[Note Taylor's observation in this essay that when the defense released video evidence proving that the charges against Gregory were false, the police rewrote their report and the judge refused to allow the defense to introduce the original police report into evidence because it would have shown that the new police report was false.]
Sunsara Taylor's statement on Sentencing of Gregory Koger:
Stop the Political Railroad! FREE GREGORY KOGER!!
Today, Gregory Koger was sentenced to 300 days in jail , and denied bail during his appeal, for “crimes” that never happened. Convicted of trespassing, simple battery (on a police officer) and resisting arrest for using his iphone to film events at a public meeting, Gregory never received an ounce of the much vaunted “rights and protections” allegedly afforded by the U.S. legal justice system. Instead, in what can only be described as a vindictive political railroad, he has been targeted with police brutality and lies, political persecution, and outrageous imprisonment.
The charges against Gregory stem from an incident last November when he filmed me making a short statement at a public meeting of the “Ethical” Humanist Society of Chicago before their service began. I was objecting to their politically motivated dis-invitation of me from a talk I had been scheduled to give. But what started as a shameful act of political suppression by the EHSC hastransformed into an extremely grave political railroad and imprisonment of an innocent and righteous revolutionary.
Gregory Koger lived a life like millions of others trapped and forgotten the bottom of this society. Growing up, he and his family were homeless at times and struggling tremendously. As a teenager he got caught up in gang activity and ended up serving 11 years in prison. All that, frankly, is not that uncommon under this capitalist-imperialist system that offers millions and millions of youth no greater purpose than crime and punishment, to kill or be killed in the streets, or to sign up and become a mindless killing machine in this system’s wars and occupations.
But what happened from there is what makes Gregory’s story unique, important, and inspiring. As he himself wrote
“Within a few years I was placed in segregation—solitary confinement—for an indeterminate period of time, and faced the prospect of languishing in isolation devoid of human contact in a concrete tomb until my release. It was in the midst of this—the pepper spray choking the whole cell house, the tactical team stomping down the gallery to drag someone out of their cell and beat them down, the constant agony of men straining against the solitude crying out for some kind of conversation or contact—that I first read Revolution newspaper.
“Revolution began to open my eyes to a whole other way that society could be organized and a whole other way of thinking. Instead of focusing intently on revenge and my own personal oppression or wrongs, I began to see that this capitalist-imperialist system is fundamentally based on the exploitation and oppression of the vast majority of humanity at the hands of the few within the ruling class who own and control the means of production. And that the basis exists to emancipate all of humanity from the oppressive relations of class society, and unleash people to flourish in ways undreamed of under the confines of this capitalist system.”
In other words, Gregory Koger did what the entirety of the U.S. prison system is set up to prevent; he transformed himself into someone dedicated to the emancipation of all humanity.
The radical transformation of Gregory Koger’s character was something that many people testified to in court today. This included professors who had taught Gregory, students who had learned from his public speaking, former members of the “Ethical” Humanist Society of Chicago who had come to know and deeply regard him, a priest who is regarded highly nation-wide, and others. Many more people wrote letters testifying to Gregory’s gentle demeanor and attentive listening, his dedication to making known the injustices of prison and the desperation of street life to all who are willing to listen, and his commitment to utilizing his own recent freedom from prison to serve not only himself but humanity’s struggle for emancipation. His activities have included defending abortion doctors, speaking out against police murder, protesting torture while dressed in the orange jumpsuit of Guantanamodetainees and much more.
But, did the judge consider any of this testimony in her sentencing? No! Instead, Judge Marguerite Quinn insisted that Gregory had been a danger to everyone present on the day of his arrest, that his criminal record proved he had a volatile “nature” and that he was not a productive member of society. Then, she gave him the near-maximum possible sentence of 300 days in jail!
All this came after the judge had worked systematically to assist the police and prosecution in jerry-rigging evidence and suppressing truth in such a way as to convict Gregory in the first place.
At every step along the way, Gregory’s trial has been a complete sham.
To site just a little of how this is so, the day before his trial, Gregory’s defense lawyers released as evidence the video footage he had taken on the day of his arrest. It offered video proof that the allegations against him were bogus. However, when faced with hard evidence that showed the lie of their charges, the police and the prosecution simply rewrote their case! They changed the location in which they claimed Gregory had resisted arrest, they changed which police officer they claimed had been assaulted, and they implied that trespass law forbids videotaping when in [fact] it only forbids people from staying in a private space after clearly being told they must leave.
