logo
Most charges against Gaza protesters dismissed but ‘intent is to scare people'

Most charges against Gaza protesters dismissed but ‘intent is to scare people'

The Guardian11-02-2025

As pro-Palestinian demonstrations broke out across the US during the first year of war in Gaza, thousands of people were arrested, charged, or cited for their involvement. Most of the cases against them did not stick, a new Guardian analysis of prosecution data in a dozen major cities finds.
About 60% of alleged offenses committed by protesters did not result in prosecutions. The Guardian identified about 2,800 charges, summons and citations brought or requested against Gaza protesters. Around 1,600 were dropped, dismissed or otherwise not filed, data shows.
The figures are likely an undercount – data between October 2023 and November 2024 was collected from prosecutors' offices and attorneys who represented large numbers of protesters, but may not include every case in a city. Some cases are still working through the legal system.
Legal advocates argue that the high number of dismissals reflects policing tactics, such as mass arrests, that are often designed to silence protesters and chill dissent, but frequently cannot hold up in court. They say the tactics are also used as a means to make it appear as if protesters were more violent than they were, and turn public opinion against them.
'The state's intent is not really to prosecute – the intent is to scare people out of wanting to participate in protests at all,' said Ria Thompson-Washington, a board member with the National Lawyers Guild, which represented many protesters.
The figures varied by city. In Los Angeles, about 88% of 476 charges, summons and citations reviewed by the Guardian were dismissed. In Chicago, about 60% of around 500 were dropped. In Portland, Oregon, however, just 10% of 52 were dismissed.
Police in part use mass arrests as 'a crowd control tactic and an easy and quick solution', said Xavier de Janon, director of mass arrest for the National Lawyers Guild. The legal standard to make an arrest only requires probable cause that a crime is being committed, he added. Most of the protesters who were charged were hit with minor charges like noise or curfew violations, or trespassing, de Janon said.
Cases are often dismissed because prosecutors have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that an individual protester committed a crime, and that can be difficult to achieve when dozens or hundreds of people were swept up in a mass arrest, de Janon added.
No prosecutors' offices contacted by the Guardian commented on the record.
Laurae Caruth, a research fellow at the John Jay College of Criminal Justice, said she could not speculate on why mass arrests are being carried out, but said arrests have a 'deterrent effect'.
'If someone gets arrested now for being a part of a protest, maybe they'll think again about going to the next one,' Caruth added.
While the majority of cases didn't result in prosecution, advocates say that some of the ones that did were motivated by pro-Israel bias. In Michigan, the Guardian revealed that attorney general Dana Nessel had personal, financial and political connections to University of Michigan regents and pro-Israel donors who wanted charges brought against largely student protesters. Nessel so far has charged 11 people who were arrested on campus in 2024. Those cases are still moving through the legal system.
Nessel's charges came after local prosecutors dropped 36 out of 40 charges stemming from a late 2023 protest in a U-M campus building.
Observers say that, broadly speaking, protesters for progressive causes are facing an escalating crackdown by the right and moderate Democrats. Often with political support, police and prosecutors have recently charged Gaza or police reform protesters with domestic terrorism, racketeering or ethnic intimidation for acts like kicking over an Israeli flag.
'Political prosecutions have political intentions,' de Janon said. 'As movements have grown stronger, the charges are becoming worse and worse.'
Even so, those charges often do not stick. In Atlanta, for example, prosecutors in November had to drop money laundering charges against three people coordinating financial support for Stop Cop City, the movement against a controversial police training center. In San Francisco, where about 67% of 717 Gaza protest charges were dismissed, prosecutors tried charging protesters who marched on the Golden Gate Bridge with conspiracy and false imprisonment of motorists on the bridge. A judge in November tossed most of the charges against 26 protesters.
'Charging decisions are made based on the facts, evidence and the law,' district attorney Brooke Jenkins's office said in a September statement. 'We do not pursue political prosecutions under any circumstances at any time.'
However, de Janon said people who are charged face a difficult process defending themselves, and 'the punishment is in the process.'
Caruth said the cases couldn't be painted with a broad brush: 'Each jurisdiction's reasons for charging the way they do are different.'
In Dallas, Boston and Northampton, the latter home to the University of Massachusetts, none of around 375 charges against Gaza protesters were dismissed until protesters completed a 'diversion program' that required some combination of a small amount of community service, a short probationary period or a small fine.
Those involved with the cases sometimes framed diversion programs as a dismissal of charges. But legal observers say the programs still chill free speech because they punish protesters, disincentivizing them from protesting in the future.
'The state will make whatever necessary adjustments they need to so they can criminalize protesting,' Thompson-Washington said. 'Even if the charges are being dropped, or the charges are minor, like community service, the intent is still to make people afraid, and wave in front of their face what they can lose.'

