DA Cyrus Vance Jr., Prosecutor for the Rich: Kangaroo Court Convicts Occupy
Protester by
DAVE LINDORFF MAY 07, 2014
Two
and a half years after the Occupy Wall Street movement took the country by
storm, injecting topics like income inequality and class war into the realm of
permissible national political discourse for the first time since the 1930s,
the nationÕs legal machinery of repression has come down like a proverbial ton
of bricks on the movement just as nationally coordinated police repression
crushed its physical manifestation in late 2011. The prosecution, and MondayÕs ultimate conviction of Occupy
Wall Street protester Cecily McMillan on the ludicrous charge of felony assault
against a brutal male police officer who had grabbed her right breast from
behind so hard it caused bruising, makes Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus
Vance, Jr. the prosecutorial equivalent of the thug police officers like NYPD
deputy inspector Anthony Balogna. Balogna,
recall, was the Òwhite shirtÓ police supervisor who was notoriously caught on
video gratuitously spraying several young women directly in the face as they
stood peacefully behind a police barricade during the early days of
Occupy. Vance, as Manhattan DA, is doing the same thing with legal prosecutions, making a name for
himself by gratuitously prosecuting the wrong people and meanwhile letting the
real criminals skate.
Last
year, he brought criminal charges against one of the cityÕs tiniest financial
institutions, little Abacus Bank, a Chinatown-based community bank, claiming it
had committed mortgage fraud. As I wrote here and in the
magazine CrainÕs New York Business, Abacus actually had discovered that a
loan officer had been allowing loan applicants to lie about their income and
had taken action itself, firing the individual and reporting the situation to
the federal Office of Thrift Supervision. But Vance decided to go after the
bank anyhow to make an example of it, claiming it was an
classic case of the bank behavior that had caused the 2008 financial crisis. In
fact, however, as Vance surely knew, Abacus Bank boasts a loan default rate of
less than 0.5%, well below the national average of 6%. It had no involvement in
subprime loans or derivative products, hadnÕt cost either the FDIC or Fanny Mae
a cent, and didnÕt need a taxpayer bailout. Furthermore, as I pointed out in my
articles, Vance has never sought
criminal prosecutions of any of the truly criminal banks that are in
his jurisdiction that did commit mortgage fraud on such a massive
scale that it caused the nationÕs financial and economic collapse: Goldman
Sachs, Morgan Stanley, JPMorgan Chase, Citicorp, Merrill Lynch and Lehman
Brothers, all of which have or had their headquarters right in Manhattan.
Instead
of frog-marching the crooked CEOs of these massively corrupt institutions
before media cameras to their arraignments, Vance had the media come to Abacus
bank to run their cameras as a Òchain gangÓ of young tellers was led out of the
bank to an arraignment. The case against Abacus is still awaiting trial, and a
court is still considering a motion by AbacusÕs attorney to have the charges
dismissed.
Now
Vance has gone after one small person, McMillan,
whoÕs only ÒcrimeÓ was defending herself against a violent sexual assault by a
police officer, at a time when she was doing nothing wrong — just
attending, along with several dozen other people, a memorial protest action in Zuccotti Park. Vance had his prosecutor in the case, Erin Choi, employ the worst kind of over-charging and abuse of
power in order to win a conviction and, it appears, a penalty that is clearly
designed to chill protest in New York City. (After charging her with felony
assault of a cop, the DA offered McMillan the prosecutorÕs bargain: plead
guilty to one lesser charge with a promise of no jail time in return for having
the more serious charge dropped. McMillan refused such a deal on principle,
insisting on her innocence.) The
shameful prosecution of McMillan is clearly designed, just like the brutal
police response to protesters in 2011, to intimidate people from protesting
against corporate power as the partisans of Occupy Wall Street did. ItÕs a message to the people of New York,
and indeed to the citizens of the United States, that when you stand up to
police, even when — or maybe especially when — you are exercising
your Constitutional First Amendment right to protest and seek redress of
grievances, you are liable to first be beaten or brutalized, and then to be
jailed on trumped-up felony charges if you in any way resist police assault.
The
cityÕs main newspaper, the New York Times, didnÕt even report on
McMillanÕs conviction on Tuesday, the day after the jury reached its obscene
verdict, but Molly Knefel, writing in the
British Guardian newspaper, which unlike the cityÕs supposed
Ònewspaper of record,Ó covered the trial from start to finish, wrote: ÒAs disturbing as it is that she
was found guilty of felony assault against Officer Grantley
Bovell, the circumstances of her trial reflect an
even more disturbing reality – that of normalized police violence,
disproportionately punitive sentences (McMillan faces seven years in prison),
and a criminal penal system based on anything but justice. While this is
nothing new for the over-policed communities of New York City, what happened to
McMillan reveals just how powerful and unrestrained a massive police force can
be in fighting back against the very people with whom it is charged to
protect.Ó
Vance
was aided in his persecution of McMillan by a judge, Ronald Zwiebel,
who brazenly sided with the prosecution from the get go, refusing to allow the
defense to present evidence of the officerÕs prior brutal behavior, refusing
even to allow jurors to get a clear view of a video showing how McMillan was
assaulted and how her elbow was directed at someone she couldnÕt have even know
was a police officer, as he was behind her.
As
Knefel wrote:
ÒIn the trial, physical evidence was considered suspect but the
testimony of the police was cast as infallible.
Despite photographs of her bruised
body, including her right breast, the prosecution cast doubt upon McMillanÕs
allegations of being injured by the police -– all while Officer Bovell repeatedly identified the wrong eye when testifying
as to how McMillan injured him.
And not only was Officer BovellÕs documented history of violent behavior deemed
irrelevant by the judge, but so were the allegations of his violent behavior
later that very same night. ÒTo
the jury, the hundreds of police batons, helmets, fists, and flex cuffs out on
March 17 were invisible – rendering McMillanÕs elbow the most powerful
weapon on display in Zuccotti that night, at least
insofar as the jury was concerned.Ó
McMillan,
who has displayed extraordinary courage as she faces a potential seven-year
sentence she doesnÕt deserve, will hopefully have her absurd conviction
overturned on appeal, but in todayÕs massively corrupted legal system, in which
judges increasingly side with the state, thereÕs no assurance of that
happening. Meanwhile, she is locked up for defending herself against a police assault which, from the looks of the video and her bruise
should have had him fired from the force.
The McMillan prosecution, and the Abacus Bank prosecution as well, are
black marks that will forever mark DA Vance as a quintessential defender of
wealth and privilege instead of justice. But the two cases are also emblematic
of a wider crisis — the utter corruption of the US legal system —
as the nation continues its slide towards a totalitarian future.
Dave Lindorff is
a founding member of ThisCantBeHappening!, an online newspaper collective, and is a contributor
to Hopeless: Barack Obama and the Politics of Illusion (AK Press).