UNCIVIL LIBERTIES
Providence activist still faces felony in GOP protest
BY STEVEN STYCOS
Although criminal charges against hundreds of protesters at the 2000 
Republican National Convention have been dropped or thrown out, Providence 
activist Camilo Viveiros still faces felony charges for allegedly throwing 
a bicycle at Philadelphia police Commissioner John Timoney.
In what critics describe as the largest violation of civil liberties since 
the Vietnam War, 420 people were arrested during non-violent protests as 
the Republicans nominated George W. Bush for president. Viveiros and many 
others were charged with felonies and jailed with bails high enough to 
guarantee that they would remain jailed until the convention was over (see 
"Liberty denied," News, January 18, 2001). Defense lawyer Larry Krasner 
calls the situation, "A sellout of democratic rights because the city had 
some notion that democracy is anti-tourism."
Since August 2000, however, Philadelphia district attorney Lynne Abraham 
has had little success in making the charges stick. The conviction rate 
hasn't been "beyond fabulous," Krasner quips. All charges against one of 
his high-profile clients, Ruckus Society leader John Sellers, who had been 
charged with several felonies and whose bail was set at $1 million, were 
withdrawn minutes before his trial was due to begin. AIDS activist Kate 
Sorensen, another felony defendant whose bail was set at $1 million, was 
convicted only of one misdemeanor and fined $500, Krasner says. Overall, 
according to the umbrella defense group R2K Legal, no protester has been 
convicted of a felony and none have served jail time after their initial 
detention.
Nevertheless, Abraham's spokeswoman, Cathie Abookire, defends all the 
arrests as "proper." Her boss, she says, keeps no statistics on conviction 
rates related to the protests at the GOP convention. "The district attorney 
doesn't believe in statistics," Abookire says. "She doesn't believe in 
justice by numbers."
Viveiros, who denies that he assaulted Timoney, has a mixed record in 
court. In January, an appeals court reinstated a first-degree felony 
assault charge against him, but it rejected the prosecution's attempt to 
restore conspiracy charges. Viveiros predicts his case will not go to trial 
before late this year.
The tenants' rights organizer is glad the charges against other defendants 
have been dropped, but he worries that the rising number of civil suits 
against Philadelphia police, for alleged civil rights violations, will spur 
Abraham to target him as a scapegoat. Convicting the Timoney Three, as 
Viveiros and his co-defendants are known, will enable city officials to 
show that extraordinary measures were necessary, he says, to protect the 
public safety.
The post-September 11 atmosphere, adds Krasner, makes it more difficult to 
convince juries of police misconduct.
While he waits for his trial, Viveiros continues to raise money for his 
legal expenses. Contributions can be sent to: Friends of Camilo, PO Box 
58247, Philadelphia, PA 19102.
FROM http://www.providencephoenix.com/archive/features/02/03/07/gop.html

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