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PLOWSHARES EIGHT:
September
9, 1980 Daniel Berrigan, Jesuit priest, author and poet from New York City;
Philip Berrigan, father and co-founder of Jonah House in Baltimore, MD; Dean
Hammer, member of the Covenant Peace Community in New Haven, CT; Elmer Maas,
musician and former college teacher from New York City; Carl Kabat, Oblate
priest and missionary; Anne Montgomery, Religious of the Sacred Heart sister
and teacher from New York City; Molly Rush, mother and founder of the Thomas
Merton Center in Pittsburgh and John Schuchardt, ex-marine, lawyer, father and
member of Jonah House, entered the General Electric Nuclear Missile Re-entry
Division in King of Prussia, PA where nose cones for the Mark 12A warheads were
made.
They hammered on two nose cones, poured blood on documents and offered prayers
for peace. They were arrested and initially charged with over ten different
felony and misdemeanor counts. In February 1981, they underwent a jury trial in
Norristown, Pennsylvania. During their trial they were denied a
"justification defense" and could not present expert testimony. Due
to the Court's suppression of individual testimony about the Mark 12A and U.S.
nuclear war-fighting policies, four left the trial and returned to witness at G.E. They were re-arrested and returned to court. They were convicted by a jury
of burglary, conspiracy and criminal mischief and sentenced to prison terms of
five to ten years. They appealed and the Pennsylvania Superior Court reversed
their s. conviction in February 1984. The State of
Pennsylvania then appealed that decision.
Following a ruling in
the fall of 1985 by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in favor of the State on
certain issues (including the exclusion of the justification defense), the case
was returned to the Superior Court Appeals Panel. In December of 1987, the
Superior Court of Pennsylvania refused their appeal, but ordered a
re-sentencing. This ruling, however, was appealed to the Pennsylvania Supreme
Court. In February 1989 the Pennsylvania Supreme Court denied a hearing of any
further issues in the case, and on October 2, 1989 the U.S. Supreme Court
announced it would not hear the Plowshares Eight Appeal.
On April 10, 1990 the
Plowshares Eight were resentenced by the Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas in
Norristown and, with neither the prosecutor nor G.E. making any recommendations
or asking reparations, paroled for up to 23 and 1/2 months in consideration of
time already served in prison. Judge James Buckingham listened attentively to
statements by defendants, attorney Ramsey Clark, Dr. Robert J. Lifton, and Professors
Richard Falk and Howard Zinn, placing the "crime" in the context of the common
plight of humanity, international law, America’s long tradition of dissent, and
the primacy of individual conscience over entrenched political system.
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