Every Hour Is a Victory”: The Trial of the St. Patrick’s Four
Bill Quigly
On March 17, 2003, two days before the invasion of Iraq
was launched, four members of the Magnificat Catholic
Worker community of Ithaca New York walked into the
waiting room of the local Army-Marine recruiting center
and carefully poured their own blood on the walls, the
windows, the posters, cardboard mannequins of soldiers,
the door and the American flag. They brought pictures of
Iraqi mothers and children into the recruiting center
along with a letter from American peace activists in
Baghdad Iraq who called on peace activists in the US to
nonviolently resist the promise of shock and awe. They
read a statement, then knelt in prayer and awaited the
authorities.
The four, Daniel Burns, Peter DeMott, Clare Grady and
Teresa Grady were each arrested and charged by the local
District Attorney with felony criminal damage to
property. They became known as the “St. Patrick’s Four.” Because they knew that the invasion of Iraq was being
condemned by international law authorities around the
world, they felt their actions were authorized under the
Nuremberg Principles which make it legal to break local
law in order to resist war crimes. Because of their
faith they felt that pouring of their own blood, though
messy and shocking, was a small disturbance compared to
the death and bloodshed that was to follow. Because they
were each parents, they chose the recruiting center
because they wanted to try to stop the death and damage
to American sons and daughters as well as to Iraqi
daughters and sons.
They refused an offer of the District Attorney’s Office
to plead guilty to a misdemeanor because they were not
guilty. A jury trial was scheduled.
For their trial, they decided to represent themselves.
With lawyers as their advisory counsel and strong family
and community support, they began to prepare for trial.
The state charged them with unauthorized damage to
property over $250. The law allowed a defense that the
damage was either authorized by law or the person doing
the damage reasonably thought they were authorized to
damage the property. (The prosecutor said this was used
when you thought the tree you cut down was yours because
it was on your property, but it was actually on your
neighbor’s property). They decided to use the trial to
show that their nonviolent action was justifiable under
both international law and the defense of necessity,
sometimes called justification. The essence of the
necessity defense is that your act was something which
would otherwise be breaking the law but is not breaking
the law when it is done to prevent a greater harm - like
breaking into a stranger’s home in an emergency like a
fire if you are trying to rescue a child.
They met dozens of times to plan out a coordinated way
to educate the jury about what they were doing and to
use the trial as an opportunity to organize around peace
in the community. The pressure of a possible felony
conviction and up to four years in prison was felt and
there were plenty of disagreements about how to proceed.
But there was generous family and community support.
Together they planned a trial strategy. Jury selection,
opening and closing statements, who would examine which
prosecution witnesses, what questions would be asked,
what documents would they try to get before the jury -
all the while trying to keep the concerns of the people
of Iraq as the centerpiece of the trial.
They filed a motion to allow Ramsey Clark to testify
about international law, Howard Zinn to testify about
civil disobedience, and Catholic Bishop Thomas Gumbleton
to talk about the scriptural and spiritual basis for
peacemaking. They also advised the court that they
wanted to put on evidence about the war and the
necessity for their actions. But the District Attorney’s
Office opposed these efforts.
Two weeks before trial the court denied most of the
planned defense. In a devastating decision, the judge
agreed with the DA that expert witnesses and other
evidence on international law and necessity would not be
allowed. The court did promise to allow the four to
testify to their own convictions on these issues and
about why they felt their actions were justified.
As the morning of trial dawned, reporters on the local
paper created a pool on how long it would take the jury
to convict - the longest bet was a couple of hours.
All filed into a big high-ceilinged congregation-style
courtroom, with white walls, wooden pews, and the words “In God We Trust” painted in gold over the raised stand
from where the judge presided. After a quick 8:45 am
pretrial conference with the judge, the four and counsel
stayed behind, held hands and prayed.
The court brought over a 100 jurors into the courtroom
and examined them in panels of 18. Twelve jurors and two
alternates had to be selected. Their verdict had to be
unanimous. The court asked a number of basic questions
and then allowed each side to ask 30 minutes of
questions to each panel.
