BLM Activists To Be Reimbursed For Being Banned From Capitol

Written By BlabberBuzz | Wednesday, 04 August 2021 09:45 PM
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Five demonstrators backing the Black Lives Matter movement are set to get $5,000 each after an Iowa appeal board decision on their ban from the state Capitol last year, according to the Des Moines Register.

The State Appeal Board on Monday voted to support a recommendation from state attorneys to pay five rebels $5,000 each and their lawyer $45,000. According to the settlement, which a judge has to approve before it is ended, the state will withdraw all bans on the five rebels, stressing that they "may continue to enter and use the Iowa Capitol Complex on the same basis and under the same terms as any other law-abiding member of the public."

Jalesha Johnson, Louise Bequeaith, Haley Jo Dikkers, Brad Penna, and Brandi Ramus were captured on July 1, 2020, after an altercation with police officers at the Capitol. The Iowa State Patrol, which is in charge of Capitol security, told these demonstrators that they were banned, some for six months and some for a year, from setting foot on the state property that encompassed the building. Four were likewise charged with interference with official acts or disorderly conduct, which were later dismissed, and one pleaded guilty to simple misdemeanor interference, being obliged to pay $250.

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The American Civil Liberties Union of Iowa sued over the ban, particularly Iowa Department of Public Safety Commissioner Stephan Bayens and many members of the Iowa State Patrol, announcing that their rights were being violated.

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Last December, U.S. District Court Judge Rebecca Goodgame Ebinger blocked the state from enforcing the bans, stating that they "likely burden more speech than is necessary to achieve the significant state interests of preventing violence and ensuring public safety."

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"We are grateful to the court and relieved that our clients will be able to engage in their right to nonviolent speech and assembly at their state Capitol once again while we move ahead in this litigation," ACLU of Iowa Legal Director Rita Bettis Austen announced back then.

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The settlement further remarks that the Iowa Department of Public Safety will proceed to instruct officers who serve in the Capitol about the First Amendment. A spokesperson for the ACLU of Iowa declined to comment to the Register about the settlement, as did one of the protesters who was reached for comment. The other four protesters could not be reached for comment, and spokespeople for the State Patrol and the Department of Public Safety did not return the newspaper’s calls.

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