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israelis lose faith in their safe rooms after Iranian strikes
Israelis lose faith in their safe rooms after Iranian strikes

Times

time13 minutes ago

  • Times

Israelis lose faith in their safe rooms after Iranian strikes

Standing outside her grandmother's tower block in pyjamas, Nurit implored the local mayor to tell her the truth. While most of the block stood firm, where her grandmother's flat used to be was now a gaping black hole. 'They're not telling me anything. They think she likely didn't survive it, but they won't tell me where she is,' Nurit said. 'She was right there, that's her apartment, all alone. On that floor. I need to know where she is.' The four people who died when the Iranian missile struck the 20-storey tower block in Petah Tikva, a city east of Tel Aviv, were sheltering in reinforced safe rooms in the lower floors of the block. Nurit's grandmother, who lived on the third floor, remained officially unaccounted for on Monday night, but was assumed by rescue workers to be among the dead. Safe rooms have been mandatory in new buildings in Israel since the Gulf War more than 30 years ago — the last time Tel Aviv came under intense fire. Made of solid concrete, they are designed to protect inhabitants from bombs and toxic gases. The missile, fired shortly after 4am on Monday, directly hit the safe rooms, taking with them the hope that they might prove impenetrable to Iranian fire, which is far heavier than the rockets launched by Hamas from Gaza. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps said the attack caused Israel's defence systems to target each other, allowing Tehran to successfully hit many more targets than on previous nights. 'There were two rooms where the missile hit. The entire apartment imploded, crushed, and one of the walls smashed into the door, so we needed to use tools to remove it,' said Yariv Sandalon, the city official who led the rescue efforts in Petah Tikva. 'They were in their safe rooms and unfortunately, even though the reinforcement is very strong, the missile hit exactly on it.' The missile moved at eight times the speed of sound, he said. It is the first time that Israeli safe rooms have been tested by the impact of a direct hit from ballistic missiles. Civilians — who use safe rooms, basements, car parks and public shelters — may now have fewer protected places to hide from Iranian attacks. 'If you are on the street and there's a bomb and a siren, what do you do?' Sandalon added. 'You go down under the ground, why? Because it's safer than staying above. You have to assess it like this.' Safe rooms had already lost some of their credibility in the October 7 attacks, when gunmen from Gaza entered southern Israel and opened the unlocked shelter doors to find their civilian victims inside. Now, Israelis may seek to move underground. 'The door of my shelter blew open from the impact,' said Liat Drori, who lives a few metres away from a second impact site in Tel Aviv, near the Carmel market, which used to be a popular tourist destination. 'We are going to try and make it to the government building nearby next time, if we have enough warning. Hopefully it'll be safer.' Eleven people were killed and 100 others wounded overnight into Monday in five locations across Israel, including in the port of Haifa, where three people were found dead from smoke inhalation after rescuers failed to extinguish the fire sparked by a missile strike. Their bodies were eventually recovered from a safe room in the structure where they had taken shelter. The defence minister, Israel Katz, warned that residents in Tehran would 'pay the price and soon' as four days of exchanging fire between the two sides showed no sign of letting up. Those who survived the attacks but were made homeless were evacuated and taken to hospital or moved to hotels, which were quickly filling up. 'I thought the neighbours were playing football, the bang was so loud. I woke up this morning and thought to go back to Egypt, where I came from,' said Yitzhak Dayan, joking amid residents in Petah Tikva who were standing behind police tape waiting to retrieve their possessions. 'I fled Egypt in 1957, now I'm thinking of fleeing back the other way.' In the face of Iranian drones and missiles launched under the cover of darkness, hospitals have moved critical patients, including premature babies, to protected facilities underground. The apartment block in Petah Tikva took a direct hit shortly after 4am on Monday ABIR SULTANEPA Sandalon said that safe rooms above ground were fine, but direct impacts were still dangerous. 'When you build a mamad, a fortified room, it's for hits even just five metres to the side of it,' he said. 'If you want to build it specifically against a direct impact, you need to make the walls much thicker, something like a metre and a half thick.' The current regulations state that walls should be about 40cm thick. 'And if it was directly on them, it's really unfortunate, but that's life,' said Sandalon, 60, hardened by years in military service as an infantry soldier and commander in Lebanon and Gaza. 'They are still very safe,' he said. 'Life is not 100 per cent guaranteed. If you walk on the sidewalk, someone could easily lose control of their car.'