The St. Patrick’s Four conducted their own jury
selection from a table where supporters had placed three
daffodils in a small glass vase. They started out by
telling the jury exactly what they had done. To the
surprise of the reporters, the four admitted right away
that they went into the recruiting center, prayed and
poured their own blood all over in order to try to stop
the war and protect US soldiers and the people of Iraq.
They then asked people whether they thought the invasion
of Iraq was moral or not. Was it legal? Could the
president make a mistake? Were the casualties worth it?
Did Iraq have anything to do with 9-11? Could the jurors
keep an open mind about whether the four should be
convicted until after all the evidence was in, or had
people already decided? Some jurors were puzzled -
saying “didn’t you just admit you were guilty?” “No, we
admitted that we took the action, but we are not guilty
because it was authorized under international law and
necessity.” The prosecutor objected but the judge said
they could tell the jury what they were going to testify
to. The prosecutor asked jurors to promise to follow the
law. The St. Patrick’s Four asked the jurors to be the
conscience of the community and to promise to create
justice.
Passions in the potential jurors ran high as jury
selection turned into a huge focus group debating the
war in Iraq, civil disobedience, Vietnam, slavery and
the duties in hindsight of the citizens in Nazi Germany.
Many said they could not keep an open mind and the judge
excused them from serving. Some jurors said the war was
a horrible mistake and they could never convict anyone
of doing anything to oppose it. Other jurors were
visibly angry saying that even though they thought the
invasion may have been a mistake, this was no time to
criticize the war while troops were on the ground -
prompting other potential jurors to break out in
applause. Stereotypes were shattered as VFW members
scoffed at the judgment of the president and business
lobbyists said they were passionately against the war.
After interviewing nearly 80 citizens until almost 6
o’clock, twelve jurors and two alternatives were
selected. It was an exhausting and trying day, but one
in which some of the questions about the war were raised
- hopefully it did some justice for the people of Iraq.
After the long day, another meeting - many hopes and
some tears - ending with holding hands and prayers for
the people of Iraq.
Meanwhile supporters were preparing open lunches in a
nearby unitarian church and dinners and music for dozens
each evening - great opportunities for sharing
information about the trial and building community.
Meetings were often held on folding tables with crawling
babies while eating everything from Moosewood spinach
quiche and goat curry to peanut butter sandwiches.
As the jury was brought in, there were soft prayers at
the table. Opening statements were made by the
prosecutor and each of the four. The prosecutor said
this was a simple case of damage, easily proven, easily
decided. Each of the defendants again admitted that they
poured blood in the recruiting center, then explained
why. Peter DeMott admitted he poured blood and spoke of
his time in the Army and Marines in Vietnam, the horrors
of war, about his family, and about the Nuremberg
Principles. The prosecutor objected, but the judge said
that even though only the judge could tell the jury
about the law the defendants could tell the jury what
they intended to testify about. Teresa Grady told about
growing up in a household of resistance where her father
had destroyed draft cards in Camden and his jury
acquitted him, her trip to Nicaragua and the successes
of numerous campaigns of civil resistance from
anti-apartheid, to Vieques, to civil rights, to the
right of women to vote. Danny Burns told the jury that
the American flag already had blood on it, the blood of
native Americans and slaves and immigrants and civilians
in Hiroshima and Vietnamese burning children. And he
told about his family and humbly asked the jury to
listen to the defendants tell their story about
international law and justification. Clare Grady told
them about her trip to Iraq in the 1990s and her bonds
with the women and children she met there - people whose
pictures she brought into the recruiting center - people
who she hoped to put before the jury as they weighed the
legality of the pouring of blood.
