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Three Nuns focus page

Information and statements from the Nuns
The Peace Poets Walk
Reference page of earlier planning emails
Articles

 
Information from organizing groups
Background information on the July 26th AdoptASilo
Colorado's Nuclear Missile Sites
The RMPJC events page

Statements by each of the three Nuns before sentencing
July 25, 2003

Jackie Hudson

Carol Gilbert

Ardeth Platte

Temporary prison addresses are below.  They will be moved to federal penitentiaries when it is decided where they will go.  

Please send letters and appreciations to:

Jackie Hudson
    and Carol Gilbert
Washington County Jail
26861 Hwy 34
Akron, CO 80720

Ardeth Platte
Clear Creek County Jail
PO Box 518
Georgetown, CO 80444

Articles

"Protesters Target Missile Sites ", published on Sunday July 27, 2003 by The Denver Post.    byline:  Annette Espinoza
          ... groups spread across the barren plains of northeastern Colorado on Saturday with hundreds of others to protest in front of 49 underground Minuteman III missile sites.

"Nuns Sentences to Prison for Colorado Nuclear Protest" , published on Saturday July 26, 2003 by Reuters    byline:  Keith Coffman
         Three Roman Catholic nuns who defaced a Colorado nuclear missile silo with their own blood as part of a peace protest last year were sentenced on Friday to prison terms ranging from 30 to 41 months by a judge who called them "dangerously irresponsible."

"Judge Orders Nuns to Prison", published on Saturday July 26, 2003 by The Denver Post.    byline:  Jim Hughes
          A federal judge on Friday sent three nuns to prison for an October 2002 act of civil disobedience at a Weld County missile silo - but for lesser sentences than government prosecutors had requested.

"Nuns Discuss Missile Silo Break-in, Jail Sentencing", published on Monday, June 9, 2003 by The State News (Lansing, Michigan).    byline:  Antonio Planas
          In an attempt to expose U.S. weapons of mass destruction, Ardeth Platte, Carol Gilbert and Jackie Hudson broke into the silo dressed as weapon inspectors by cutting a linked fence surrounding the compound. Once inside, the sisters poured their own bottled blood in the form of crosses onto the silo cover that protected a 300-kiloton high alert nuclear missile.

"Three Nuns and a Test for Civil Disobedience",  published on Tuesday, May 27, 2003 by the Boston Globe
          "This is a dark time in our country, a time when there is only one truth in the government and very little tolerance for dissent,'' said Ardeth Platte, one of the nuns found guilty of sabotage for her actions at a Colorado missile silo in October. ''We were speaking out against the crimes of our government and they intend to punish us for that.''

 

Antiwar Nuns Use Days Before Prison  -- Associated Press - -
 © St. Petersburg Times, published May 26, 2003

 DENVER - Three Roman Catholic nuns facing possible eight-year prison  terms for pounding on a missile silo with hammers and smearing it with their own blood are spending their final days of freedom thanking supporters before a court decides their sentences.

Released from jail for the first time in six months, the peace activist  nuns are on a whirlwind tour of potluck, suppers, doctors' appointments and visits to family and friends.

"Eight years would be a long time to wait to give that gratitude," said  Sister Jackie Hudson.

Sister Hudson, 68, Sister Ardeth Platte, 66, and Sister Carol Gilbert, 55, were charged in federal court with a felony for defacing a Minuteman  III missile silo on Oct. 6 and are scheduled to be sentenced July 25.  The three, dressed in white chemical weapons suits, trespassed on  federal land in northeast Colorado, swinging hammers and painting a cross on the silo with their own blood. They argued it was a symbolic disarmament that did not jeopardize national security.  The nuns said they were compelled to act as war with Iraq moved closer and because the United States has never promised not to use nuclear  weapons.

They say they have no regrets.  As they talked about their approaching sentencing, they expressed frustration over being charged with a felony rather than misdemeanor trespassing, as they have been in previous protests. Prosecutors said the nuns, all closely aligned with the late peace activist Philip Berrigan, showed a blatant disregard for the law and that previous arrests had not deterred them. A federal jury convicted them of interfering with the nation's defense and causing property damage of more than $1,000. The maximum term is 30 years, but prosecutors have recommended five- to eight-year terms.

The nuns are not sure if they will appeal because they are concerned an unfavorable ruling might hurt other activists.  Some peace activists believe the felony conviction was harsh.  In 2001, a priest who broke into a Colorado missile silo dressed as a clown and leaving bread, wine and a hammer was sentenced to 83 days on a federal trespassing conviction.

A dozen years earlier, Berrigan was convicted of criminal trespassing and sentenced to six months in prison for hammering and pouring blood on a naval battleship in Virginia. He was arrested at least 100 times for his protests and served a total of 11 years in prison. He died last year, but his brother, Dan, continues protest activity.

The nuns served nearly seven months in jail as they awaited trial in the silo case, saying they couldn't promise to remain out of trouble if freed on bond. After their conviction, they were released until sentencing.

Sister Platte and Sister Gilbert returned to Baltimore's Jonah House, an activist community founded by Berrigan. Sister Hudson went to a similar community in Polusbo, Wash. She planned to distribute leaflets against the nuclear submarines at the Puget Sound Naval Shipyard in Bremerton.  All three planned to meet at their mother house, the Grand Rapids (Mich.) Dominicans, before they return to Denver for sentencing.

Before leaving Colorado, the nuns returned to the jail where they had been housed to encourage their former fellow inmates, who they taught to knit blankets for babies in foster care. They also stopped by the U.S. Post Office in Georgetown to thank workers for taking care of the dozens of letters they received from supporters around the world.  "It's given us a new energy. It's a spiritual strengthening to know we're not alone," Sister Platte said.

 © Copyright 2003 St. Petersburg Times. All  rights reserved.