Ray Returns- RELOCATED & REVAMPED

[Update: The blog post below was published 11/05/09. Later that evening, word broke that the University of MA, apparently under pressure from the office of MA Governor Deval Patrick, canceled Ray's appearance scheduled for 11/12/09.

Organizers worked hard to find an alternate venue so that this event could proceed as planned, and on 11/10 a new set of sponsors and new venue on the UMass campus were announced so that the talk could go forward as planned at 7:15 pm on Thursday, 11/12/09.

However, on 11/11, the parole commission to which Ray reported, rescinded his permission to travel to this event, so he was not able to be present. Instead, attorneys from his sedition trial, a juror from that trial, and Ray's former wife, Pat Levasseur, were among the participants.  Police groups from across the region turned out en masse to protest this event.

Media coverage and other information about the UMass event is available at the "Let Ray Have His Say" Facebook Group page here.]


Next Thursday night Ohio 7 defendant, Ray Levasseur will make his first public speech in our local area in twenty years. In late 1989, after a 10-month trial in Springfield, MA, Ray, along with his fellow defendants, was acquitted of Seditious Conspiracy to overthrow the US government by force and violence. Since he was already serving a multi-decade sentence after being convicted of politically motivated crimes while engaging in clandestine activity during the late 1970’s and early 1980’s, he was imprisoned until being paroled just a few years ago. Although he remains on parole to this day, he was finally granted permission to return to our area to speak about his case at the University of Massachusetts.

I am looking forward to his talk with great anticipation for two reasons.

I first heard about the Ohio 7 in the fall of 1988. I’d been working as a business and tax lawyer for a firm in Springfield for a little over two years and was becoming increasingly unhappy with my work. I learned that these defendants were called the Ohio 7 because they were three married couples, and a single man who were arrested in Ohio in 1985 after evading capture for almost ten years. The three couples had nine children between them. The government seized three of the children, interrogated them and held them incommunicado for weeks. They were not released to the custody of relatives until their parents began a hunger strike.

This horrible story evoked distressing memories of my childhood, but what happened to these kids, aged 1l, five and three, seemed even worse. Their plight percolated in my subconscious only to reemerge five months later with the realization that my dream of starting a foundation in my parents’ name had found its focus. The foundation would help children today suffering the same nightmare I endured as a child. While there were other factors involved, it is no exaggeration to say that the case of the Ohio 7 gave birth to the RFC.

The second reason I’m eagerly awaiting Ray’s talk is that the last time I heard him speak was when he gave his final statement (he defended himself) at the close of his trial. He gave one of the most powerful speeches I’ve ever heard.

Judge Young, who presided, was fond of reminding the Jury to pay no attention to what the clock on the courtroom wall read, he would determine when they recessed for lunch or the day’s session would end.

Ray, in his summation, pointed out that there were many points he wished to make in his defense to provide a context for his actions, but the Judge ruled they were irrelevant and would not allow him to present them to the jury.

I could see the Judge fuming because while he could prevent Ray from telling the jury what those points were, he could not stop Ray from saying he’d been prevented from making them. And then Ray drove his point home by saying essentially, “It’s like the clock. We know it tells us what time it really is, but we have to ignore it because the Judge says so.”

I could see that the jury got Ray’s point. There was a real world out there, and the Jury should take that world into consideration no matter what the Judge told them to do. I believe Ray’s speech helped sway the jury towards dismissal.

Ray was taking a terrible chance. If the jury did not acquit him, the Judge would surely vent his fury during sentencing at being outwitted by someone whom this elite and very arrogant man considered light years beneath him. But Ray carried the day, and I’ll never forget that speech for as long as I live.

Join me if you can on Thursday, November 12th, at 7pm, in the Amherst Room on the 10th Floor of the UMass Campus Center, Amherst, MA

(Ray's prison writings and his statements from the Springfield sedition trial are available at the following links: http://home.earthlink.net/~neoludd/ and http://home.earthlink.net/~neoludd/statement.html.)