The prosecutor then started her case. As she did, the
defendants stood and offered to stipulate to the facts
of the case - but the prosecutor insisted on calling
witnesses and the judge allowed her to do so. She put on
a fairly quick case. Two soldiers from the recruiting
center who told about the blood being poured all over,
including the flag. Big pictures of bloody walls and
windows and the bloody American flag were shown to the
jury. The defendants only asked the soldiers whether
potential recruits were advised about depleted uranium
or the spiritual or psychological consequences of
warfare or that nearly half of those who served in the
first gulf war have applied for disability. The soldiers
said that they did not know about these things and did
not advise anyone about them. The arresting officer told
of the arrest - and the only response of the defendants
was to thank him for the respectful treatment he gave. A
cleaner testified that he had been asked to clean up the
blood. He hired two people clean for 7 hours each and
payed them $7 to $10 an hour, but charged $45 an hour
for their time and a couple of hundred extra for his
time and for supplies, thus calling into question
whether the damage was over $250 or not - a key element
for the felony charge. The prosecution’s final witness
donated a new American flag and the blood spattered flag
was lifted up to show the jury. The prosecution rested.
At the close of each day of trial, the defendants met to
coordinate their strategies and to make mid-trial
corrections. Many in the community had a stomach flu and
as all were so often together shared it as generously as
everything else. Sleep was hard to come by. People in
the courtroom had different perspectives on what had
happened and what should happen. There were hopes and
laughter and tears but always reconciliation, ending
with hands held and singing. And as court started each
morning, hands were held in court hallways and there
were soft songs and prayers.
All the while the trial was going on, the courtroom was
full of children and teenagers and cousins and
supporters from near and far. Many arriving early and
staying late, others popping in between family and work
obligations. Patiently sitting and standing in
solidarity with the truth that is being witnessed.
The jury never knew that the defendants had tried to get
additional testimony about Iraq and international law
and civil disobedience into evidence. Now, the judge
dismissed the jury and again outside of their presence
went over all the other witnesses and exhibits proposed
to be included in the defendants case to which the
prosecutor had lodged objections. Cathy Breen of New
York Catholic Worker and Voices in the Wilderness to
testify about what it was like in Baghdad before and
during the bombardment? Not allowed. Fr. Ned Murphy, SJ,
about the defendants’ reputation and the role of blood
in scriptures? Denied. Damacio Lopez to speak about the
effects of depleted uranium in Iraq and in New Mexico?
Denied. Pre-invasion reports by Scott Ritter testifying
that Iraq did not have weapons of mass destruction?
Denied. Pictures of people in Iraq? Denied. Newspaper
articles from around the world about the illegality of
an invasion of Iraq under international law? Denied. A
copy of the Nuremberg Principles? Denied. The only
evidence the judge was letting in was the testimony of
the defendants themselves about what they did, why they
did it, and how they thought they were justified in
doing so. The jury got to see none of this evidence, nor
knew that it was excluded.
In the end, it was up the four, and them alone, to tell
the jury and the larger community why they poured their
blood and why they thought it was moral and legal.
Peter DeMott testified as a father, a husband, the
oldest of nine children and as a Marine and Army
Veteran, who served in the war against Vietnam. He
stated it was his duty as a Christian and under
International Law and the Nuremberg Principles to take
non-violent action to stop an illegal and immoral war
undertaken by his country. He spoke of his sincere
concern for his family and for the Iraqi people
suffering under the U.S. sanction, invasion and
occupation. He also spoke of great concern about the
U.S. service people who are suffering in Iraq and
elsewhere from the ravages of war, and especially about
the toxic effects of depleted uranium (DU) on the troops
in Iraq and the Iraqi people. Peter also spoke of the
contamination of the air, soil and water for millions of
years as a result of the U.S. dropping tons of DU in
Iraq in the current war and the first Gulf War. He
respected the soldiers but he feared for them. At the
end, when asked about the command to "Love Your
Enemies", he responded by saying he had no enemies. The
prosecutor asked him about prior convictions and he
testified he had been arrested over 25 times protesting
at the White House, the Pentagon, the Department of
Energy, the Air and Space Museum and numerous army and
navy installations and had spent time in prison for his
nonviolent protests.
Teresa Grady testified about being raised to embrace all
of God's children and to greatly appreciate the
diversity of people while growing up in New York City.
She said her religious convictions were a strong
motivation for her to take her action. She spoke of her
father's acquittal in the Camden 28 trial, in which he
and 27 others were involved in destroying the draft
files of men about to be drafted for the Vietnam War.
