Peace activists Daniel Sicken, Brattleboro, Vermont,
and Sachio Ko-Yin,
Ridgewood, New Jersey, were sentenced on February 18th in Denver
Federal
District Court. Sicken was sentenced to 41 months and Ko-Yin
to 30 months.
The court imposed standard conditions for the mandatory payment
of
restitution. The government claimed damage at $21,299.40.
The Plowshares activists commemorated the 53rd anniversary
of the atomic
bombing of Hiroshima, Japan, last August 6th by using sledgehammers
to
symbolically disarm an active U.S. Air force Minuteman III strategic
nuclear
missile silo in northeast Colorado. They also painted on the
underground
silo's concrete cap the images of a gravestone and a broken rifle,
the
international symbol of disarmament.
Sicken, 57, an Air Force veteran, is self-employed
in electrical and
plumbing home repairs. Ko-Yin, 26, is a nursery school teacher.
They
represented themselves in a three day jury trial, November 2-4,
1998, and
were found guilty of sabotage, conspiracy, and destruction of
government
property charges. A formal defense was prohibited, such as the
"necessity
defense" or "Nuremburg defense." Immediately following
the trial, the
activists were incarcerated at Englewood Federal Detention Center,
outside
Denver. Sicken was assigned to federal detention at Ft. Devens,
MA. and
Ko-Yin at Allenwood, PA.
Arguments made for downward departure were accepted
based on the Judge's
decision to apply the principle of gradation of offense. Thus
the
sentencing guidelines of 63-97 months became 30-41 months. Sicken
and
Ko-Yin repeated their earlier assertions that their actions were
morally and
legally justified. Byron Plumley, American Friends Service Committee,
said
"the outcome represented the reality that legal and moral
action are not the
same as the court upheld the nuclear policy of the United States."
This act of beating swords into plowshares is one of
over 60 similar
Plowshares-disarmament actions that have occurred since 1980,
largely
inspired by the biblical prophecy of Isaiah 2:4. 500 Minuteman
III and 50
MX missiles are just one leg of the first strike strategic nuclear
triad of
hydrogen bombs deployed in the U.S. nuclear arsenal. The other
two legs are
comprised of 18 Trident submarines and a bomber fleet. A single
Minuteman
III missile has the equivalent destructive power of 58 Hiroshima-type
bombs.
Bill Sulzman, representing the Minuteman III Plowshares group
stated his
strong disappointment that Judge Miller chose to put his personal
stamp of
approval on America's (Colorado) weapons of mass destruction.
Sulzman
said, "Unfortunately nice men like Judge Miller keep the
nuclear system
functioning smoothly."
Contact: Bill Sulzman (719) 389-0644 Citizens for Peace
in Space
Byron Plumley (303) 623-3464 American Friends Service
Committee
"I prefer the most unjust peace to the justest
war that was ever
waged." Cicero, LETTERS TO ATTICUS
Baltimore's Hiroshima-Nagasaki Commemoration Committee, 4806 York Road, Baltimore, MD 21212 Ph: 410-323-7200; Fax: 410-323-7292; Email: maxo@igc.org