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Indybay Feature

Victory in the Pepper Spray Lawsuit

by nopepperspray (repost)
Unanimous verdict finds police used excessive force against peaceful activists protesting logging of ancient redwoods.
The jury has just returned a unanimous verdict for the activists/plaintiffs, finding the County of Humboldt and City of Eureka liable for excessive force used by Humboldt County Sheriff's Deputies and Eureka Police Officers when they applied pepper spray directly to the eyes of the eight nonviolent forest defense protesters in three incidents in 1997. Former sheriff Dennis Lewis and present sheriff Gary Philp also were found liable for causing the use of excessive force by ordering the unprecedented use of pepper spray on the passive, locked together sit-in demonstrators.

The jury awarded nominal damages of $1 to each of the plaintiffs, who made it clear all along that they weren't suing for the money, but to bring about a change of policy, to stop the use of pepper spray in Humboldt in the way it was used on them. They hope and expect that the verdict will reverberate far beyond rural Humboldt County to make it clear that police can not use the extremely painful pepper spray on non-violent people to coerce them.

The losing defendants will be required under the law to pay the attorneys fees and costs of the plaintiffs, which will no doubt exceed $1 million for litigating the case through three trials and multiple appeals as high as the U.S. Supreme Court.

The civil rights lawsuit was filed at the end of October 1997. After the first trial ended in an evenly split jury in 1998, the judge presiding over the case at the time took it upon himself to decide the case in favor of the defendants, saying no reasonable juror could find that the actions of Humboldt officers was excessive force. After appeals overturned that ruling and granted a new trial, a new legal team took over the case for the activists. Further appeals by the new team removed the first judge for the appearance of bias. Judge Susan Illston replaced him, and a second trial in September 2004 ended in a hung jury split 6-2 in favor of the activists.

The third time was the charm, as the jury of six women and two men reached a unanimous verdict after a day and a half of deliberations.

More details will be posted as soon as they are available. Plaintiffs are talking with the jurors to learn more about how they saw the case and how they reached the verdict. A press release is being prepared, and a press conference is being set up for Friday morning.
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Comments (Hide Comments)
by Steve
Biggie Fries for everyone!
by Lelly
yeahhhhhhhhhh..I'm so gald you all wan...yeah..I'm so happy for you!!Great!!
by Non-Pepper Lover


Good goin non-peppers. Very proud of ya. The fact that the city council has to pay the legal fees is gold. Right makes over might.
by Daniel
I'm glad you people hung in there, stuck it out for all these years. Congratulations!
by 2 facilitate further discussion
The comments section on most imcs is either completely ignored or we get people saying "biggie fries for everyone" or some other foolishness. Portland imc actually uses their comments section to continue an intelligent discussion of the article posted..

Really, it's great to have a sense of humor but if folks would actually use the comments section without troll postings we could expand on any article/issue and network with other community/activist groups..

The pepper spray victory celebration opens doorways into further activism against police brutality and unsafe products used for "pain compliance". As a result of this trial, now people know who David DuBay is and the corporation he represents, Defense Technology..

Outside of the Humboldt Sheriff/Maxxam/PL goon squad and the forest defenders, Defense Technology's oleoresin capsicum pepper spray products have claimed several lives of people while held in police custody. The circumstances are different in each case, and drugs/alcohol may be a factor in some. The fact remains that whatever condition (asthma, heart disease, etc.) the deceased may have had, the additional exposure of oleoresin capsicum pepper spray contributed to the death of the person in custody..

Please keep the momentum going and continue to seek justice for the people who lost their lives after being sprayed with pepper spray (or tasered, etc.) while held in police custody..

luna moth
by Deev
way to go....been following this story since i saw it on a video where tree sitters made a fort on a logging road....great to hear.
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