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G20 Activist Released on $140,000 Bail with Extreme Conditions (General Legal Defence Update Included)

Syndicated from Media Co-op

G20 activist released on $140,000 bail with extreme conditions

By Justin Saunders - July 27, 2010

One of the three G20 arrestees remaining in custody has been released from a courtroom in North Toronto tonight, after more than a month in prison.

Amanda Hiscocks, a community organizer in Guelph, is among 17 people facing conspiracy charges stemming from the police crackdown on G20 dissent. She and several other prominent activists were preemptively detained in violent, early morning raids on several Toronto homes prior to the demonstrations on June 26th.

She was released on bail totaling $140,000 and has been placed under house arrest with family in Ottawa until trial.

As part of the conditions of her release, Hiscocks is under strict surveillance by her sureties and police, is not allowed access to a cell phone, pager or any other device with wireless connectivity, cannot organize, plan or attend public demonstrations (a breach of her charter rights), have contact with her co-accused or associate with anyone who is a part of No One Is Illegal (NOII), Anti-War at Laurier (AW@L) or the Southern Ontario Anarchist Resistance (SOAR).

The details of the proceedings have been placed under a publication ban.

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G20 Bail hearings continue, Crown appealing some releases

Bail hearings continue for G20 activists detained for a month; Crown appealing release of some. Communities express support for defendants and denounce criminalization of dissent.

July 26, 2010 - Toronto Media Co-op
http://toronto.mediacoop.ca/newsrelease/4294

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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Bail hearings continue for G20 activists detained for a month;

Crown appealing release of some. Communities express support for defendants and denounce criminalization of dissent.

July 26, Toronto - Leah Henderson, Amanda (Mandy) Hiscocks, and Alex Hundert, along with others, are facing politically-motivated charges in relation to the Toronto G8/G20 protests. The three were preemptively arrested at gun-point in a house raid on the morning of June 26, before protests began.

Mandy continues to await a bail hearing on Monday July 26 after a month of detention [see above report]. Alex and Leah, released on bail on July 19, have learned that their release is being appealed by the Crown. “The appeal of our bail release, like the preemptive arrest, is a strong indication of the state's intent to criminalize ideas, dissent, and effective community organizing,” says Alex Hundert.

Friends, family, and supporters are attesting to these activists’ valuable efforts to serve the community and to further social justice. “I am concerned that the press is vilifying Alex, an idealistic and powerfully intelligent young man,” says Gershon David Hundert, Alex Hundert’s uncle and Professor of Jewish Studies at McGill University. “He is passionately committed to righting wrongs. Without the energy, passion, and dedication of young people like him, our democracy would be endangered.”

According to Michael Keefer, Professor at the University of Guelph, “I know Ms. Hiscocks as a generous, open-hearted, and gentle young woman. She is a pillar of the Guelph community who has, amongst other things, coordinated a youth shelter and clean up of Speed River.” Approximately 30 professors across Ontario have written in support of Mandy, calling for her release from detention, claiming that “Her community activism is in the public interest. Her continued detention is not.”

Alex, Mandy, and Leah’s dedication to the environment, Indigenous rights, women’s liberation, and economic justice has earned them respect across the country. They are known in their communities as researchers, childcare providers, legal workers, festival coordinators, and sports coaches.

Judy Da Silva of Asubpeeschoseewagong Anishinabe (Grassy Narrows First Nations) attests to Alex and Leah’s commitment: “Alex and Leah support the Grassy Narrows community in our continuous struggle to protect our boreal forest from logging and pollution. They are friendly, patient, generous, and work tirelessly on environmental and social issues.”

Harjap Grewal, a regional organizer with the Council of Canadians, states “Over the last year I have gotten to know Alex and Mandy. Their work carries purpose and commitment to marginalized communities, amongst whom they share many friendships.”

These politically-motivated charges illustrate the increasing criminalization of those who work for social change. “The arrest at gunpoint of these three and the delay before bail hearings amounts to the criminalization of dissent. It is not the first time perceived leaders of an action have been jailed for what they were alleged to have said in meetings or demonstrations. I have worked with Leah Henderson, she deserves an award not vilification and arrest”, adds veteran activist Judy Rebick.

“It is important for people to continue to raise their voices, and for communities to refuse to let this attempt at silencing be anything more than further inspiration to build the world we believe to be possible --a world where land and people are valued over profit and power", says Leah Henderson.