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Ray Returns: Part 2

Last week I posted a blog about Ohio 7 defendant, Ray Levasseur making his first public speech locally in 20 years. In late 1989, Ray, along with his fellow defendants, was acquitted of Seditious Conspiracy after a trial in Springfield, MA. Since he was already serving a multi-decade sentence after being convicted of politically motivated crimes, he remained in prison until being paroled in 2004.

His talk was scheduled to take place tonight (11/12), but since my posting last week it was canceled, rescheduled, and finally will be held in his absence. I will outline these twists succinctly, before explaining why the Ohio 7 case is so important to the RFC.

Ray had originally been invited by the UMass library to speak at its social change forum. Police organizations pressured the Governor and University Chancellor who in turn pressured the Library department into withdrawing the invitation. In response faculty incensed at this trampling of free speech re-invited him. Next his parole board revoked Ray’s permission to travel to Massachusetts after the head of the Massachusetts Fraternal Order of Police convinced them to do so. As of now the event is going forward with several of Ray’s attorneys from the Sedition trial, and even one of the jurors, attending. It is also my understanding that despite Ray’s absence State Police and their supporters will be out in force to protest.

I’ll be attending this event. While I believe we need to make a statement that the State Police should not be permitted to dictate who can speak on any state university campus, that is not why the RFC is one of several groups sponsoring this program. (Sponsorship only included lending our name and publicizing the event to our constituency, we did not provide any financial assistance.)

The reason the RFC is involved is because of our long-standing connection to the Ohio 7. I first heard about this group in the fall of 1988. I learned that the defendants included three married couples. Each of the three couples had three children and the FBI seized them all when the Ohio 7 defendants were arrested in 1985. The two eldest children, then aged 8 and 11, were interrogated by the FBI. Six children of two of the couples were held briefly by Virginia Protective Services, but the third couple’s children aged 11, five and three, were held by authorities for almost two months! They were not released to the custody of relatives until their parents began a hunger strike.

This horrible story evoked distressing memories of my childhood, but what happened to these kids was even worse. I wrote the following in my blog last week, but it is worth repeating here. “Their plight percolated in my subconscious only to reemerge five months later with the realization that my dream of starting a foundation in my parents’ name had found its focus. The foundation would help children today suffering the same nightmare I endured as a child. While there were other factors involved, it is no exaggeration to say that the case of the Ohio 7 gave birth to the RFC.”

When my parents were arrested the vast majority of Americans considered them to be the epitome of evil, worse then any of the Ohio 7 defendants. But people came forward to protect my brother and me, even some who felt my parents might have been guilty. These people were our champions and I owe my survival to them. The RFC’s mission is to serve as the champions of children in similar circumstances today. I believe the story of the Ohio 7 and what happened to their children must be told and it was my hope that Ray would make their story a part of his presentation. I hope that still happens, even in his absence.

Grandchildren & Great Grandchildren

I had a real treat a couple of weeks ago. Elli and I spent the weekend in New York City to celebrate our granddaughter, Josie’s second birthday. It took relatively little effort. A bit of planning, 3 or 4 hours in the car fighting heavy traffic, and we could join the other grandparents and a couple of aunts for a party with Josie, her parents and a few of their friends. It was a special, but commonplace, family ritual that fell within the normal course of our lives.

It isn’t so easy for some people. Just two days after I returned from New York, the RFC held its first granting meeting of the year. We made several dozen awards, but one new one stood out for me. We received a request from the grandson of RFC Advisory Board member Leonard Peltier. He asked for an Attica Fund prison visit travel grant to enable him to introduce Leonard to his great grandchildren. The family lives in South Dakota and can’t afford to visit Leonard who is now imprisoned in Danbury, Connecticut. What this family must go through just to consummate a simple family gathering enrages me. It saddens me that Leonard has been in prison for so long that neither his grandchildren, nor his growing number of great grandchildren, have ever known him as a free man. I hope every RFC contributor takes some pride in helping to facilitate this family reunion.

