Born in 1947 in
Traverse City, Michigan, Gilbert was the elder of two children. She was raised in a middle class setting. At the age of 18, in 1965, she joined the
Dominican Sisters of Grand Rapids. Starting in 1969, Gilbert taught junior high school students at various schools around Michigan. This lasted until 1977 when she started to teach at the Alternative Learning Center in
Saginaw, Michigan. The group was arrested and held in a federal prison until the charges were dropped. In 2002, the same group of sisters entered a Minuteman III missile silo in Colorado. Clad in white jump suits emblazoned with "Citizen Weapon Inspection Team," the group drew a cross in their own blood, banged on the silo, and prayed. The sisters were arrested and left on the ground for three hours. Their protest spilled over into their pre-trial hearing. Clad in full
religious habit, the sisters answered the judge with a nod. At their trial, the presiding judge,
Robert E. Blackburn, granted an
in limine motion to the prosecutor. This prevented the sisters from arguing that their actions were legal under international law and the
Nuremberg defense. They were sentenced to between 30 and 41 months in prison. Due to their activism, in 2005 and 2006 Gilbert and Platte were labeled as terrorists by the State of Maryland. While in prison Sister Carol Gilbert met fellow federal inmate
Martha Stewart. ==See also==