Since 2000, the
US government has prosecuted over 20 cases involving
environmentalists, which
Los Angeles CityBeat claims "redefined not only free speech, but also redefined environmentally motivated property destruction - like torching
Hummers or tree-felling equipment." These arrests, indictments and trials, which have collectively been termed the
Green Scare by
environmentalists, include:
Individuals Rod Coronado, a prominent
Native American eco-anarchist associated with the
Animal Liberation Front, who was arrested on a felony charge of demonstrating the use of a destructive device. His indictment indirectly related to an August 1, 2003 fire in
San Diego that destroyed an apartment complex causing an estimated $50 million worth of damage. Coronado, a self-described "unofficial ELF spokesman", stood trial in 2007. After two days of deliberations, the jury remained
deadlocked so the judge declared a mistrial. He subsequently entered a guilty plea and
accepted a deal for a one-year prison term.
Jeff "Free" Luers, a
veganarchist from
Los Angeles, California, who served a prison sentence of almost ten years for
arson. His initial sentence was over 22 years, but the
Oregon Court of Appeals overturned it, and the Lane County Circuit Court determined a new sentence of 10 years in February 2008, after what
The Independent described as an "international campaign for a more appropriate sentence for a crime in which no one was hurt." In 2000 he set fire to three
SUVs at Romania Chevrolet dealership in
Eugene, Oregon as a protest against
excessive consumption and
global warming. He has become a
cause célèbre among some radicals,
anti-prison activists, and people associated with the Earth Liberation Front, although Luers has said that he does not consider himself an ELF member. Upon his resentencing, Judge Billings said that he expected Luers would be treated as an "elder statesman" among some activists, and hoped that Luers would use that influence in a productive way. Luers declared that he was looking forward to "promoting activism through legal means." McIntosh admitted guilt as part of a
plea agreement, in which the prosecution said they would not ask that he spend more than ten years in prison. Supporters criticized the sentence as excessive "for someone who caused $5,000 damage". Prosecutors argued it was important to "protect the public" from some one who expressed no remorse, saying McIntosh was "proud of his crime, and, given the chance, he would do the same thing again." They released over 8,000 animals from various
fur farms in
Iowa,
South Dakota, and
Wisconsin and disposed of the breeding records at each farm. Samuel was arrested on September 4, 1999 in Belgium and was extradited to the
United States to face trial. He agreed to cooperate with the government in exchange for a reduced sentence of two years. Young was arrested in
San Jose,
California on March 21, 2005 on charges of
shoplifting from a local
Starbucks and was extradited to Wisconsin to face trial for the fur farm raids. He was sentenced to two years in federal prison; 360 hours of community service at a charity; $254,000 restitution; and one year probation.
Groups SHAC 7, six
animal rights activists, who were found guilty of using their website to incite threats,
harassment, vandalism and attacks against the company
Huntingdon Life Sciences and their business partners. Originally seven individuals were charged, leading sympathizers to describe the defendants as the
SHAC 7, but the case against one of the defendants was dropped.
Pamelyn Ferdin, the current president of
SHAC USA, told the jury that "for the government to say you can't say this and you can't say that is going down a very scary path of going toward
fascism." However, the US Attorney's Office described the convicts as "thugs who went far beyond protected speech and lawful protest to engage in and incite intimidation, harassment and violence." The judge sentenced the individuals to an aggregate of 24 years in prison, and ordered to pay a joint
restitution of $1,000,001.00.
Operation Backfire, a multi-agency criminal investigation into destructive acts in the name of animal rights and environmental causes in the United States, that resulted in the December 7, 2005 arrest of seven people. At least six people were
subpoenaed to testify before grand juries. Three of the individuals subpoenaed ended up on a January 20, 2006, 65 count, 84-page-long indictment. The new indictment charged 11 people with conspiring to commit 18 acts of arson and vandalism over a 5-year period across multiple states. Some of the charges relate to a 1998 arson attack on the
Vail Ski Resort in
Colorado and the sabotage of a power line near
Bend, Oregon, in 1999. The
FBI considered these crimes to be acts of
domestic terrorism and the ELF to be the nation's top domestic terror threat. == Response ==