Posted on 12/28/2005 5:16:03 PM PST by kristinn
A few weeks back, a Code Pinko named Diane Wilson got her name in the papers by disrupting a Houston fundraiser for Rep. Tom Delay that was attended by Vice President Cheney.
At the time, Ms. Wilson bragged that she only paid $50 to gain entrance to the event. However, her stunt has ended up costing her a whole lot more: 120 days in jail and a $2000 fine, to be precise.
It seems she had a warrant out for her arrest stemming from her conviction almost two years ago for trespassing when she hung a banner from a Dow Chemical platform in Seadrift, Texas.
Here's the lovely Ms. Wilson doing her Medea Benjamin impression at the Delay fundraiser:
Her local paper, The Victoria Advocate reported her detention in a just-the-facts-ma'am story:
Former Seadrift resident arrested
Wednesday, December 14, 2005
PORT LAVACA - Diane Wilson, 57, formerly of Seadrift, was arrested by Harris County deputies on a Calhoun County warrant for criminal trespassing. She was returned to Calhoun County Friday and began serving 120 days in jail after a jury recommended the sentence plus a $2,000 fine in January 2004.
A Corpus Christi appellate court upheld the Calhoun County court's decision in May 2004. Wilson, who has been out of the state since that time was arrested when she returned to Texas, said Sheriff B.B. Browning.
Wilson was forcefully removed from a platform at Dow Chemical's Seadrift plant on Aug. 26, 2002 after lodging an eight-hour protest accusing the company of not making amends for losses in the 1984 industrial disaster in Bhopal, India.
A sympathetic blogger, Artemesia Pax, reported on Wilson's travails this way:
This is a follow-up to an earlier post about Diane Wilson, one of the co-founders of CODEPINK Women for Peace, and author of An Unreasonable Woman who legally infiltrated a Cheney/Delay fundraiser last week in Houston where she was arrested for speaking her mind.
Why is Diane Wilson still in jail after the Cheney/Delay fundraiser in Houston last week? (And this is while corporate and political goons who have stolen pensions, misappropriated funds, accepted bribes, and contributed to the increasing lack of access to essential needs in life by American service and blue collar workers run free with their lies and graft.)
At first after the arrest it looked like everything would turn out more or less in Diane's favor as the Indymedia article, Diane Got Sprung, suggested in that Diane's bail was posted largely thanks to the outpouring of generosity from the activist community. But by that time the police had figured out that Diane had the little outstanding matter of a previous jail term she had failed to serve for criminal trespass. Seems like they could have been a tad more considerate and not accepted the bail money if they were going to keep her on another charge. But as reported in the second follow up article in the Indymedia article, bail was posted about 48 hours after Diane had been taken into custody.
Close friends who had the chance to talk to Diane said she was going crazy and ready to be released. After taking several thousand dollars in bail money the authorities changed their course of action. Wilson's partner waited for hours after driving in from Texas City only to learn that Diane wouldn't be released.
She was instead transferred to the Calhoun County Jail where she will serve her time for a previous criminal trespass conviction.
The former conviction was for climbing and dropping a banner from a tower at the DOW Chemical Plant in Seadrift, Texas. According to an article on the India Together site:
On August 26th, a 52-year-old shrimp farmer who had been on hunger strike for 29 days in solidarity with the Bhopal movement broke into the Dow/Union Carbide facility in Seadrift, Texas. Diane Wilson climbed the main tower, hung up a 12 feet banner that said "Dow - Responsible for Bhopal" and chained herself to the structure. She was later hauled away by police and arrested. "Even after 18 years, almost 30 people still die every month as a result of long-term effects of the exposure in 1984. Dow has a moral, legal responsibility to fully rehabilitate the Bhopal survivors," she said via her cellphone from the top of the tower.
Weak from the effects of her hunger strike she did not have the strength nor stamina to get down from the tower. She had to get the attention of a security guard in order to request help getting down from tower. If it had not been for that, it is unlikely she would not have been apprended, arrested, or convicted on criminal trespass.
Trespass charges often bring light sentences or are dismissed. After complying with all the court hearing formalities, Diane, a mother of five with one special needs adult child still in her care, decided she could not accept the harsh sentence of 120 days imposed at that time.
It is three years later now, and Katie Heims reports, "While she was planning the Houston action, Diane and I were discussing the possiblity of her going to prison for a long time. She was in some ways, looking forward to it because she was tired of living out of bags these past couple of months. Also, she really missed writing. She was desperate to get back to the second book she's been working on."
Her currently pending hearing for removing and displaying her wrap that had a message written on the inside of it and shouting "Corporate Greed Kills, and Iraq kills too!"at the Delay fundraiser and to which she had a legitimate invitation/ticket, has been postponed until she's served her time at Calhoun County.
Katie provided additional information: The $1500 raised and paid as bond money will take 4-7 weeks until the the check is returned and contributors can be repaid. The judge, however, has raised her bond pending settlement/time served in Calhoun County and her return to return to deal with Harris County. Diane's attorney hopes to be able to have this reduced at a later date. In the event she's convicted in Harris County, she will get credit toward any punishment she might receive. The attorney would like to have the sentence reduced from 120 days to 90 days.
