By Tom H. Hastings, Guest Columnist
I’m heading to court from my home in Portland, Oregon, to Missoula, Montana.
Leonard Higgins is going to go on trial in a Montana courtroom for his role in the Oct. 11, 2016, coordinated shutdown of several of the dirtiest tar sands oil pipelines that increasingly and dangerously traverse North America.
Leonard simply shut off a valve, turning off the Express pipeline in Montana, an act of supreme nonviolent symbolism because he and everyone involved knew that the pipeline company would open the valve quickly and get the filthy tar sands oil sludging along again.
Four other climate chaos resisters also shut down sections of tar sands oil pipelines in Washington, North Dakota, and Minnesota the same day. All either face trial or have gone to trial. For the most part, thus far, the courts have disallowed the necessity defense, that is, effectively eliminating the chance for the jury to hear why these resisters did their actions.
This means that, for the most part, they have been kangaroo courts, a travesty of the judicial system.
Another valve-turner, Michael Foster, a mental health counselor in his 50s from Seattle, went on trial in North Dakota and one of the charges — the only one the jury found him “Not Guilty” of — was reckless endangerment. The other charges resulted in convictions, and he faces a possible 21 years in prison. His sentencing will be held on Jan. 18, 2018.