Subject: [Sage] FW: Seven Women Defy Court Officers to Speak Their Piece
From: Hattie Nestel
Date: Tue, 19 Jun 2007 15:38:40 -0400
To: VT Vermont Yankee , Sage

Subject: Seven Women Defy Court Officers to Speak Their Piece
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Contact Marcia Gagliardi 978.249.9400

The mushroom-shaped cooldown plume over the Vermont Yankee nuclear power
plant in Vernon, Vermont, stood out vividly against the morning sky on
Tuesday, June 19, as the Shut It Down affinity group of the Citizen's
Awareness Network made its way to Windham County District Court to answer
charges of trespass and disorderly conduct for an April 25 demonstration at
the plant. Photo by Rebecca Coffey

Women of the Shut It Down affinity group of the Citizen's Awareness Network
offered their reasons for shutting down the Vermont Yankee nuclear power
plant in Courtroom 1 of Windham County District Court in Brattleboro,
Vermont, on Tuesday, June 19. From left, they are Paki Wieland of
Northampton, Massachusetts; Marcia Gagliardi and Hattie Nestel of Athol,
Massachusetts, Dorthee (her full name) of Wendell, Massachusetts; Ellen
Graves and Frances Crowe of Northampton; Julia Bonafine of Shrewsbury,
Vermont. Photo by Mary-Ann DeVita Palmieri

    BRATTLEBORO, Vermont -- Seven women of the Shut It Down affinity group
of Citizen's Awareness Network took the floor in Windham County Courtroom
One on Tuesday, June 19, to publicly explain their demands to close the
Vermont Yankee nuclear power plant in Vernon.
    Ironically, the power plant spewed a mushroom-shaped cooldown plume high
into the air above the Connecticut River in Vernon as the women made their
way to the courtroom.
    Informed that charges of trespass and disorderly conduct against them
had been dropped by State's Attorney Dan Davis, the seven demanded that the
court to hear their statements.
    "We deserve to have the charges against us heard," said Hattie Nestel of
Athol, Massachusetts, who led the women from the courtroom's spectator area
toward the judge's bench, which Judge Katherine Hayes immediately vacated.
    Shouting "Get back! Get back!" several court officers blocked the
women's access to the area between counsel tables and the judge's bench.
State's attorney staff still at the prosecution table also fled the
courtroom as the women insisted on being heard.
    Nestel contended that failure to hear the charges violates the women's
right to due process. "Take it up with the state's attorney," said a court
officer. "You have no business here."
    Approximately fifteen spectators remained in court as the women read
statements condemning the Entergy Corporation, which operates the power
plant, and the governments of Vermont and the United States for deceiving
taxpayers about dangers and hidden subsidies.
    Court officials milled around during the women's ten-minute recitation,
punctuated by demands to shut down Vermont Yankee. Some officials listened
to the demands while others ignored the women and carried on conversations
as if nothing were happening.
    Members of the Shut It Down affinity group have acted five times at
Entergy Headquarters in Brattleboro or at the Vernon plant to urge the shut
down of the nuclear plant. They have spray painted danger signs on the
Entergy driveway, deposited effigies at the main Entergy sign, attempted to
chain shut the doors of the Entergy headquarters, and waited to present an
indictment to the president of Entergy. On each occasion, they were arrested
and charged with trespassing or disorderly conduct and ordered to appear in
the district court to answer them. In every instance, the state's attorney
ordered that charges be dropped.
    In several instances, the Brattleboro or Vernon police departments
advised the women that charges had been dropped, but repeated telephone
calls to the state's attorney's office resulted in no response.
    The women said they decided to act to call attention to "collusion
between the state's attorney's office and the Entergy Corporation."
    Members of the Shut It Down group are Paki Wieland, Frances Crowe, and
Ellen Graves of Northampton, Massachusetts; Hattie Nestel and Marcia
Gagliardi of Athol, Massachusetts; Dorthee (her full name) of Wendell,
Massachusetts; and Julia Bonafine of Shrewsbury, Vermont.
    "We will take this up with the state's attorney," the women of Shut It
Down vowed as they left the courtroom. They have made plans to contact him
soon.