Law enforcement reformer Jack McLamb
recently asked Mr. Steele to write an article on American political
prisoners for his Aid & Abet newsletter, which goes out to law
enforcement officials and prisoners across America. The following is
that article.
by Edgar J. Steele
POLITICAL PRISONERS? In America? I’ve known a few.
You might recall the Christines, the young couple who lost their four
little girls while on vacation in Oregon and got locked up on a bum rap
for robbery and kidnapping. The kids looked skinny to an anonymous
busybody, who called in the local child protective services. Yes, they
were slim, but it was because their parents were vegetarians and health
food conscious, not to mention slight of build, themselves. One of the
girls had recently fallen and cut her forehead, too, which was used to
buttress the abuse charge.
What really did in the Christines, however, was taking their children
back from the state at gunpoint and fleeing to Montana. For that, they
now sit in separate Oregon state penitentiaries.
Why did they do it? Because the Oregon caseworker assigned to the
kids said she was going to adopt out their children and there was
nothing the Christines could do about it. Never mind that she had no
real basis for that frightening claim.
Why are the Christines political prisoners? Because they went up against
the system and lost. Because they refused to play ball with an
out-of-control government agency. Had they jumped through the hoops,
they would have gotten their kids back in due time and been on their
way. Having done nothing wrong, they refused to do so, thereby marking
themselves as "anti-government."
I recall what a big deal was made at trial of their having a copy of
the Declaration of Independence taped to the inside wall of their motor
home...indicative of their anarchistic leanings. That's all it takes
these days, you know. Disagree with a bureaucrat and you are
“anti-government.” Push the point and you go to jail. Result: political
prisoners in America.
Already, their numbers are legion - and growing by leaps and bounds.
This is the way it starts. This is the way it always starts in countries
where freedom becomes displaced by tyranny. People go to jail for a
variety of charges, all excuses, some flimsier than others, with the
true reasons to be found in their being out of step. Before the process
runs its course, people are "disappeared" in the night for failing to
enthusiastically support their government.
I wonder when the Russian public generally became aware that its
government locked up dissidents strictly for their political views? I
wonder when America’s public will reach the same awareness level.
You may think I am exaggerating. I'm not.
Matt Hale sits in a Chicago federal cell right now, his sentencing
hearing again delayed. Hale was entrapped by an FBI plant, an agent
provocateur, who allegedly suggested killing a Federal judge who had
taken away Hale's copyright to his church name and obtained Hale's
assent. The wiretap transcript is, at best, equivocal. Bottom line:
Hale didn’t do it. At trial, Hale's lawyer was so confident that he
rested without presenting a defense, thereby demonstrating his contempt
for the state’s case. Big mistake. Hale was well known to area jurors,
who didn't like him. Result: conviction for conspiracy.
An ordinary guy would have walked. Of course, an ordinary guy
wouldn't have been targeted and set up. Hale is a political prisoner,
one of the many that Michael Chertoff, soon to be head of Homeland
Security, railroaded into prison. Hale's sentencing judge deferred
sentencing until after the US Supreme Court rules on the Booker
case in light of its prior Blakely decision, which said that a
judge may not consider aggravating circumstances not presented to a jury
when imposing a sentence beyond that recommended by either a jury or
prescribed minimums. The deferral in Hale's case is ominous, because it
clearly signals the judge's intent to throw the book at him. Because
Hale is a political prisoner.
A few years ago, I represented Richard Butler and the Aryan Nations
in a trumped-up civil case of assault by proxy (a couple of his
adherents, off duty, off the property and against orders, assaulted two
people). Though the "victims" had no injuries, Butler was hit with a $6
million judgment in a case that would have been laughed out of court if
against a normal person. Because the jury didn’t like him. Butler was a
political prisoner, too, in a very real sense.
The list goes on: Zundel, Duke, Metzger, among the more recognizable
names.
I have had several clients with less recognizable names: McGuckin and
Rae come to mind. All political prisoners.
How long before your name is added to the list?
New America. An idea whose time has come.