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To: BurbankKarl
                  Archived for your protection...
 

                  Tree-sitter dead after fall from tree in Corralitos

                  The Associated Press
                  Published 11:35 a.m. PDT Thursday, October 10, 2002

                  CORRALITOS, Calif.(AP) - A man with the environmental activist group Earth First!
                  has died after a 50-foot fall from a redwood tree in which he'd lived for several weeks.

                  Rescue personnel were called to the scene of a logging operation in the Ramsey Gulch
                  area about 20-miles south of San Jose on Tuesday night after loggers heard moans
                  coming from the area where a group of tree-sitters has been camped since August, the
                  group said. It was unclear how long the injured man had been on the ground.

                  It took workers a half-hour to hike to the scene. The man, who was believed to have a
                  broken arm and leg, was transported by helicopter to a San Jose hospital.

                  The Santa Clara County Coroner's Office confirmed Thursday morning the man was
                  dead, but said he had not been identified.

                  Earth First! said the man had been sitting on a platform in the tree for several weeks.
                  Apparently he had spent time in forests of Northern California, but the group said he
                  never had tree sat before.

                  Earth First! activists have protested logging operations by San Jose-based Redwood
                  Empire in the Ramsey Gulch area for more than two years. Although protesters and the
                  logging company have been at odds at times, Redwood Empire issued a statement
                  Wednesday saying its employees were saddened by the death.

                  Tree sitters can spend months camped on platforms in old-growth trees, hoping to call
                  attention to the environmental effects of logging. In perhaps the most famous incident,
                  Julia "Butterfly" Hill spent two years 180 feet up a 1,000-foot redwood in Northern
                  California to save it from being cut down for lumber.

                  She came down in 1999 after Pacific Lumber Co. agreed to leave the tree standing in
                  return for $50,000 to make up for lost logging revenue.

5 posted on 10/10/2002 12:26:42 PM PDT by DoughtyOne
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To: DoughtyOne
...Tuesday night after loggers heard moans coming from the area where a group of tree-sitters has been camped since August, the group said. It was unclear how long the injured man had been on the ground.

Campers were there since August, but didn't notice anything?
Too many psychodelic mushrooms?
"Wow, man, I hear music, man."

24 posted on 10/10/2002 1:33:41 PM PDT by concerned about politics
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To: DoughtyOne
but the group said he never had tree sat before.

The tree sitters last words....."Hey everybody. Watch this!"

25 posted on 10/10/2002 1:34:50 PM PDT by concerned about politics
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To: DoughtyOne
Tree sitters can spend months camped on platforms in old-growth trees

And how do their employers feel about that?
Oh, never mind.
Do they use birdhouses as mailboxes to collect their welfare checks?

26 posted on 10/10/2002 1:38:16 PM PDT by concerned about politics
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