Teresa spoke as the parent of a teenage boy and how
important it is to educate young people about the real
impact of signing up for the military, the reality that
the recruiters gloss over. She pointed to the numbers of
people killed in Iraq during the time of the trial
alone, and how that pointed to the desperate need for
the prevention of this war. She testified about numerous
instances where nonviolent resistance to unjust laws
ultimately helped make justice possible.
Daniel Burns testified that as a parent of a small
child, he felt that the loss of a single child would be
too great for anyone to bear, and that he was thinking
very much of that when he took his action. As the tenth
of twelve children, he thought of the parents of
soldiers and Iraqi citizens and how horrible it was for
any of them to lose their children to war. The
prosecutor said to Danny, "Why didn't you just bring
your own flag to the recruitment station and pour your
blood on it outside? That would have been fine." He
stated that Rosa Parks didn't just stand outside the bus
and hold a sign. She went inside the bus and took more
serious action and the world was better for her action.
Danny said he felt there was an emergency about to occur
in Iraq and that our country is essentially "on fire",
with the emergency continuing in Iraq and the tragedy
continuing here as well in the form of U.S. military
people still coming home dead, wounded and scarred. He
felt his action was taken as an emergency measure, in
conjunction with many others around the world who were
also saying “NO” to this war. He talked about seeing
articles in the paper challenging the proposed invasion
as a violation of international law and statements by
hundreds of law professors who said war was illegal.
Clare Grady told of her eyewitness knowledge of the
suffering in Iraq at the hands of the U.S. sanctions
when she visited there with a Voices in the Wilderness
Delegation in 1999. She told how she visited with Iraqi
mothers and despite their language barriers they
together shared the joy of their children, kissing each
other’s photographs of their children. Clare spoke of
her strong religious belief that there is never
justification for killing. Clare said that she was
raised to oppose injustice, to oppose racism, war making
and the injustices of poverty. She remembered how her
father cried when Martin Luther King was killed and how
the family helped him run as a peace candidate for
congress. She spoke of her work as kitchen coordinator
for 15 years in the community kitchen in Ithaca, serving
free meals 5 times per week. She then recounted how she
went to the recruiting center and carefully poured the
blood and knelt and prayed and waited for the
authorities.
In the fourth day of the trial, after Clare finished,
all the defendants rose and said together “the defense
rests.” The jury was dismissed for the Easter weekend.
The judge discussed proposed jury instructions -
ultimately rejecting most of the ones suggested by the
defendants on international law, necessity, and
Nuremberg principles - instead keeping most of the
standard jury instructions for a criminal damage case.
Over the Easter weekend, while the defendants worked on
their closing statements to the jury there was a shock -
Peter had been hospitalized with a brain hemorrhage.
While he was in intensive care, the community and the
families rallied to support his family and the rest of
the defendants. The doctors would not allow him to leave
the hospital, would the trial continue or would there be
a mistrial? Peter wanted the trial to continue for the
sake of all involved, especially the jurors who had
already given up four days. Defendants and dozens in the
community decided to go forward with a huge Easter
gathering with a pitch-in dinner and music and
festivities.
On Monday the judge agreed to allow the trial to go
forward as Peter had requested and allowed Peter’s
advisory counsel to read a brief closing statement from
him to the jury. Teresa closed with “We are Catholic
Workers and We Are Still Pacifists.” Clare thanked the
jury for their time and reminded them that while
everyone in the trial had the weekend to catch up and
take a breath, the people of Iraq were dying by the
dozens as were many US soldiers. Clare finished with a
quote from GK Chesterton about the importance and wisdom
of juries. Danny gave a brief summation of the case and
asked the jury to look at their action not in the narrow
legalistic context that the prosecutor wanted, but in
the context of the war in Iraq, in the context of
history of nonviolent civil resistance, and in the
context of justice. Danny said Iraq is the building and
the building is on fire, though they were not able to
stop the fire of war, they should not be penalized for
trying. He reminded the jurors of their promise to give
justice and asked them to send the world a message of
justice and peace by deciding justly. The prosecutor
said it was a simple case with a simple outcome -
conviction of people who, though idealistic, were wrong
and engaged in illegal acts that if approved would lead
to anarchy. She also said that even if Iraq was a
burning building, it was millions of miles away and
there was nothing that anyone could reasonably do about
it - thus the defendants should be convicted.