Trump leaves G7 early after warning Iranians to evacuate Tehran
Trump leaves G7 early after warning Iranians to evacuate Tehran

Times

time43 minutes ago

  • Times

Trump leaves G7 early after warning Iranians to evacuate Tehran

President Trump pulled out of the G7 meeting a day early on Monday night, saying he wanted to return to Washington to focus on the Middle East shortly after posting a warning for Tehran to evacuate. Trump's abrupt departure marks a dramatic rejection of efforts by the world's richest democracies to come together to push for de-escalation in the wars in Iran and Ukraine. He leaves behind a group of western leaders who were hoping Trump could have been persuaded to join them in putting diplomatic pressure on Israel as well as applying sanctions on Russia to force it to accept a ceasefire with Ukraine. His departure after the 'family photo' of leaders in Canada means he will not have the bilateral meeting with President Zelensky of Ukraine that was expected to be held on Tuesday. 'President Trump had a great day at the G7, even signing a major trade deal with the United Kingdom and Prime Minister Keir Starmer,' wrote Karoline Leavitt, Trump's press secretary. 'Much was accomplished, but because of what's going on in the Middle East, President Trump will be leaving tonight after dinner with heads of state.' The tone of his posts on Truth Social suggested that the US president was strongly supportive of Israel's bombing campaign against Iran, as he hit back at those in his own party calling on him not to involve the US any deeper in the conflict between Israel and Iran. 'AMERICA FIRST means many GREAT things, including the fact that, IRAN CAN NOT HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON. MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN!!!' Trump posted. Trump ordered that the National Security Council convene in the White House situation room for his return to Washington, about a four-hour flight away from Calgary, according to a report on Fox News. Shortly before Trump's departure was announced, Iran's foreign ministry rejected his earlier call for Tehran to return to talks, saying it was not possible to negotiate under fire from Israel. This led to an ominous post from Trump, declaring that 'Iran should have signed the 'deal' I told them to sign. What a shame, and waste of human life. Simply stated, IRAN CAN NOT HAVE A NUCLEAR WEAPON. I said it over and over again! Everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran!' Trump's departure highlights the split in the west after Sir Keir Starmer and European allies spent the day attempting to persuade the US to sign up to a joint position. At a meeting with the prime minister Trump said 'I have to leave here' to take action on the Middle East. Asked if he wanted to see regime change in Tehran, Trump said: 'I want to see no nuclear weapon in Iran. And we're well on our way to making sure that happens.' President Macron of France put a positive interpretation on Trump's departure, saying the US president had made a proposal for a ceasefire in the Middle East. 'There is indeed an offer to meet and exchange. An offer was made especially to get a ceasefire and to then kick-start broader discussions,' Macron told reporters. 'We have to see now whether the sides will follow.' Israel widened its bombing offensive against Iran on Monday, striking the state television building in Tehran. Flames leapt from the television building in north Tehran after the strike, which cut programmes just as a newsreader was lambasting Israel live on air. Iranian channels said a new salvo of missiles and drones had been launched towards Israel on Monday night. The regime's Revolutionary Guards threatened 'the largest and most intense missile attack in history on Israeli soil' in retaliation. They urged people in Tel Aviv to flee. But privately, Tehran was said to be asking America's allies in the Middle East to persuade President Trump to use his influence on Israel to sign a ceasefire. In Canada, Starmer was leading calls for 'de-escalating' the war. But though No 10 said it was 'premature' to talk of a divided G7, Trump was holding out against signing a joint document and Israel's prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, gave cold comfort both to Iranians and allies hoping to prevent the war spinning out of control. Asked on American television about reports that Iran was seeking new talks through intermediaries, Trump said: 'I'm not surprised. I mean, they want to continue to have these fake talks in which they lie, they cheat, they string the US along… 'They want to continue to create existential threats against Israel while they're talking. That's not going to happen.' Later on Monday he wrote on Truth Social that 'everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran'. During a fourth day of attacks by both sides, Tehran's civilian population began to take evasive action. Traffic jams were reported on routes out of the city after residents paid heed to growing Israeli warnings of continued and intensifying attacks. They followed specific threats by Israeli leaders toward a part of north Tehran that is home to many government buildings and diplomatic compounds, as well as state television channels. 