I learned of another bitter-sweet reunion at about the same time. I have told Ray Levasseur’s story many times (see Blogs “Ray Returns, Parts 1 & 2, 11/5 & 11/12/09). I first learned about Ray and his fellow Ohio 7 defendants in 1988. They were three married couples, and a single man who were arrested in 1985. The three couples had nine children between them. The government seized three of the children, interrogated them and held them incommunicado for weeks.

This horrible story evoked distressing memories of my childhood, but what happened to these kids, aged 1l, five and three, seemed even worse. Their plight percolated in my subconscious only to reemerge five months later with the realization that my dream of starting a foundation in my parents’ name had found its focus. The foundation would help children today suffering the same nightmare I endured as a child. While there were other factors involved, it is no exaggeration to say that the case of the Ohio 7 gave birth to the RFC.

Ray, who served almost 20 years in prison and is now out, last week wrote to tell me that he has been discharged from parole and is finally a totally free man. It was a short note, as he has a lot of people to communicate with, many of whom the conditions of his parole had forbid him to contact. He concluded his letter by describing a very special upcoming event: “Pat [Ray’s ex-wife] was one of those I was prohibited from having contact with, direct or indirect. [In two weeks] we’ll all be gathering together - the grandparents, three daughters and three grandchildren – in the same place for the first time.”

What a joy to share such family milestones. I dream of the day when all our beneficiary families can do so without state supervision.
 

20th Anniversary Gala: Carry it Forward

Below, I am reproducing the talk I gave at our 20th Anniversary Gala on October 17th. It was a great party, attended by over 200 of our staunchest supporters from Western Massachusetts, as well as people from Boston, New York City, Connecticut, Rhode Island, Vermont, New York City, and the Albany, NY area. I’m sharing my words with you, because many of you could not make it.

-Robert Meeropol

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[Note: visit our Gala page for videos of all the presentations.]

I’m so pleased to see you all here tonight exactly 20 years and 5 days since we held our kick-off benefit concert just a few blocks away at John M. Greene Hall on the Smith College campus. The money we cleared that night started our Granting Fund and enabled us to make our first grants the following spring. In May, 1991 we awarded a grant of $805 to enable two children of an Ohio Seven defendant to attend a Quaker Summer Camp in Maine. We’ve awarded almost 4 millions dollar since, over 1 million in the last three years alone!

The RFC was my idea, but it has been a collective effort involving thousands. We’ve probably had 20,000 people who have made at least one contribution to us. We’ve involved hundreds of providers, hundreds of performers, hundreds more who’ve hosted events, dozens of Board members as well as our staff. I wish I had time to thank you all personally and give you the public recognition you deserve, but my time is short.

There are three people I’m going to single out, however. First, the first person I told about my idea for the RFC, my wife, Elli. From the moment she heard the idea she was its biggest booster. She even went behind my back to get a friend to provide me with the initial business plan for the RFC and she has been the most involved non-paid member of the RFC team ever since. I have two other people to introduce tonight, but I’ll tell you a little story first.

I’d gone to law school with the idea of gaining legal skills to enable me to start and run a public foundation. The name RFC came much later. After law school I worked for a tax and business law firm and lost sight of my dream. I became increasingly unhappy with the work I was doing and left the firm at the end of 1988 not knowing what I would do.

That December, as I was going through the turmoil of leaving the firm, I heard a talk by Pat Levasseur, one of the Ohio 7 defendants. Pat and her husband Ray, and six other defendants were each charged with seditious conspiracy to overthrow the government of the United States (one was later dropped from the case).

The three couples and one single person had been members of an underground revolutionary cell. At a previous trial most had been convicted of carrying out bombings against multi-national corporations who invested in apartheid South Africa or sold arms to right-wing forces in El Salvador.

Even though all except Pat, who had only been convicted of harboring a fugitive (her husband), were serving multi-decade sentences, Attorney General Edwin Meese decided to charge them with Seditious Conspiracy and have them retried. They faced an additional 60 years in prison.

Pat, recently paroled into her attorney, Bill Newman’s, custody, gave a presentation to explain the trial to the community in Springfield. Afterward she told me that each of the three married couples had three children. When two of her co-defendants were arrested in 1985 the authorities seized their three children, then aged 11, five and three, and held them incommunicado for several weeks. The oldest was repeatedly interrogated without any supportive adult present. During this period the FBI told the parents that the children would not be released to their relatives until the parents cooperated.

