A U.S. peace activist found guilty of laughing during
Attorney General Jeff Sessions’ confirmation hearing early this year had
her conviction thrown out on Friday and will be retried, her lawyer
said.
Desiree Fairooz, 61, a member of the anti-war group Code
Pink, was arrested for laughing during the Senate Judiciary Committee
hearing in January in response to a lawmaker’s assertion that Sessions,
then a Republican U.S. senator from Alabama, treated all Americans
equally.
Fairooz, a children’s librarian, shouted, “This man is evil,
pure evil” as police led her out. A jury found Fairooz guilty in May of
disrupting a session of Congress and demonstrating on Capitol grounds.
She had been due to be sentenced on Friday.
But Chief Judge Robert Morin of the District of Columbia
Superior Court overturned the guilty verdict and ordered a new trial. In
his ruling, Morin said it was unclear whether Fairooz had been
convicted for laughter or for speaking out as she was removed, her
lawyer, Samuel Bogash, said by telephone.
“The government’s position was that laughing alone was
enough to convict. But the judge made it clear that he didn’t think it
was,” Morin said.
Code Pink, which often stages protests against politicians,
said on its Facebook page that Fairooz denounced a retrial as a waste of
taxpayers’ money.
“The only thing more ridiculous than being tried for
laughing, is being tried twice for laughing,” Code Pink quoted her as
saying.
Morin did not set a trial date and scheduled a status
hearing for Sept. 1. Fairooz had faced up to six months in jail and a
$1,000 fine for each of her two convictions.
Bill Miller, a spokesman for the U.S. attorney’s office,
said two other Code Pink activists who were convicted for disrupting the
hearing, Lenny Bianchi and Tighe Barry, were sentenced to 10 days in
jail.
The sentences were suspended on condition that Barry and Bianchi complete six months of unsupervised probation, he said.
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