[News] Activists, UC Berkeley Alumni Protest Yoo on First Day of Classes

Anti-Imperialist News news at freedomarchives.org
Tue Aug 18 15:44:20 EDT 2009



Activists, UC Berkeley Alumni Protest Yoo on First Day of Classes

By Riya Bhattacharjee
Tuesday August 18, 2009
http://www.berkeleydailyplanet.com/issue/2009-08-13/article/33526?headline=Activists-UC-Berkeley-Alumni-Protest-Yoo-on-First-Day-of-Classes-

Four generations of UC Berkeley law school alumni joined activists, 
community members and lawyers on the Boalt Hall steps to protest 
former Bush administration lawyer John Yoo's return to campus Monday.

The group called for Yoo to be prosecuted and fired from his position 
as professor of law at UC Berkeley's Boalt Hall School of Law for 
writing memorandums which were used to justify extensive policies on 
detention and interrogation, even torture.

The Obama administration has so far showed little interest in 
prosecuting those who worked for the Bush administration. Despite 
criticism from protesters and from the National Lawyers' Guild about 
Yoo's continuing employment at UC Berkeley, Boalt Hall Dean 
Christopher Edley has defended Yoo's actions as academic freedom.

Chanting "Yoo should be ashamed," and "I am so over Yoo," the crowd 
assembled outside Boalt Hall at 1:30 p.m. Monday, closely watched by 
UC police, as students and professors walked in and out of the building.

The event was organized by the National Lawyer's Guild, World Can't 
Wait and Code Pink, whose members dressed up as "Pink Police" and 
included a dog sporting a pink "arrest torture" button.

When the UC Police Department told the event organizers they would 
not be allowed to use amplifiers outside the building, the speakers 
either talked loudly or stood on boxes to have their voices heard.

Members of the National Lawyer's Guild stressed that Yoo should be 
held accountable for his actions, which they said had led to the 
torture of thousands of U.S. political prisoners.

Sharon Adams, a guild member, called Yoo's memos "inane" and "secretive."

"In the name of democracy, Yoo did all he could to undermine 
democracy," she said, talking about the much criticized wiretapping 
and controversial interrogation techniques like waterboarding.

"This is the kind of person who is teaching our next generation of 
lawyers. ... He should be prosecuted for war crimes."

The infamous Abu Ghraib torture pictures, which came to public 
attention in 2004, dotted Boalt's steps, with several individuals 
posing as hooded prisoners in chains, and one of them resembling the 
iconic man on top of a box.

Dan Siegal, a 1970 Boalt Hall alumnus and nationally known trial and 
appellate lawyer, said he was angry and frustrated that Edley, a 
staunch advocate of civil rights, continues to head a faculty which 
includes a "war criminal."

"There is little doubt that John Yoo is a war criminal," Siegal said. 
"There are some who try to bastardize the situation, as if Yoo wrote 
a law review. This person wrote an ideological and legal basis for 
torture. I am hoping that if Dean Edley doesn't get wise, we will 
march down to Yoo's office next time."

Ann Fagan Ginger, Boalt Hall Class of 1960, decried Edley using 
academic freedom as the basis of Yoo's actions.

Ginger, who leads the Meiklejohn Civil Liberties Institute in 
Berkeley, said UC Berkeley students should have the academic freedom 
to take classes from someone who had not been charged with being a 
war criminal.



Freedom Archives
522 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110

415 863-9977

www.Freedomarchives.org  
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://freedomarchives.org/pipermail/news_freedomarchives.org/attachments/20090818/2af9beff/attachment.htm>


More information about the News mailing list