View My Crime - Is this a Felony?
Today in court, strangely, the court is pressing full steam ahead with the prosecution of me for the felony recording of an officer during my own arrest but they dropped the two charges they originally arrested me for regarding selling art in the Loop! Please help me understand how this works…?
I apologize to Rosemary Sobol of the Suntimes. I broke a basic rule and flipped on the messenger. Of course she couldn’t interview me - they had me buried so far in the system that even my wife couldn’t even talk to me. Ha-ah…. sorry. I laugh looking back. I hope others can, too. I apologize Rosemary Sobol. I was wrong!
The eavesdropping law I quoted was changed to broaden it in 1994. The ugly part of this overly broad law is that it is used in the State of Illinois to squash dissent and quiet speech. This is the law Kane County State’s Attorney’s Office used to charge animal activist Steve Hindi in 2000. He was found innocent of the charge. It was this eavesdropping law that Elizabeth Dobson, a former assistant state’s attorney from Champaign County used to attempt to silence the organizing activity of Martel Miller and Patrick Thompson in the African American community in that region. They later sued the County in Federal Court. It is this law that the Cook County’s State’s Attorney is using to silence my out spoken voice for artists’ rights. This is and remains a free speech case of interest to the world, in my humble opinion.
I apologize to Rosemary again and thank her for pulling the item off the wire and placing it in a prominent location. I went down to the Loop with the best of intentions in mind - you know - to do my civic duty - to fight the laws that are wrong within the court system, as we are taught. In the separation of powers, the legislature legislates and the courts determine the interpretation of the constitution. We can test a law by breaking it and we can make change …. but the police in Chicago combined with top down interests have worked together to make a way to silence me.
Myself and three other artists who documented my actions tried for two months to get the police to arrest me for selling art downtown so we could test the Chicago peddlers license law. The police hesitated for two months because they knew it would mean a federal court case. With this felony charge they are trying to avoid this test an ruin me financially and stain my credibility.
However, to the world, an artist selling $1 art items becoming a felon for trying to protect himself from police brutality looks just like what it is. A railroad job. The world must wonder, “Where does Obama come from? What is this ridiculous charge?” The idea really is laughable on the world stage.
It’s no laughing matter in Cook County. Illinois could very possibly make a felon out of me. Wakeup. Freedom is not free. I am not free to protect myself from abuse by the police in Chicago without risking becoming a felon. But this fight, this is something I will never apologize for. It is to help you protect yourself some day from abusive police. Or do you think we do not have that problem in Chicago?
Thank you Ms. Sobol for giving us a forum.
Please use this forum to express how you feel about this railroad job if you haven’t already. The comments from this forum will be a part of a future art exhibit with the work from the Art Patch Project someday.
(As soon as I sent an apology to the SunTimes thanking them for this forum they canceled the comment feature so we have moved the forum to this blog. You can e-mail me your comments to be included on this blog - link below - and in a future art exhibit with the Art Patch Project patches. Please send us your comments. Please?)
http://www.c-drew.com/blog/comments-on-suntimes-article-creative-felony/
Sincerely - C Drew
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[...] View My Crime – Is this a Felony? Filed under:Free Speech Arts Community Newsletter — posted by cdrew on December 9, 2009 @ 9:56 pm View of My Crime – Is this a Felony? (photo by Ron Grenko) [...]
Pingback by When does selling art become a felony? — Chris Drew « Chicago Labor & Arts Festival Blog — December 10, 2009 @ 9:08 am
[...] The artist was confronted by Chicago police and arrested on December 3. Because he recorded the entire incident, on the understandable assumption that the reasons the officers gave for arresting him may prove useful to his follow-up lawsuit, Drew was also charged with “felony eavesdropping.” [...]
Pingback by Why Is It A Felony To Record Your Own Arrest? – C Drew « Chicago Labor & Arts Festival Blog — December 31, 2009 @ 5:52 pm
[...] I felony charge against him. Drew is charged with violating the state’s eavesdropping statute when he recorded his encounter with a police officer last December on the streets of Chicago. A Class I felony in Illinois is [...]
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[...] charge against him. Drew is charged with violating the state’s eavesdropping statute when he recorded his encounter with a police officer last December on the streets of Chicago. A Class I felony in Illinois is [...]
Pingback by Instapundit » Blog Archive » Last week, an Illinois judge rejected Chicago artist Christopher Drew’s motion to dismiss the Class … — May 20, 2010 @ 9:40 am
[...] charge against him. Drew is charged with violating the state’s eavesdropping statute when he recorded his encounter with a police officer last December on the streets of Chicago. A Class I felony in Illinois is [...]
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