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<h1><font size=3><b>Convicted terrorist (sic) Ray Luc Levasseur denied
permission by parole commission to travel to Amherst<br><br>
</b></font></h1><h4><b>By
<a href="http://connect.masslive.com/user/dlederman/index.html">Diane
Lederman</a> <br><br>
</b></h4><h5><b>November 11, 2009,
4:17PM</b></h5><font size=2><b>
<a href="http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2009/11/convicted_terrorist_raymond_lu.html" eudora="autourl">
http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2009/11/convicted_terrorist_raymond_lu.html<br>
<br>
</a></b></font><font size=3>Convicted terrorist (sic) Ray Luc Levasseur
has been denied permission by the U.S. Parole Commission to leave Maine
to address a forum at the University of Amherst in Massachusetts Thursday
night.<i>This is a 5:23 p.m. update of a story posted at 4:17 this
afternoon. <br><br>
</i>AMHERST – After all the controversy and protests and counter-protest,
convicted bomber Raymond Luc Levasseur will not be coming to campus
Thursday night because the parole commission has denied him permission to
travel. <br><br>
The forum he was to be a part of called “The Great Western Massachusetts
Sedition Trial: Twenty Years Later,” however, will take place at the
University of Massachusetts Isenberg School of Management, Room 137.
Participants will include sedition trial defendant Pat Levasseur,
Levasseur’s ex-wife, members of the 1989 Springfield sedition trial legal
defense team, and a juror from the trial. <br><br>
Ray Levasseur was a leader of the United Freedom Front, a group that was
charged with eight Boston-area bombings between 1976 and 1979, the murder
of a New Jersey state trooper, the attempted murder of a Massachusetts
state trooper, several other assaults on law enforcement officers, and
several armed bank robberies. Levasseur was not at the scene of the
trooper’s shooting and never charged. The bombings were carried out to
protest the United States’ backing of South Africa’s racist apartheid
regime and Central American right-wing death-squads. He spent 20 years in
prison. <br><br>
UMass Amherst Libraries’ Department of Special Collections and University
Archives initially invited him to speak as part of the fifth annual
Colloquium on Social Change, but his appearance was canceled after the
department received angry of angry calls and complaints. <br><br>
A group of faculty from the social thought and political economy program
led by Sara Lennox and faculty from five other departments and three
student groups then invited Levasseur back to campus. <br><br>
The cancellation of the talk drew wide-spread protest and letters.
<br><br>
The new invitation angered Gov. Deval L. Patrick, UMass President Jack M.
Wilson and campus administration as well as police. <br><br>
Levasseur, who was released from prison in 2004, said Wednesday that he
was up front with his parole officer about the invitation and was
initially given permission to attend. He usually gets permission for
travel from his Maine parole officer but “they felt for whatever reason,
parole officers wanted clearance from the regional commission.” <br><br>
He said he has been able to travel out of state before but didn’t want to
speculate on “what motivated the commission” to reverse its decision. He
said the event would still happen and that there would be surprises. The
university was looking into possibly having a conversation with him in
another way. <br><br>
<i>More details in The Republican. <br><br>
<br><br>
</i></font><x-sigsep><p></x-sigsep>
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