If you would like to write to Diane, you can do so via USPS. In order for mail to be received it must be addressed in this way:
Sylvia Dianne Wilson (Deleted)
(Deleted) County Jail (Calhoun County inmate)
(Deleted)
(Deleted), TX (Deleted)
She is not allowed to receive items such as books, but Katie suggests that articles, crossword puzzles or newspaper cuttings, and greeting cards could be included in letters of support.
I don't know either for sure but was just going by the info in the Chronicle about the protest.....
http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/topstory/1548945.html
....After climbing the tower and chaining herself down, Wilson unfurled a banner accusing the Dow Chemical Co., now the parent company of Union Carbide, of being responsible for the explosion of Union Carbide's Bhopal plant that killed 3,849 people. ....
Associated Press,
December 9, 2002
IBS TV Network
http://www.click10.com/sh/news/stories/nat-news-aptv-182740820021209-091253.html
SEADRIFT, Texas -- A persistent protester who recently was arrested for scaling the front gate of the White House to hang a "No War on Iraq" banner says she is now setting her sights on President George W. Bush's Texas ranch.
Diane Wilson, a 54-year-old grandmother from the southeast Texas town Seadrift, said a Washington, D.C., judge advised her last week to go home to Texas or risk a future arrest and some serious jail time.
But she doesn't plan to stay in Seadrift for long. She has big plans for Bush's Christmas in Crawford.
"Right now I'm just dreamin' and schemin'," Wilson said. "We want to do a surprise inspection at a presidential palace. He's demanding it in Iraq and we're demanding it here. We need to see those cupboards and guest rooms. We need to look in the refrigerator. We need to know: Is that jelly in those jars, or what do they have in those jars?"
The White House on Friday referred questions to the Secret Service, which declined to comment on Wilson or her interest in Bush's Crawford ranch.
Wilson, who ekes out a living fishing for black drum in San Antonio Bay, has devoted the past 15 years to peaceful protest and occasional trespass and civil disobedience. She has sued, fasted and chained herself to a chemical plant tower.
Not everyone supports her activism. Her husband has left her. Her dog has been shot. Her own mother wishes she'd just keep her mouth shut, she said.
"But protesting is woven into the fabric of my life. It's who I am," Wilson said. "Sometimes you finally find out who you are and then you realize other people don't like you, but that's OK. I believe you have to take the consequences of your actions."
Still, Wilson is disturbed by what she considers an order from District of Columbia Superior Court Judge Robert Rigsby banning her from the capital city for a full year.
"He told me I could not be arrested for protesting again for a whole year, and I had to get out of Dodge City. I was kicked out," Wilson said in Monday's editions of the Houston Chronicle. "They said if they saw my face in Washington, I would be arrested immediately."
Wilson's court file shows no such order, which she says was delivered verbally. Neither the judge nor Wilson's court-appointed attorney, Reginald Towe, returned calls from the Chronicle seeking clarification, and a transcript of Wilson's hearing Tuesday was not yet available.
Wilson's file indicates only that if she manages to avoid arrest in the next year, a misdemeanor charge of unlawful entry for the White House incident could be dismissed.
The activist's Washington troubles began Sept. 18, when she and other protesters calling themselves "Unreasonable Women" disrupted a congressional hearing on Bush's plans to use military force against Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
Wilson and Medea Benjamin, a San Francisco activist and founder of the human rights group Global Exchange, unfurled a banner reading "U.N. Inspections, Not War" behind Defense Secretary Donald Rumsfeld as he tried to testify before the House Armed Services Committee.
More...
http://tinyurl.com/c4f8s
She's a loon. You'd think she'd stay home and take care of her kids.
:-)
BTW sounds like this one is still 'single' (technically) too.
Ah I see. Thanks.
;-)
So... ya gotta wonder, does Lesbos have a big tourism industry?
A joke for the geographically inclined.
Dow has since bought all UCC sites. UCC doesn't exist anymore.
Stretching my recollections back a bit since it has been the late 80s since I worked for Dow but...
If I recall correctly, Dow bought most or all Union Carbide petrochemical plants about 20 years ago. I don't recall this Seadrift plant being part of that acquisition though and the only Texas facility from Union Carbide being the one on the Houston Ship Channel near San Jacinto.
Sadly, DC is afraid to offend the leftist lawbreakers here...
Are you kidding? No better education for a liberal than a good ass whuppin'. I'm sure you could take her.
On the other hand, I'd hate for you to be her cellmate. That'd mean you were in jail for a crime you didn't commit, cause we all know you're an upstanding conservative American.
Looks like she is in great pain.
"Are we sure that's not BS Barbara Streisand?"
It does look like Babs hitting her whine note.
Heck, add another .010 to the bullet diameter, a belted case and I bet the 7mm mag will make a nice exit wound at 70 yds :-)
Jeeez, I call THAT "Code Coyote Ugly" (run for the door, chew your arm off to get away if necessary).
ping
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