This revelation coursed through me like an electric shock. Bad as my childhood had been, I had never been interrogated. The authorities had used these children to extort cooperation from the defendants, the same way they had used my brother and me to pressure our parents. But what hit me hardest was that I hadn’t even known about it. While I’d been helping businessmen make more money, these kids with whom I felt such a kinship were being terrorized

I left the firm a couple of weeks later. I spent a lot of time during the next few months figuring out what to do with my life, but starting my own foundation still hadn’t crossed my mind even though I’d dreamed about doing it for so many years.

I’d never taken seriously cartoon pictures of ideas turning on like light bulbs in people’s heads, but that April a cerebral switch was thrown and my brain was rewired. I snapped awake in bed at 4:00AM knowing the mission of my foundation. It would help Pat and Ray's kids and others like them. It would help kids who were experiencing the same nightmare my brother and I experienced as children.

Having an idea is one thing effectuating it is another. I told Elli about it and she liked it a lot, but I didn’t have a clue about how to finance it or make it a reality. So I put the idea away, but Elli was unwilling to have me give up that easily.

Friends were visiting from Berkeley over Memorial Day weekend. Dan Scharlin, has a rare combination of left wing politics and business expertise. Dan and I were getting ready to venture out Sunday morning to, in my words, “slay the wild bagel,” when Dan’s wife Harriet said she wanted to pick up some pastries at the bagel place. Elli asked Dan to stay and help her with other brunch preparations. It seemed like I was being set up for something, but I couldn’t imagine what since my birthday had passed two weeks before.

I found out when we were sitting in our living room after gorging ourselves. Dan said that Elli had told him about my idea and its financial impediments. He asked me how many years I’d thought I’d need to make the foundation self sustaining and how much money I’d need annually to operate an office and pay myself a minimal salary. Then Dan sketched out a rough business plan for me. He said write up a proposal for your project, circulate it to your fund raising contacts and find 20 people who’ll pledge $2,500 each year for four years. I hemmed and hawed, but that’s what I did and the rest is history.

So I’d like to introduce to you - straight from Oakland California - Dan Scharlin, the person who provided me with the plan that brought the idea of the RFC to fruition.

That spring I attended the trial of the Ohio 7. Most of the defendants were represented by attorney’s but one, Ray Levasseur, represented himself. The lawyers were good. They won that case. None of the defendants were found guilty by the good people of Western Massachusetts who made up that jury, but the most amazing thing I saw at that trial was Ray Levasseur’s closing argument.

He explained his politics. He explained his actions. He even explained why he had children. He confronted everything. He shied away from nothing and the jury did not find him guilty.

But Ray was serving time for his prior conviction so I did not meet him. I finally met him in 2005. I saw him again in 2006. He’d been paroled and he’d helped organize an exhibit of art work by political prisoners at the University of Southern Maine. Bill Newman and I drove up to see it and him, but when we arrived on the campus we discovered that Maine State Police protests caused the University to cancel the exhibit and Ray has been ordered to leave the campus. So we drove to Ray’s house and had dinner with him instead.

Last fall it happened again. Most of you know how Ray was invited to speak at UMass, and that the University caved in to State Police pressure and cancelled his appearance. When UMass faculty re-invited Ray - when the teachers would not let the State Police become the thought police – the Federal Parole Board stepped in and Ray’s voice was silenced again.

But Ray’s off parole now, and no one will silence Ray’s voice this time. We’ve come full circle. Tonight you will hear the first public address given by Ray Levasseur in Western Massachusetts since his great closing argument I heard over 20 years ago. And it will be given at the 20th Anniversary Gala of the Rosenberg Fund for Children, the organization that his trial, the trial of the Ohio 7 inspired me to start. Tonight the RFC is proud to present Raymond Luc Levasseur.

(Ray then went on to give an extremely moving speech.)

See a slide show of the Gala by clicking here .

Read Jenn Meeropol's speech at the Gala here.

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