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Most UNC-CH protestors escape charges

Tuesday, September 15, 2009
(Updated 8:43 am)

CHAPEL HILL (MCT) — Michael Bandes, 25, pleaded guilty to a disorderly conduct charge Monday, saying you can't fight UNC-Chapel Hill in its hometown.

Then, a judge dismissed the charges against four fellow protesters and declared a fifth not guilty.

"We didn't really think we'd get a fair trial in Chapel Hill," Bandes said. "I should have stuck it out with my co-defendants."

Monday morning, Bandes and Meredith Dickey, 19, agreed to pay fines and legal costs rather than go to trial on charges that they disrupted former U.S. Rep. Virgil Goode's speech in late April.

Earlier Monday, District Court Judge Joe Buckner threw out senior Haley Koch's disorderly conduct charge. Her attorney, Bob Ekstrand, had argued that holding a banner, singing and chanting did not significantly disrupt former U.S. Rep. Tom Tancredo's speech, also in April.

Campus police Lt. Lawrence Twiddy said officers arrested Koch alone of 250 protesters because he had identified her through Internet searches for students who had been involved in previous protests against sweatshop labor for Tar Heel apparel.

Monday evening, Buckner said a video showing Donald George Yeo, Sarah Monica Johnson or Rachel Love Harris yelling at Goode was insufficient evidence to try them.

The video showed Jack Wilson Groves unfurl a banner during Goode's speech, but Buckner found that didn't prove Groves' disorderly conduct beyond a reasonable doubt. "You were rude and inappropriate, but the verdict is not guilty," Buckner told Groves.

Buckner said the defendants' obeying police orders to leave the events shielded them from prosecution.

"The event went on," Buckner said.

In the Tancredo case, under cross-examination by Ekstrand, Twiddy testified that Koch complied with his order to leave the classroom as the event began. The judge found Koch "was only responsible for 90 seconds of disruption," Assistant District Attorney Jeff Nieman said.

Comments

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Henry

September 15, 2009 - 8:50 am EDT

Try disrupting a gay rights rally and watch what happens.

fizz27320

September 15, 2009 - 10:23 am EDT

Some Singapore justice would have been more in order.A Whoopin with a cane?

thestatelottery

September 15, 2009 - 11:04 am EDT

I'm glad justice prevailed!

opec

September 15, 2009 - 12:30 pm EDT

thestatelottery~ What justice? This amounts to nothing but more bias. Now it's not only in the media, now it's in the courts as well. So I ask again, what justice? Although these persons do have the 1st amendment, does it give them the right to do that which would be ostracized and condemned if it were a conservative, or just anyone else that disagreed with the leftest view and expresses there disapproval? We now have a new kind of discrimination in this land.

newkid

September 15, 2009 - 11:32 am EDT

1

balance

September 15, 2009 - 3:55 pm EDT

Poor, poor conservatives. We are so discriminated against. Woe is me. I'll just sit down and cry.

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