The judge then gave the jury his instructions and their
deliberations started at 11:30 on Monday morning. One of
the court personnel was overheard saying “These people
are making a mockery of this whole process!”
While at lunch, one person from upstate New York told
how she and others had gone over a fence around a
national guard installation to protest the first gulf
war, had gone to trial and poured their hearts out for a
day and a half - and their jury was out seven minutes
before convicting them!
As the afternoon inched forward, supporters were heard
saying “every hour is a victory.” (The newspaper
reporters’ pool for how long the jury would be out
topped out at a couple of hours).
At 5:45 all were summoned back into court. As the jury
filed in, the judge said they wanted the
cross-examination testimony of the defendants read back
to them. A bad sign. All the prosecutor wanted to focus
on was their version of the action - having each
defendant admit again that they had poured blood and
waited. Hopes sagged. The testimony was re-read to them.
After that the judge ordered them dinner and sent them
back to deliberate.
At 8 at night all were summoned back into the courtroom.
People were very worried, but it turned out that the
light in the jury room had gone out and the judge was
going to dismiss them for the night.
The next day the jury is out all morning and the judge
orders them lunch. The print reporter admitted that no
one in their pool even bet that the jury would be out
overnight. The TV reporter said her managers wanted to
know what was going on? Hadn’t the defendants admitted
that they did it? What was taking so long?
Courtroom officers admitted they were surprised by how
long the jury was taking. Another courtroom official
said “this is ridiculous!”
At 2:30 the judge asked everyone to come back to the
courtroom. The jury said they were unable to reach a
unanimous verdict and did not foresee any changes and
asked to be let go. Defendants agreed with the jury
request. But the prosecutor asked that they be given
further instructions by the court to conscientiously
re-evaluate the evidence and the court did so. Once the
jury was told this and sent back to deliberate, the
judge said he would re-evaluate at 5 o’clock.
The next few hours went by extremely slowly. At 5 the
jury had another question and the judge answered it and
sent them back to deliberate and ordered dinner.
At 8:50, after 20 hours of deliberation, the jury again
said it was deadlocked and the judge agreed to dismiss
them and declare a mistrial. As the jury advised the
judge that they were unable to reach a verdict, the
packed courtroom gave them a tremendous ovation and
repeated it as they filed out.
The DA was stunned, the media were stunned, the
community was elated. But the greatest news of all?
Within 24 hours, it was reported that the jury was
deadlocked 9 to 3 in favor of acquittal of the
defendants.
A mistrial means that the prosecutor can seek to re-try
the defendants. The prosecution said they would try the
protestors again. The judge agreed to consider a defense
motion to dismiss the prosecution in the next 30 days.
It started as a trial of brave and conscientious
protestors. But it was clear that somewhere along the
way the trial changed. As it ended up, the war in Iraq
itself had gone on trial. Every hour is a victory and
another opportunity to lift up the concerns of the
people in Iraq and work overtime in the coming weeks to
try to stop the violence.
This story will end with the closing argument of Danny
Burns, then you decide how together we can try to stop
the continued killing. The jury did their part. What is
ours?
Closing Argument of Daniel Burns to the Jury
First I want to thank you for giving up a week of your
time to hear this case. We are not lawyers and we
appreciate your patience with us and we appreciate your
attention. We also thank the judge and the courtroom
people, thank you. I also thank the prosecutor. We think
she is, as she joked, a talented prosecutor arguing a
weak case.
I would now like to remind you of the promise you made
to us in jury selection. You promised to do justice in
this case. For hundreds of years, our system has relied
on the wisdom and courage of jurors to do justice. I
know you will keep your promise to do justice now that
the case is finally in your hands.
The prosecutor wants you to look at this case very
narrowly and will tell you that you have no choice to
convict us. But that is clearly not the case. The judge
will tell you to use your common sense and to search for
the just meaning of the words "reasonable." The jury's
role is to apply the law to the facts and to produce
justice. We know you will not look at this so narrowly
and we know you will never forget justice.
