THAMES RIVER
PLOWSHARES: Early in the morning on Labor
Day, September 4, 1989 Jackie Allen, artist and shelter worker of the Ahimsa
Community in Voluntown, CT and member of Griffiss
Plowshares; Kathy Boylan, mother, sanctuary worker and member of the Long
Island Catholic Peace Fellowship; Art Laffin, member of the Isaiah Peace
Ministry and Trident Nein; and Elmer Maas,
member of the Isaiah Peace Ministry and participant of two previous plowshares
actions; Anne Montgomery, participant in five previous plowshares actions; Jim
Reale, arborist and member of Jonah House; and Homer White, husband and member
of the Caritas Community in Chapel Hill, NC; swam and canoed up the Thames
River to the USS Pennsylvania Trident submarine, docked at the Naval Underwater
Systems Center in New London, CN. Jackie, Anne, Kathy and Homer swam to the Trident.
In full view of armed security, Jackie and Kathy hammered and poured blood on
the Trident near the conning tower, while Anne was detained at the Trident
dock. Jackie also carved the word "death" on the Trident. After 30
minutes Jackie and Kathy, who were fire-hosed by sailors, were taken into
custody by the Coast Guard. Heavy tidal currents forced Homer to return to
shore and he was arrested upon entering the main gate of the Naval Underwater
Systems Center.
Simultaneously, Art, Elmer, and Jim canoed to
the tail end of the Trident and, in full view of armed security, hammered and
poured their blood on the side of the sub. They boarded the Trident, hammered
several more times, and prayed, sang and read from St. John's Gospel for 45
minutes. They too were fire-hosed before taken into custody. They left on the
Trident a videotape of live footage of Hiroshima after the bombing, a
Salvadoran cross, a banner, booklets documenting the nuclear arms race at sea
and naval nuclear accidents, their action statement and "Call to
Confession and Captivity." Concurrently with this action, a 96 foot-long
banner was dropped over the Gold Star Bridge in New London, proclaiming
"Trident Is The Crime." After being held overnight in jail, they were
arraigned and released the next day on a PTA. Charges were later dropped
against Homer, presumably due to insufficient evidence. During their 3-day
trial in Hartford Federal Court, they focused on their "lack of criminal
intent" and on the criminality of the Trident, despite certain
restrictions imposed by the court. Citing a ruling made by the Silo Pruning
Hooks judge, their trial judge, Judge Nevas, instructed the jury to disregard
the defendants' and their character witnesses’ religious, moral and political
views about the U.S. nuclear weapons policy. On December 19, they were
convicted by a jury of conspiracy to enter a naval reservation for an unlawful
purpose.
All, except Jackie, were acquitted of trespass with intent to injure and
depredate U.S. property. In addition, Jackie was the only one charged and
convicted of destruction of government property less than $100. (During the
trial the government entered into evidence one photo of hammer marks on the
Trident, where Jackie said she hammered. Kathy claimed responsibility for some
of the hammer marks in the photo. Despite each of the Thames River Plowshares
conveying to the jury and the Court that they should all be treated the same
way for their community act of disarmament, Jackie still was convicted of these
charges. On March 6, 1990 they were given the following sentences: Jackie,
Kathy, Art, Elmer, and Jim were sentenced to 60 days in prison; Anne was given
a 120-day sentence. On January 7, 1991 the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second
District denied an appeal made by Jackie, Elmer, Jim and Art.