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Protesters go on hunger strike outside Guantanamo<br>
<a href="http://www.theithacajournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2005512140329" eudora="autourl">
http://www.theithacajournal.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=2005512140329<br>
<br>
</a>By NANCY DOOLING Gannett<br>
News Service<br><br>
Three of four Ithaca protesters convicted in September of
trespassing<br>
and damaging government property when they spilled their own blood
in<br>
a Lansing military recruiting office are now in Cuba protesting the<br>
treatment of terror detainees at Guantanamo Bay, family members
said.<br><br>
Daniel Burns, Clare Grady and Teresa Grady have joined about 25
other<br>
protesters fasting since Monday at a Cuban military checkpoint<br>
outside the U.S. Naval base at Guantanamo Bay, said Mary Anne Grady<br>
Flores, elder sister to Clare and Teresa Grady. The group of<br>
protesters walked 66 miles from Santiago to the checkpoint.<br><br>
"Their goal is to do the works of mercy and visit the
prisoners,"<br>
said Flores, an Ithaca resident. The group is demanding access to
the<br>
hundreds of detainees being held at the naval base, some since just<br>
after the terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001. About 32 of the<br>
detainees are conducting a hunger strike to protest their
treatment.<br><br>
The three Ithaca protesters - along with a fourth defendant, Peter
De<br>
Mott - have had no travel restrictions placed on them by Judge
Thomas<br>
J. McAvoy until their sentencing in January in federal court. But
one<br>
of the conditions of their freedom is to not break any laws.<br><br>
Americans face restrictions when traveling to Cuba and face both<br>
civil and criminal penalties if they don't get approval from the
U.S.<br>
Treasury Department, a spokeswoman said. Molly Millerwise could not<br>
confirm whether the three protesters had obtained the required<br>
permission, saying that information was confidential.<br><br>
Burns, De Mott and the Grady sisters called themselves the St.<br>
Patrick's Four during their September trial in Binghamton.<br><br>
The four in 2002 splashed their own blood on the walls of the<br>
recruiting office, a flag and other items. Some of the blood was<br>
splashed on a military recruiter.<br><br>
A trial in Tompkins County ended in a mistrial, and the U.S.<br>
Attorney's Office filed federal charges against the four, resulting<br>
in the September trial and convictions.<br><br>
The four are members of a Catholic Workers community in Ithaca.
Burns<br>
is a former Binghamton resident and is the son of Binghamton's late<br>
mayor, John Burns Sr.<br><br>
Missing from the group in Cuba is De Mott, who was convicted of<br>
trespassing and damaging government property in Binghamton's federal<br>
court in September. He stayed behind in Ithaca to support his<br>
brother, a Roman Catholic priest, who suffers from a brain tumor,<br>
Flores said.<br><br>
Burns, De Mott and the Grady sisters will be sentenced on the<br>
misdemeanor level convictions in January in Binghamton. They could<br>
get sentenced to up to one year in prison. The jury in Binghamton's<br>
federal court found the four protesters, who represented themselves,<br>
innocent of conspiring to impede a federal officer, the most serious<br>
of the four counts.<br><br>
The protesters in Cuba say they will stay there up to a week
awaiting<br>
a response.<br><br>
The Associated Press contributed to this story.<br><br>
Originally published December 14, 2005<br>
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