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</font><tt>California Grand Juries Lock Up Witnesses - Oread
Daily<br><br>
<a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OreadDaily/message/803" eudora="autourl">
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/OreadDaily/message/803<br><br>
</a>In San Diego, a federal judge ruled yesterday two activists must
<br>
stay in jail in an effort to get them to testify before a grand jury
<br>
investigating arson and a controversial speech from two years ago. <br>
The Union Tribune reports that the judge said "no" to defense
<br>
attorneys who argued that enough time has passed to know that <br>
there's no chance the pair will testify.<br><br>
David Agranoff, 31, and Danae Kelley, 21, have been in custody for <br>
45 days, and their detainment has become more punitive than <br>
coercive, their attorneys argued before U.S. District Judge Irma <br>
Gonzalez.<br><br>
Defense Attorney Jeremy Warren, told the judge. "I know Mr. Agranoff
<br>
will not testify. "Warren said Agranoff has lost his job and a <br>
chance to go to school, but still refuses to testify before the <br>
grand jury.<br><br>
Julie Blair, representing Kelley, said her client wouldn't testify<br>
despite "miserable" conditions in jail. "She's never
indicated to me <br>
that she's going to testify," Blair told the court. "She's
never <br>
going to testify no matter how long it takes."<br><br>
A third activist, Nicole Fink, has been jailed for two weeks for <br>
refusing to testify before the same grand jury.<br><br>
The Grand Jury is reportedly investigating an arson that caused $50 <br>
million in damage to a massive condominium complex under <br>
construction next to the UTC shopping mall in University City on <br>
Aug. 1, 2003.<br><br>
It is also investigating whether Rodney Coronado, a Tucson, Ariz., <br>
animal rights activist, broke a federal law in a Hillcrest speech <br>
that night when he demonstrated how he set an earlier arson.<br><br>
The jailed activists were at that speech. Other grand jury witnesses
<br>
have said the questions focused on the speech and who possibly <br>
attended.<br><br>
Before they were taken into custody July 12, Agranoff and Kelley <br>
said they didn't know who started the fire and said it would violate
<br>
their free-speech rights to be forced to testify in the secret grand
<br>
jury proceeding.<br><br>
Prosecutor Stephen Cook argued that the government should be able to
<br>
hold the activists in until the grand jury investigating the case <br>
ends its service. The panel is scheduled to finish by the end of the
<br>
year, but may have its service extended until June.<br><br>
"The nature of today's hearing highlights the problem with the Grand
<br>
Jury process," Warren said. "Everything's done in
secret."<br><br>
Meanwhile, just last week a judge up in the California Bay area <br>
jailed a former member of the Black Panther Party for refusing to <br>
testify before a grand jury investigating the killings of two San <br>
Francisco police officers in the early 1970s. Ray Michael Boudreaux,
<br>
62, who has worked for 23 years as an electrician for Los Angeles <br>
County, is being held indefinitely at San Francisco County Jail on <br>
the order of Superior Court Judge Robert Dondero.<br><br>
Boudreaux served in the Vietnam War, returned home in 1968 and soon <br>
joined up with the Black Panthers in Oakland, his attorney said, <br>
working at a breakfast program in the schools. He now lives in <br>
Pasadena.<br><br>
No one knows what the prosecution wants from Boudreaux. The special <br>
assistant attorney general, who is bringing the case before the <br>
grand jury, did not return calls seeking comment Wednesday. The <br>
prosecutor in court did tell the judge that Boudreaux is "a bright
<br>
individual."<br><br>
FBI Withchunt.com reports Boudreaux's attorney challenged the legal <br>
validity of the limited immunity offered by prosecutors, saying it <br>
failed to protect his client's Fifth Amendment rights. "The <br>
privilege against self-incrimination seems to be meaningless to <br>
them,'' attorney Michael Burt said."They figure, 'We want your <br>
testimony. Testify against yourself -- you are just going to have to
<br>
trust us that we are not going to make improper use of that.' It's a
<br>
little scary."<br><br>
Burt argued that Boudreaux had reason to be skeptical of any <br>
government deal. He called to the stand Jill Elijah, a Harvard Law <br>
School professor, who testified that given the FBI's history of <br>
civil rights violations against the Black Panthers, "Mr. Boudreaux
<br>
would have no reason to trust any representations made to him by the
<br>
government with respect to his immunity, his safety or his <br>
protection from prosecution.''<br><br>
Elijah testified that "it's been well-documented that well over 30
<br>
members of the Black Panther Party across the United States were <br>
assassinated by the FBI, or in tandem with the FBI and local police <br>
force operatives.'' Sources: Voice of San Diego, Union Tribune (San <br>
Diego), FBI Witchhunt.com <br><br>
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