The prosecutor has charged with the crime of criminal
mischief. The judge will tell you that this law requires
3 elements:
We intended to damage the property of another;
We had no right, nor any reasonable ground to believe we
had a right to do so;
The damage exceeded $250.
Again, the prosecutor wants you to look at this very
narrowly and technically - We want you to use your
common sense and look at these elements in the context
of the real world.
What is the context for our action?
The IMMEDIATE CONTEXT for the justice of our action is
the Pre-emptive Invasion of the War of Iraq. An invasion
opposed by the United Nations, opposed by most nations
in this world, and founded on lies about weapons of mass
destruction, and an invasion that has cost a billion
dollars a day, hundreds of American sons and daughters,
and thousands of our Iraqi sisters
and brothers.
Also we ask you to look at the justice of our action in
light of the CONTEXT OF INTERNATIONAL LAW. Why was the
invasion opposed by the UN and many of our allies?
Because International law only allows an attack on
another country in self defense or with approval of the
UN security council - and we had neither. And The
Nuremberg principles provide a legal defense for people
seeking to prevent war crimes.
We also ask you to look at the justice of our action in
a RELIGIOUS CONTEXT. Think of thou shall not kill. Love
your enemies. And Jesus in the temple - where he
disturbed the peace and broke the law to protest the
injustices of the temple.
THE HISTORICAL CONTEXT is also important to judge the
justice of our action. Remember the Boston Tea party,
Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King, Gandhi, Susan B.
Anthony, and Sojourner Truth.
The prosecution will tell you to forget all that but we
say justice demands that you use common sense and
context.
So, in these contexts, how do we think justice applies
to the elements of this charge?
The first element, damage to property. We ask you to
balance the mess we made with the horrors we were trying
to prevent. We think if you do that you will find
justice.
The second element is "the right to do so, or reasonable
ground to believe we hads such a right" - we have tried
to explain our religious, historical, moral, and
international law reasons. We believe what most other
people in the world believe - that no country has the
right to invade and bomb another country except in
self-defense. We think history will judge that this was
an illegal and immoral war. That is what we tried to
stop. Even though we are not lawyers, I hope we were
able to explain our reasons to you so that you might
apply justice.
The third element is damage of over $250. We hurt no
person. We admitted from the beginning that we poured
our blood, prayed and stayed to take responsibility for
our actions - because what we did was right. The
prosecution has not given you proof beyond a reasonable
doubt that you can put ANY cost on the mess we created.
The cleaner admitted on the stand that he gave one bill
under oath to the grand jury and a completely different
one under oath here in this court - that alone is enough
to create reasonable doubt about the proof of damages.
The cleaner also testified that he did NO CLEANING
himself. 2 people did most of a day's work and he paid
them $7 to $10 dollars an hour. 14 hours at $10 an hour
is far, far less than $250. And we all know the cost of
ammonia. He wanted to be paid $45 an hour and who blames
him, but use your common sense, and consider what the
real cost is. The prosecution has not proved this
element beyond a reasonable doubt.
No jury would convict 4 people of breaking and entering
if they broke into a burning house to try to save a
child. Here, the building was on fire - as Iraq is now,
and we broke in to try to save our troops and the
innocent Iraqis. We did not save them, but justice says
we should not be punished for trying.
So, we end where we started. We ask for justice.
We ask for justice for the people of Iraq and our
troops, We ask for justice for world peace. We ask for
justice to say no to pre-emptive illegal war.
Send a message to the world from Tomkins county -
we say yes to conscience,
we say yes to love of neighbor,
we say yes to international law,
say yes to justice.
Thank you and god bless.

BILL WARREN/Journal Staff
Teresa Grady, left, and her
sister Clare Grady look to their friends in the
courtroom after Judge John Sherman declared a
mistrial Tuesday evening in Tompkins County
Court. Co-defendant Daniel Burns is at right;
the three defendants, along with Peter De Mott,
faced third-degree criminal mischief charges for
pouring blood throughout the lobby of a military
recruiting station in Lansing in March 2003. The
jury was unable to reach a verdict after two
days of deliberations.
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