BP Citizen's Arrest – Friday, High Noon

This Friday at high noon join with CCAN, Public Citizen, Friends of the Earth, Greenpeace, Energy Action Coalition, 350.org, Hip Hop Caucus and the Center for Biological Diversity as we hold BP accountable for its high crimes and misdemeanors. We need YOU to help us deliver our charges against BP!

Join us from 12-1 outside of BP’s D.C. headquarters at 1101 New York Avenue, NW.

Charge #1: Criminal negligence. BP has a long history of worker, consumer and environmental violations. BP’s culture of negligence, shunning of common safety devices and inability to adequately respond to the mounting catastrophe in the Gulf of Mexico and the surrounding communities warrants a citizen finding of criminal negligence.

Charge #2: Unfettered corporate influence. Corporate meddling in the political process has led to oil-friendly regulators and lawmakers, and a blatant disregard for the regulatory process.

Charge #3: Need for clean solutions. Even with increased safety and environmental regulations, oil drilling is still inherently dangerous. The only way to ensure we don’t have any more catastrophes is to stop offshore drilling altogether. Instead, we should pursue clean energy and energy independence.

RSVP on facebook or using this google spreadsheet. Then help us spread the word!

CCAN director tours oil disaster: video, photos, words

Photo Album Photo Credit: Jeffrey Dubinsky, Gulf Restoration Network
Oil Invading Marsh
Photo of oil invading Louisiana wetlands as seen from the air.
Mike Tidwell and Aaron Viles
Tidwell flies over the oil disaster site with Aaron Viles of the Gulf Restoration Network
More pictures from Tidwell’s Gulf Coast trip>>

I just got back from a four-day tour of the Louisiana coastline. I flew over the oil catastrophe in a small plane. I toured the oily marshes in fishing boats. And I walked the beaches myself, smelling what people here say is a mix of oil and “agent orange,” their name for the toxic chemical dispersant BP is spraying on the oil. Watch this short video. I went to Louisiana to see for myself just what’s at stake for Maryland and Virginia. Unless we re-instate a permanent ban on all new offshore drilling in the mid-Atlantic, this could be us. Thankfully, due to the activism of people like you, President Obama last week cancelled a plan to sell drilling leases just 50 miles off the Virginia coastline. That’s a good start. But it’s not a done deal. Please sign this petition for a permanent offshore ban. And donate to CCAN to help us keep up this critical fight. Based on my trip to Louisiana, I can tell you we’ll never be safe with oil. Never. It’s wrecking our climate, of course, and there’s no way to permanently eliminate human error and equipment failure through regulation. As long as we have thousands and thousands of drilling rigs off our shores, there will be another spill. I visited innocent Louisiana fishing families now being wiped out by the spill. Many of them weep openly as they talk. They describe spending their whole lives fishing only to be told last week that they’ll get a $10,000 fine if they drop a single net or line in the water. One fisherman said, “BP thinks they can repay us with money. But they’ve taken away something no money can repay. They’ve taken away our way of life.” If a similar blowout occurred off the coast of Virginia, we’d have oil from Virginia Beach to Cape May, NJ. And it would be innocent Virginia watermen crying. Innocent Maryland hotel owners and dockworkers crying. Please donate to CCAN to help us make sure this never happens. Offshore wind power in Virginia and Maryland is the better path, of course. Using only a small portion of the coast, windmills in Virginia alone could provide enough electricity to power 3.6 million electric cars [pdf] forever. That’s with practically zero pollution even if, god forbid, a hurricane blew through and knocked down some or all the windmills. It’s clean energy. We are all victims of climate change, of course. But the Louisiana families I visited last week are the victims, right now, of one the ugliest addictions within the climate crisis. It’s our responsibility to make sure their suffering is not in vain.

Prison time for activist over green jobs banner. No kidding.

Despite the Gulf disaster, no one from BP has been arrested and sent to jail. Despite safety violations at coal mines, no one from Massey Energy has been handcuffed. But today I write to inform you that one of America’s best global warming activists is probably facing several months of jail. He’s been convicted by a D.C. jury, and now he awaits sentencing on July 6th. Why? Because he peacefully dropped two banners on Capitol Hill that said: “GREEN JOBS NOW” and “GET TO WORK.”

I’m not joking. Ted Glick of the Chesapeake Climate Action Network was convicted by a jury May 13th of peacefully dropping the banners inside the U.S. Senate Hart Office Building last September. The D.C. U.S. Attorney’s office clearly has decided to make an “example” of Ted because of his previous two — count ’em, two — convictions related to peaceful acts of climate civil disobedience. Can you believe it? You can see a three-minute video of Ted’s September “crime” below. He’s the guy towards the end simply lowering the banners.

Now Ted is facing up to three years in jail. Based on the judge’s comments last week, it really does appear that he will be incarcerated for at least a month or two.

What can you do? Help spread the word about this fight to keep a morally innocent staff member out of jail during this time of great global crisis.