Feb. 10, 2013
Chief Judge
Jeffrey Thompson
Winona
County Courthouse
171 W. Third Street
Winona , MN 55987
Winona , MN 55987
Dear Judge Thompson,
I am writing to inform you that I will not willingly pay the
court-ordered restitution of $200 as the result of our conviction for the frac
sand protest of April 29, 2013 and our trial verdict of February 6. To do so
would make us further complicit in human-caused climate change because of your
decision to make such a payment as restitution to frac sand profiteers rather than
a fine which might accrue to victims of crime. Your choosing that penalty
directly implicates you in support of the on-going destruction of the landscape
and the endangerment of our water and air.
I know our trial was about us, the defendants, but you took
the opportunity with the jury excused to lecture us about civil disobedience
and taking the consequences for our actions. I wish you had continued in that
vein and would talk about the role of the courts and judges in sentencing
people like Martin Luther King.
Would you have ordered him to pay restitution to the racist governmental
leaders? Would you have ordered him to “behave himself” and not risk arrest
again for one year as our world is increasingly threatened by potentially
apocalyptic climate change?
You strive to be “content neutral” in your rulings from the
bench but my I remind you of the late historian Howard Zinn who forcefully
wrote histories of social change and said, “You can’t be neutral on a moving
train”? I understand your argument about the quicksand nature of protests which
land before the courts, running the gamut from landmines to abortion, from Klu
Klux Klan to civil rights. But you did choose to take sides in court when you
agreed with Prosecutor Flaherty to order restitution in this case. Where is
restitution really needed? Can you order restitution to the Mississippi River
because it is being endangered? Can you order restitution to our air, to the
water table? Why is it that corporations, a legal construct designed to limit liability, are favored by
our judicial system rather than nature itself which seems to have no standing
before the court?
If the judiciary is to, in fact, act as a check-and-balance
on the other two branches of our government in our “messy democracy”, at what
point will it weigh in on crucial political issues to help move public opinion?
You pointed out how difficult it is to change public opinion within a
democracy. Was your sentencing designed to be your “public comment” on the frac
sand industry which threatens both the beauty and livability of your city for
the sake of short-term profits? Or could you use your position to take a risk
by speaking out on behalf of the river flowing by just blocks from your
judicial chamber?
Enclosed is the $85 court costs fee. You can gather my
account number and bank off the check if you wish to seize my money to pay
those you see as “victims” of my “crime” but I will not pay it voluntarily. I
bear you no ill will or animosity. I felt you treated us respectfully in the
court. My lack of compliance is an act of conscience, a withdraw of consent on
behalf of the governed. Please also note my Rosa Parks stamp on the envelope.
Sincerely,
Stephen D. Clemens
MNCIS #85-CR-13-985
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