Occupy Wall Street protestors flood into court
Occupy Wall Street protesters in New York shifted their fight from
the streets to the court Thursday, when dozens of people arrested while
marching rejected a deal for them to avoid trial.
The first batch of 78 protesters from among hundreds arrested for
disorder over the last six weeks filed into New York State court, nearly
all of them telling a judge that they were innocent and demanding a jury
trial to clear their names. “There’s a general push,” said Joshua Lewis,
23, after rejecting the deal, known in legal terms as an adjournment in
contemplation of dismissal, or ACD.
“They were offering ACDs and the majority seems to be moving (to
reject). I rejected it,” he said. “I’m entirely not guilty.”
Like the others processed Thursday, Lewis was arrested on September
24 during a march in Manhattan’s Union Square area.
Many more have been arrested in other incidents since then, with 16
people detained on Thursday outside the headquarters of Goldman Sachs in
the Financial District, the New York Police Department said. AFP |