All of these new claims by police were contradicted not only by multiple witnesses, but by the police’s own original report! However, rather than overseeing a forum where all the evidence could be heard and justice could prevail, the judge refused to let the defense submit the original police report as evidence!
The fact is, Gregory is not a menace or a threat to the public. As many testified, Gregory is a living example of how even the most pushed-down and written off members of this society can rise above the muck and mire, become emancipators of humanity, and connect with and inspire many from other walks of life in this process. In reality, it is precisely for this reason, that the system has thrown the book at him; Gregory’s life and this case contradict some of the very lies behind which this system maintains its legitimacy.
Gregory is a living refutation of the MYTH that the 2.3 million people in prison are all irredeemable monsters. His case is a living refutation of the LIE that everyone in this country receives “equal rights before the law.” The outrageous sentencing is a living refutation of the FABLE that people in this country are not persecuted for their political beliefs.
Gregory’s case is currently being appealed. Yet, as one final grotesque and unjust step in this political railroad, the judge refused to release Gregory on bail as his appeal works its way through the courts. To quote from the recent coverage of this case in Revolutionnewspaper [http://revcom.us/a/211/grave_injustice-en.html]:
“Jon Burge, the notorious Chicago police detective who tortured many people and sent them to prison and death row based on false coerced confessions, and who was finally convicted this spring—30 years later—of felony lying to a federal agent, is out on bail until his November sentencing.
“By contrast: A young man wrenches himself out of the dog-eat-dog mentality and life into which this system drives so many. In the bowels of the U.S. prison system he questions, he studies, he begins to understand, and live a life based on the fact that, as he put it, ‘the basis exists to emancipate all of humanity from the oppressive relations of class society, and unleash people to flourish in ways undreamed of under the confines of this capitalist system.’ But for Gregory, the person who has inspired many other people with his moral, ethical, and political transformation, the prosecutor and the judge took the extraordinary step of revoking his bail before sentencing [and now, during appeal].”
It is urgent and imperative that Gregory Koger be released immediately and his sentence overturned.
WHAT YOU CAN DO:
• Send this newsflash to everyone you know. Use Twitter, Facebook, use the list serves you are on to get this out everywhere
• Immediately send statements of support for Gregory to the defense committee AdHoc4Reason@gmail.com
• Donate money for the appeal. Go to the defense committee website for more information www.dropthecharges.net
• More information will be coming; keep in touch with the Ad Hoc Committee at AdHoc4Reason@gmail.com


Salon.com
Comments
As for Mr. Caca, as usual, he can't bring himself to contrast the injustice done to Mr. Koger (and those like him) to the lionizing and freedom afforded to people guilty of war crimes like Bush and Cheney. No, his style is that of ridiculing those who actually fight against injustice while giving a pass to those who truly deserve ridicule.
I'm going to keep this simple for you. Keep your comments, when you make them, germane. What my politics may or may not be isn't really at issue. What is at issue is the "Justice" System's treatment of Mr. Koger, which is the subject of the post. You insist always to make your characterizations of my politics the topic of your comments. You don't ever comment directly on the subject of the post. If this were a newspaper's feedback or forum section, your remarks would be edited out for failure to stick to the subject. As it is, it is a waste of time to even bother reading what you have to say if you can't stay on topic. Indeed, any future comments from you that don't show any direct relationship to the post's contents will be skimmed by me and not read further.
The Criminal Justice System's purported purpose is to dispense justice. The fact that it and the political organs won't and refuse to prosecute confessed torturers such as Bush and Cheney and instead go after innocents and whistleblowers, is telling. Except that people like you try to muddy the waters by redbaiting.
As Army attorney Joseph Welch famously said to Sen. Joe McCarthy:
"Have you no sense of decency, sir?"
Brand new to OS. Linked here from an article on Intelhub, 'Government Using Anti-Terrorism Laws to Crush Dissent', they used you're post on DoD's training manual/ protests=low-level terrorism as one example. FYI. Also fyi, after signing up, I searched 'Dennis Loo' to get back here, and the top 3 results were posts by your buddy Frank A, so I went to check out his criticsm of you... WOW. That's all I'm gonna say.
Great post here, I had NO IDEA about this story, and I visit all kinds of progressive-ish sites daily. Stories like this really get to me- individuals being served deep injustice, by means of the 'Justice' system no less. Argh. Good on ya for providing links to help this guy out. I'll do what I can to help spread the word.
Well, glad I found this spot, keep up the good work, aloha nui loa and all that good stuff.
(Frank and I buried the hatchet a while back.)