国产偷拍

Skip to Content, Navigation, or Footer.

Court arraignment day two: Remaining 21 sit-in demonstrators plead not guilty to willful trespassing

Pre-trial date for all 41 BDC demonstrators set for March 5

All 41 students pleaded not guilty to “willful trespassing within school buildings” and received a pretrial conference date of March 5.
All 41 students pleaded not guilty to 鈥渨illful trespassing within school buildings鈥 and received a pretrial conference date of March 5.

The remaining 21 of the 41 students arrested at a Dec. 11 University Hall sit-in for divestment and ceasefire were arraigned at 9 a.m. Wednesday. The other 20 students were arraigned on Monday. All 41 students pleaded not guilty to 鈥渨illful trespassing within school buildings鈥 and received a pretrial conference date of March 5. 

An hour before the arraignment, approximately 75 students, faculty and staff members gathered on the Main Green in support of the students who were arrested. The group then walked to the Providence 6th Division District Court, where the arraignment took place.

鈥淚t's great to see people remaining energized to come out to things even at eight in the morning,鈥 said Garrett Brand 鈥26, one of the students who were arraigned. His mom came to support him as well. 

鈥淪he's supportive of me making my choice to protest and all that, but it's a lot for her as a Black parent to see her son wrapped up in the legal system,鈥 Brand said. 鈥淪he really wanted to be there, and I'm happy to have her.鈥

ADVERTISEMENT

At an Undergraduate Council of Students town hall last November, University Investment Office officials said that Brown does not 鈥渄irectly invest in any weapons manufacturers鈥 or companies with direct ties to Israel. A large portion of the endowment is invested in external managers with undisclosed, confidential portfolios. 

University Spokesperson Brian Clark previously wrote to The Herald that the University is 鈥渃onfident that our external managers have the highest level of ethics and share the values of the Brown community, including the rejection of violence.鈥

At the arraignment, the students were granted permission to travel out of state, and all students agreed to return to court for future proceedings and give up the right to an extradition trial in their home state. Students also received a personal recognizance set at $1000 鈥 a release without bail unless they fail to make future court dates.

鈥淲e weren't there for terribly long, but it's just the very beginning of what is going to be an entirely unnecessary and arduous legal proceeding,鈥 Brand said, 

He believes the proceedings are 鈥渨asting the city's taxpayer money for Brown to prosecute its own students.鈥

University Spokesperson Brian Clark did not respond to request for comment on the protesters鈥 characterization of the proceedings.

Hanna Aboueid 鈥24 worries that the charges 鈥渕ight take the spotlight off of the real issue, which is Palestine and divestment,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e're going to do everything we can to make sure that this isn't used as a distraction 鈥 to siphon our energy and our momentum.鈥

Abouied reemphasized claims made by students arraigned earlier this week, highlighting the racial differences between JFCN and BDC. 

鈥淥ur group is made up of a lot of people of color, especially Black and brown students 鈥 much more so than JFCN was,鈥 she said. According to Abouied, BDC ensured that they 鈥渨ere abiding by University directives in the same way that JFCN did, and for them to be painting this narrative, it just feels very racialized.鈥

She fears that this response may 鈥渟et a very bad precedent for student activism on campus, but especially student activism among Black and brown individuals who are already criminalized at large.鈥

ADVERTISEMENT

Clark previously pushed back against similar implications of racial bias made at the Monday trial. 

鈥淩espectfully, this is a disingenuous claim,鈥 Clark wrote in an email to The Herald on Monday. 鈥淎t multiple points on Dec. 11, both verbally and in writing, University leaders made abundantly clear to the students that, while arresting students is not an action that Brown takes lightly, Brown would proceed with arrests and criminal charges if they chose not to leave the building after 5 p.m.鈥 

At Tuesday鈥檚 Brown University Community Council meeting, Abouied, Brand and other audience members confronted President Christina Paxson P鈥19 P鈥橫D鈥20 on the University鈥檚 decision to press charges against the sit-in demonstrators, The Herald previously reported.

Get The Herald delivered to your inbox daily.

Ryan Doherty

Ryan Doherty is a Section Editor covering faculty, higher education and science & research. He is a sophomore concentrating in chemistry and economics who likes to partially complete crosswords in his free time.


Tom Li

Tom Li is a Metro Editor covering the Health & Environment and Development & Infrastructure beats. He is from Pleasanton, California, and is concentrating in Economics and International & Public Affairs. He is an avid RIPTA passenger and enjoys taking (and criticizing) personality tests in his free time.



Powered by Solutions by The State 国产偷拍
All Content © 2024 国产偷拍, Inc.