Were you arrested at IAC demonstration on April 15, 2000 in Washington, D.C.? $14 Million Suit Won Against Illegal Arrests; $18,000 to each Arrestee--IF YOU FILE BEFORE MAY 17, 2010; SPREAD THE WORD!
Ten years ago, the International Action Center initiated a major demonstration
focused on the prison industrial complex. It was held on in front of the U.S.
Department of Justice in Washington, D.C. The march was called to take place on
April 15, the day before militant actions to oppose the criminal policies of
the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank, which were meeting in that
city; thousands of youth took part in those protests.
The IAC rally demanded freedom for all political prisoners, including Mumia
Abu-Jamal and Leonard Peltier. It sought to draw the attention of the
international media — which was gathering to hear the bankers and
financiers at the IMF/World Bank meeting — to the millions of prisoners
held captive in U.S. dungeons.
The IAC aimed to deepen class consciousness and to link a militant current of
new activists to solidarity with the most oppressed African-American, Latino/a
and Native American prisoners. Although the demonstration was a legally
permitted protest, the public focus on the institutionalized racism of the
prison system itself presented a major and intolerable challenge to the
state’s repressive apparatus.
After the rally ended at the Department of (In)justice, the march proceeded to
the IMF building. Suddenly, and without warning or an order to disperse, the
Washington, D.C., police closed the streets and arrested 700 protesters, along
with some members of the media and passersby. Many arrestees were held for 18
to 24 hours in police buses and holding cells, painfully handcuffed
wrist-to-ankle in cramped positions.
There was widespread media coverage of the police sweep and mass arrests of
demonstrators as they began to march to the IMF building.
The IAC was determined to expose the pre-emptive and disruptive attacks on a
legal demonstration and to publicize the massive illegal arrests. The
organization was not going to allow the flagrant violation of the rights of
freedom of speech and assembly to go unchallenged.
The Partnership for Civil Justice Fund diligently persevered and successfully
sued the District of Columbia and won the largest class-action settlement of
protester claims in U.S. history, totaling nearly $14 million. It insures that
each class member can file a claim to receive $18,000 in financial
compensation, that the arrests will be expunged, and that all arrestees who
join in the settlement will receive a court order declaring their arrest null
and void.
Several claimants in this landmark case have already pledged to donate their
funds from the settlement to the IAC to continue its 19-year legacy of
organizing against war, racism and corporate bailouts, and for jobs and human
needs.
How to file a claim
Those who can file a claim are “all persons who were detained and
arrested on April 15, 2000, near the area of 20th Street, NW and I and K
Streets, Washington D.C., in connection with the protest against the Prison
Industrial Complex during the IMF/World Bank demonstrations.”
The funds will be distributed through a Class Administrator; the
toll-free number is 1-877-567-4780. Claim forms can be downloaded at
http://www.BeckerSettlement.com. Mail them to:
Becker v. District of Columbia Administrator, c/o Gilardi & Co. LLC, P.O.
Box 8060, San Rafael, CA 94912-8060. The deadline for filing all claims for
financial compensation is May 17.
Each individual arrested must file a Proof of Claim Form and mail it to the Class Administrator at the above address before May 17. This is the only way to receive the $18,000 settlement. Otherwise, unclaimed funds will revert to the government.
The IAC wants to help insure that all individuals who were arrested on April
15, 2000, in Washington, D.C., receive their fair share of the
settlement.
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