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Tree Hugging Hippies Arrested [Updated]

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Apparently there were protesters hanging out in trees for nearly a month trying to stop the construction of I-69 near the Warrick County border. It was a rather peaceful protest it seems since I have never heard about it, but that all came to a halt this morning when police arrested two of the protesters this morning after police came to evict them from their tree fort via a cherry picker.

Police were dispatched to the protest site at the request of INDOT who claimed the protesters were trespassing on their property. The police hopped into a cherry picker to retrieve the protesters.

I don’t know much more other than a few things I’ve read on twitter, so if you want to share it in the comments, please do.

Viva la revolution!

hat tip to C&P

Updated: One of the people behind the Stop I69 blog has checked into the comments with their side of the story.

6 Comments...add one

 

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Treehuggin hippie

June 20, 2008 @ 09:28AM

ANTI-I69 TREE SIT EVICTED, POLICE DANGEROUSLY PULL PROTESTERS FROM TREE TOPS

June 20th 7am, Evansville Indiana — In the early morning hours of June 20th, around 25 police officers from the Indiana State Police (ISP), Indiana Department of Natural Resources (IDNR) and the Gibson County Sheriff’s office descended on the scene of the anti-I69 tree sit, just south of State Road 68 in southern Gibson County (20 miles north of Evansville). The police officers, many of them trained specifically for this purpose, brought in “cherry pickers” and other platform raising equipment in order to reach the sitters. The two people in the trees at the time of eviction were lowered to the ground, after being forcefully and dangerously approached by Conservation Officers of the IDNR.

Sitting on platforms suspended 40 feet above the ground, the tree-sitters were not in positions from which they could be easily and safely removed. Arresting officers’ reckless behaviors, however, resulted in protesters’ quick eviction. One protester was not attached to a safety line during the eviction, but was still hostilely handled by the Conservation Officers. As they reached her with the cherry picker, they pulled her unattached to anything that would have prevented her tumbling to the ground, putting her life in great danger.

After evicting the first sitter, officers moved on to the second. They raised the cherry picker below the platform to threaten the sitter, and then lifted the platform with the cherry picker. They proceeded to cut the support line that was holding it in the tree. This protester had locked himself onto the ropes using a “lock box” device intended to help him evade eviction. The officers cut that rope, leaving this protester also without any form of safety.

After the tree-sitters were forcibly removed from their tree top positions, they were lowered, cuffed and placed on the ground below the trees. From a telephone recording made during the eviction, it is clear that the arresting officers purposefully laid one of the protesters face down into a patch of poison ivy.

People not involved in the tree-sit eviction this morning have reported to the media office that state police officers are pulling people over on the state highways in the vicinity of the sit. One person reports that they were surrounded by 5 police vehicles when stopped. As well, it has been reported that one car had its tires blown out by the state police in order for them to arrest all of the occupants of that vehicle.

The information in this press release was compiled by the I-69 Media Office, an independent anti-I69 media clearinghouse. All questions should be directed to the media contact given in this release.

Justin Williams

June 20, 2008 @ 10:48AM

25 officers for two guys is a wee bit ridiculous. Still, I don’t really see how saving a few trees is worth the trouble when people around the area have already given up their homes.

chad dick

June 20, 2008 @ 11:42AM

this isn’t about a couple of trees. this is about the a highway that will tear through thousands of acres of farmland, wetland, and forest; that 76% of hoosiers—by indot’s own numbers!—oppose; and that will only serve to drain more employment out of indiana and the rest of the us and into the poorest parts of the hemisphere where workers don’t have even the marginal protections that our labor law affords. this is about take back control of local communities by local communities; about preserving the land from tarmac, concrete, and diesel fumes; and about standing together with the exploited and dispossessed people of the rest of the americas.

and this isn’t over.

JERRY BILL

June 22, 2008 @ 11:23AM

It is over

Midgetquen

June 24, 2008 @ 06:28PM

Jerry: According to the folks pissed off in southern Indiana and all over the country, it is only just beginning.

Jenna

June 24, 2008 @ 07:32PM

midgetqueen—missed to at the ItsEvansville get together at RiRas.

 

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