Judge Bans Abortion Protest at Kerry's House
NewsMax.com Wires
Monday, July 26, 2004
BOSTON A federal judge refused Monday to let
anti-abortion groups demonstrate in front of Sen. John Kerry's
Beacon Hill townhouse.
"I'm not going to second-guess the Secret Service's idea of how
they feel they need to protect a presidential candidate," U.S.
District Judge Nathaniel Gorton said.
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The groups had filed a lawsuit contending the city improperly
revoked their permits to demonstrate. Operation Rescue and several
other anti-abortion groups had planned to pray and lay roses
outside Kerry's home during the Democratic National Convention.
Kerry supports abortion rights.
Mary Jo Harris, a legal adviser to the Boston Police Department,
said the city revoked the permit at the request of the Secret
Service, which believed the demonstration zone was too close to
Kerry's residence. She said the groups were offered another
location about a block from Kerry's house. The groups turned down
the offer and said they would likely not appeal the judge's
decision.
"The Democratic National Convention should be welcoming free
speech, not crushing it," said the Rev. Pat Mahoney, director of
Christian Defense Coalition, one of the anti-abortion groups.
"It is clear regardless of whatever one's political views are, the
First Amendment is not welcome here in Boston during the Democratic
National Convention."
The lawsuit, filed on the first day of the Democrats' four-day
convention at FleetCenter, was the latest by protest groups
seeking greater flexibility in where and when they can stage their
demonstrations during the convention.
Also on Monday, the 1st U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Boston
refused to make any changes to the fenced-in demonstration area
near FleetCenter. Civil libertarians and activist groups had
sued the city, saying that confining the protests to the cramped
area violates their First Amendment rights. A lower court judge had
dismissed their complaint, saying unique security concerns
presented by the convention made it necessary to confine the
protests.
In the demonstration zone itself, several dozen protesters
gathered Monday to complain about the conditions there.
Members of a group calling itself Save Our Civil Liberties
quietly walked around the protest area wearing black hoods, their
hands bound behind their backs with yellow cord. One protester
wearing combat boots and a red Democratic National Committee
T-shirt ordered them to walk, kneel and hop on one foot.
David Meieran, 42, of Pittsburgh, said they were trying to draw
comparisons between the government's treatment of terrorism
suspects and political protesters.
Elsewhere in the city, Buddhists held a silent vigil for peace
at the Holocaust Memorial near Faneuil Hall, and rowdy supporters
of perennial presidential candidate Lyndon LaRouche began singing
loudly on a subway car, mocking DNC volunteers on board.
Across town, about 150 members of the Bl(A)ck Tea Society, a
self-described anarchist group, gathered for protests, starting
with a two-hour rally on the Boston Common, a 50-acre park once
used for public hangings.
About 15 speakers railed against the Iraq War, U.S. drug policy
and the imprisonment of American Indian activist Leonard Peltier
before the group set off on a march through the Back Bay
neighborhood. One protester collapsed, apparently from the heat,
and was treated on the scene by an EMS crew.
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