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Protesters Arrested Near Bush's
Ranch
By Angela K. Brown
The Associated Press
Wednesday 23 November 2005
A dozen war protesters were arrested
Wednesday for setting up camp near President Bush's ranch in defiance
of new local bans on roadside camping and parking.
About four hours after the group pitched
six tents and huddled in sleeping bags and blankets, McLennan County
sheriff's deputies arrested them for criminal trespassing.
Another dozen or so demonstrators left
the public right of way after deputies warned them they would be arrested.
The protest was set to coincide with
Bush's Thanksgiving ranch visit.
The arrests were made by more than
two dozen deputies who calmly approached the demonstrators in their
tents and asked if they wanted to walk out on their own or be carried.
Two chose to be carried. They were to be taken to jail for booking.
Anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan wasn't
among the protesters Wednesday because of a family emergency in California,
but she planned to be at the camp later in the week.
"We are proud to be here," Dede Miller,
Sheehan's sister, said hours before her arrest as she huddled in a blanket
at the campsite. "This is just so important. What we did in August really
moved us forward, and this is just a continuation of it."
In August, hundreds of demonstrators
camped off the road during a 26-day protest led by Sheehan, whose 24-year-old
soldier son Casey was killed in Iraq last year. But a month later, county
commissioners banned camping in any county ditch and parking within
7 miles of the ranch, citing safety and traffic congestion issues.
Earlier this week, three demonstrators
filed a federal lawsuit against McLennan County over the two local bans.
During the last several weeks of their
summer protest, the activists had camped on a private 1-acre lot that
a sympathetic landowner let them use. That land is about a mile from
Bush's ranch.
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Arrests Begin as Protesters Challenge
New Ordinances on Two Fronts
KWTX News (Waco, Texas)
Wednesday 23 November 2005
While three war protesters headed to
court Wednesday to challenge new McLennan County ordinances banning
roadside camping and restricting parking in a large area around the
President’s Central Texas ranch, others pitched tents on a roadside
to court arrest and they succeeded.
About a dozen protesters arrived before
daybreak Wednesday to pitch tents alongside a rural road near Crawford
in defiance of a new county ordinance that bars temporary structures
in any county ditch.
A McLennan County deputy sheriff warned
the protesters that the tents violated the ordinance, but after the
protesters continued to defy the restriction, deputies began to make
arrests.
About a dozen protesters were arrested,
largely without incident, although two had to be carried by deputies.
They were taken to the McLennan County
jail.
Cindy Sheehan, the California woman
whose roadside vigil in August attracted international attention, was
not there, but was expected to join the group by the end of the week
after being delayed by a family emergency.
Meanwhile Texas Civil Rights Project
attorneys headed to federal court in Waco to seek a temporary restraining
order barring the county from enforcing the new ordinances.
President and Mrs. Bush arrived Tuesday
evening in Waco on their first trip to their ranch since Hurricane Katrina
struck in August. |