Charges against Sheehan
dropped
MSNBC
February 1, 2006
WASHINGTON - Capitol Police dropped a charge of unlawful conduct against
antiwar activist Cindy Sheehan on Wednesday and apologized for ejecting her and
a congressman's wife from President Bush's State of the Union address for
wearing T-shirts with war messages.
"The officers made a good faith, but mistaken effort to enforce an old
unwritten interpretation of the prohibitions about demonstrating in the
Capitol," Capitol Police Chief Terrance Gainer said in a statement late
Wednesday.
"The policy and procedures were too vague," he added. "The failure to
adequately prepare the officers is mine."
The extraordinary statement came a day after police removed Sheehan and
Beverly Young, wife of Rep. C.W. "Bill" Young, R-Fla., from the visitors
gallery Tuesday night. Sheehan was taken away in handcuffs before Bush's
arrival at the Capitol and charged with a misdemeanor, while Young left the
gallery and therefore was not arrested, Gainer said.
"Neither guest should have been confronted about the expressive T-shirts,"
Gainer's statement said.
Apology to the Youngs
Gainer added that he was asking the U.S. attorney's office to drop the charge
against Sheehan. The statement also said he apologized to the Youngs and "share
the department's plans for avoiding this in the future."
"A similar message has been left with Mrs. Sheehan," Gainer said.
For his part, Bill Young said he was not necessarily satisfied.
"My wife was humiliated," he told reporters. He suggested that "sensitivity
training" may be in order for Capitol Police.
A foreign-born American citizen who was the guest of Rep. Alcee Hastings,
D-Fla., also was taken by police from the gallery just above the House floor,
Hastings said Wednesday.
The congressman met with Gainer and House Speaker Dennis Hastert, R-Ill.,
about the incident.
"I'd like to find out more information," Hastings said in an interview,
identifying the man only as being from Broward County in Florida. "He is a
constituent of mine. I invited him proudly."
Different messages expressed
Sheehan's T-shirt alluded to the number of soldiers killed in Iraq: "2245 Dead.
How many more?" Capitol Police charged her with a misdemeanor for violating the
District of Columbia's code against unlawful or disruptive conduct on any part
of the Capitol grounds, a law enforcement official said. She was released from
custody and flew home Wednesday to Los Angeles.
Young's shirt had a message with a different tone: "Support the Troops
— Defending Our Freedom."
"They said I was protesting," Young told the St. Petersburg Times. "I said,
‘Read my shirt, it is not a protest.' They said, ‘We consider that
a protest.' I said, ‘Then you are an idiot."'
The two women appeared to have offended tradition if not the law, according
to several law enforcement and congressional officials. By custom, the annual
address is to be a dignified affair in which the president reports on the state
of the nation. Guests in the gallery who wear shirts deemed political in nature
have, in past years, been asked to change or cover them up.
Rules dealing mainly with what people can bring and telling them to refrain
from reading, writing, smoking, eating, drinking, applauding or taking
photographs are outlined on the back of gallery passes given to tourists every
day.
However, State of the Union guests don't receive any guidelines, according
to Deputy House Sergeant at Arms Kerri Hanley. "You would assume that if you
were coming to an event like the State of the Union address you would be
dressed in appropriate attire," she said.
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