferred prosecution, but she's not interested.

''I feel really strongly that the charges should be dismissed," she said.

Koch spoke at a rally in front of the courthouse after Monday's hearing. So did her father, award-winning filmmaker Chris Koch, who has observed peaceful anti-war and pro-civil rights demonstrations over the years.

''There is an honored tradition of that in America," he said. "That's the only way progress has been made. ... I guess I'm partly responsible for Haley being here."

Koch's mother, Susan, was also there, along with family friend Hodding Carter, who was White House press secretary under President Jimmy Carter and now teaches at UNC-CH.

''She was raised in a home where hate dialogue wasn't allowable," said Susan Koch. "When someone else speaks it in your presence, then you have to speak up."

The UNC Protesters Defense Committee, which organized the rally, called on Thorp to dissolve Youth for Western Civilization. Haley Koch said allowing speech against immigrants would fuel donations and membership for more violent groups.

''A culture of hate breeds a culture of violence," she said. "This isn't about people just saying things. This is about people who hope to perpetrate violence."

The protesters pointed to Youth for Western Civilization co-founder Marcus Epstein, who pleaded guilty last week in Washington to a charge of simple assault. Prosecutors say he struck an African American woman while uttering a racial epithet. They called the incident a hate crime.

Youth for Western Civilization leaders maintain they're not racist and have pointed to Epstein, who is ethnically Jewish and Korean, as evidence.

Comments

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ravencottage

June 2, 2009 - 6:44 am EDT

LIBERAL FASCISM on display for all to see.

Panacea

June 2, 2009 - 7:45 am EDT

I don't think they are fascists. I do think they are fanatics.

Koch, you participated in a violent, not peaceful demonstration. You should have picketed OUTSIDE. Purposefully disrupting the ability of another to exercise his First Amendment rights is WRONG, even if your message is right. Admit it, get over it, and move on.

I agree with Koch in that I think YWC is a racist group in disguise. But not everyone who opposes illegal immigration is a racist as Koch and her ilk would have us believe. Some people just want the law to be followed. It's not up to Koch to decide who gets to speak out and who doesn't.

countryboy

June 2, 2009 - 9:00 am EDT

"That's the only way progress has been made". Not true. Progress comes in many forms...legislation, volunteerism, prayer and faith, grassroots efforts, etc. Myopia is curable...the first treatment is an open mind.

''She was raised in a home where hate dialogue wasn't allowable"...but hate actions were..and are? As a UNC alum, it is embarrasing to see this degradation of dialogue. If you disagree, shout it down by calling it a trigger word such as "racist", "hatefull", "sexist". The media will run the story, you will get your 15 minutes of fame, and in the meantime, nothing is accomplished. Style beats substance....again.

rayzer

June 2, 2009 - 9:17 am EDT

Hate speech has become code for speech that the left disagrees with. If you don't like the message, then be civil and raise your points at the end during the Q&A. Or organize a protest outside. Disrupting the speaker because you find the message disagreeable or even repulsive is uncivil. If you are going to do the crime be ready to do the time.

mamaboilermaker

June 2, 2009 - 9:43 am EDT

Koch should lose her Morehead scholarship. It should be given to a law-abiding student instead. Why should someone with no respect for the 1st amendment rights of others--or the personal safety of others--go to school for free when I'm sure there are others who would like to go to college and study instead of misbehave.

countryboy

June 2, 2009 - 11:03 am EDT

Excellent idea...but sadly, the athletics department has already established a very high standard for revoking scholarships.

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