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Harrisburg Seven

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
American anti-Vietnam War activists
Seven of the eight defendants in January 1972: Wenderoth, McLaughlin, Glick, McAlister, Ahmad, and the Scoblicks

TheHarrisburg Seven were a group ofreligious anti-war activists, led byPhilip Berrigan, charged in 1971 in a failedconspiracy case in theUnited States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania, located inHarrisburg. The seven were Phillip Berrigan,Elizabeth McAlister, Rev. Neil McLaughlin, Rev. Joseph Wenderoth,Eqbal Ahmad, Anthony Scoblick, and Mary Cain Scoblick.[1][2]

The group was unsuccessfully prosecuted for alleged criminal plots during theVietnam War era. Six of the seven were Roman Catholic nuns or priests. The seventh,Eqbal Ahmad, was a Pakistani journalist, American-trained political scientist, and self-describedodd man out of the group.[3]Haverford College physics professorWilliam C. Davidon, the mastermind of theMedia FBI burglary, was named as an unindicted co-conspirator in the case. In 1970, the group attracted government attention when Berrigan, then imprisoned, and McAlister were caught trading letters that alluded to kidnappingNational Security AdvisorHenry Kissinger and blowing up steam tunnels.[4]

Background

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The defendants stood accused of conspiring to raid federal offices, to bomb government property, and to kidnap Kissinger.[5]

Father Berrigan was serving time in the Lewisburg Federal Penitentiary, in central Pennsylvania. Boyd Douglas, who eventually would become an FBI informant and star prosecution witness, was a fellow inmate. Douglas was on a work-release at the library at nearbyBucknell University. Douglas used his connection with Berrigan to convince some students at Bucknell that he was an anti-war activist, telling some that he was serving time for anti-war activities. In fact, he was in prison for check forgery.[6] In the course of the investigation the government resorted to unauthorized and illegal wiretapping.[7]

Douglas set up a mail drop and persuaded students to transcribe letters intended for Berrigan into his school notebooks to smuggle into the prison. They were later called, unwillingly, as government witnesses. Douglas was the chief prosecution witness. LibrarianZoia Horn was jailed for nearly three weeks for refusing to testify for the prosecution on the grounds that her forced testimony would threaten intellectual and academic freedom.[8] She was the first United States librarian to be jailed for refusing to share information as a matter of conscience.[9]

The trial

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U.S. attorneys obtained anindictment charging the Harrisburg Seven withconspiracy to kidnap Kissinger and to bomb steam tunnels. They filed the case inHarrisburg, Pennsylvania, seat of the Middle District. Activist attorney and formerAttorney GeneralRamsey Clark led the defense team for their trial during the spring months of 1972. Unconventionally, he didn't call any witnesses in his clients' defense, including the defendants themselves. He reasoned that the jury was sympathetic to his Catholic clients and that that sympathy would be ruined by their testimony that they'd burned their draft cards.[10] After nearly 60 hours of deliberations, the jury remainedhung and the defendants were freed.

Douglas testified that he transmitted transcribed letters between the defendants, which the prosecution used as evidence of a conspiracy among them. Several of Douglas' former girlfriends testified at the trial that he acted not just as an informer, but also as a catalyst and agent provocateur for the group's plans.[11]

There were minor convictions for a few of the defendants, based on smuggling mail into the prison; most of those were overturned on appeal.[12][2]

The trial gained some notoriety for the use ofscientific jury selection – use of demographic factors to identify unfavorable jurors – to keep the defendants from being convicted.[13]

See also

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References

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  1. ^"Berrigan, nun guilty".Anchorage Daily News. Anchorage, Alaska: Lawrence S. Fanning. AP. April 6, 1972. p. 3. RetrievedJuly 12, 2010.[permanent dead link]
  2. ^abDisciples & dissidents : prison writings of the Prince of Peace Plowshares. Baggarly, Stephen, 1965-, Wilcox, Fred A. (Fred Allen), Prince of Peace Plowshares (Group). Athol, Mass.: Haley's. 2001.ISBN 1884540422.OCLC 44634298.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: others (link)
  3. ^Jay Schulman, et al. (May 1973) "Recipe for a Jury"Psychology Today, pg. 42.
  4. ^"No Again on the Conspiracy Law".Time. (17 April 1972) Retrieved on 8 September 2007.
  5. ^O'Rourke, William (2012) [1972].The Harrisburg 7 and the New Catholic Left (Fortieth Anniversary ed.). Notre Dame, Indiana: University of Notre Dame Press. p. xiii.ISBN 978-0-268-03733-8.
  6. ^Egelko, Bob (September 16, 2002)."FBI snooping has librarians stamping mad: Local woman jailed in '70s in informant flap".San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved2008-10-23.
  7. ^United States v. Ahmad, vol. 499, 3 April 1974, p. 851, retrieved2019-11-10
  8. ^Horn, Zoia (1995).Zoia!: Memoirs of Zoia Horn, battler for people's right to know. McFarland & Co.ISBN 0-7864-0071-4.
  9. ^Egelko, Bob (2014-07-15)."Zoia Horn, librarian jailed for not testifying against protesters". SFGate. Retrieved2016-08-04.
  10. ^Josh Saunders (November/December 2003). "Ramsey Clark's Prosecution ComplexArchived 2016-03-03 at theWayback Machine".Legal Affairs. Retrieved on 8 September 2007.
  11. ^Bigart, Homer (27 February 1972)."It Is Not A Funny Trial; Harrisburg 7".The New York Times. Retrieved2008-10-23.
  12. ^See United States v. Ahmad, 347 F.Supp. 912 (M.D.Pa.1972)[1], modified sub nom., United States v. Berrigan, 482 F.2d 171 (3d Cir. 1973)[2]; United States v. Ahmad, 335 F.Supp. 1198 (M.D.Pa.1971)[3]; and United States v. Ahmad, 329 F.Supp. 292 (M.D.Pa.1971[4]).
  13. ^Huss, Matthew T.Psychology and Law, Now and in the Next Century: The Promise of an Emerging Area of PsychologyArchived 2007-07-12 at theWayback Machine In J. S. Halonen & S. F. Davis (Eds.). The many faces of psychological research in the 21st century (chap. 11). Retrieved 8 September 2007. Citing Schulman, J., Shaver, P., Colman, R., Emrich, B., & Christie, R. (1973, May). "Recipe for a jury."Psychology Today, 37-44, 77-84.
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