'In the coming hours, the Israel Defence Forces will operate in the area, as it has in recent days throughout Tehran, to strike military infrastructure of the Iranian regime,' the IDF Persian-language social media feed said. The raid on state television was caught live on air. A female newsreader was addressing the camera when a loud explosion went off and smoke filled the newsroom. Part of its ceiling collapsed and there was shouting in the background. Shortly after, broadcasts resumed, but a female employee of the Islamic Republic of Iran news network was later confirmed to have died in the attack. 'The Zionist regime, the enemy of the Iranian nation, minutes ago conducted a military operation against the Islamic Republic of Iran news network,' Hassan Abedini, a media official, said. 'The regime was unaware of the fact that the voice of the Islamic revolution and the great Iran will not be silenced with a military operation.' After midnight local time, air raid alerts then warned Israelis to take shelter due to Iranian reprisal attacks, but there were no immediate reports of damage or casualties. The strikes will raise questions over the focus of the continuing military operation, which Israeli leaders have insisted is not aimed at regime change. Netanyahu, in the same interview, refused to rule out directly targeting the supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, saying it would 'end the conflict'. Later, in a video message, he said Israel was 'changing the face of the Middle East' through its strikes against Iranian nuclear and military targets, adding: 'We are eliminating them, one after the other.' Iran's foreign minister and chief nuclear negotiator, Abbas Araghchi, said Israel's strikes against his country in the midst of nuclear negotiations with the United States 'deal a blow' to diplomacy. Araghchi made the comments during a call on Monday with his French, British, and German counterparts. Raphael Grossi, the head of the International Atomic Energy Agency, the main external monitor of Iran's nuclear programme, said there had been no signs of damage to the nuclear facilities at one of Iran's key sites, Fordow, which are buried deep underground. In a statement, he confirmed damage to the above-ground facilities at Natanz, the second main site, and to uranium conversion plants at Isfahan, which are key for converting uranium for enrichment and then weaponisation. But there was also no sign of an attack on Natanz's underground facilities. He said that radiation levels appeared 'normal'. Iran has retaliated by firing volleys of missiles at Israel. Israeli officials admit that some 5 to 10 per cent are penetrating the country's 'Iron Dome' system and other defences and striking targets, including civilian ones. AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES As of Monday lunchtime, 24 Israelis had been killed in Iranian strikes since Friday. Iran's health ministry increased its official death toll from Israeli attacks to 224, with more than 1,200 wounded. Iran's foreign ministry spokesman called the Israeli attack on the television centre a 'war crime' and demanded the UN security council intervene. Diplomatic sources said that Qatar, Oman and Saudi Arabia had appealed to Washington to press Israel to agree to a ceasefire and to resume talks with Tehran towards a nuclear deal. • At the G7 summit in Alberta, Trump argued for the resumption of US talks with Iran, but has put the onus on Tehran to make concessions. Iran wants a ceasefire first, and has given no indication it is giving up its bottom line of continued uranium enrichment. 'They have to make a deal, and it's painful for both parties, but I'd say Iran is not winning this war, and they should talk, and they should talk immediately, before it's too late,' Trump said. Starmer said: 'I do think there's a consensus for de-escalation. Obviously, what we need to do today is to bring that together and to be clear about how it is to be brought about. There must be de-escalation. That will be the central focus of much of the discussion.'

Trump to depart G7 early as Israel-Iran conflict shows signs of intensifying
Trump to depart G7 early as Israel-Iran conflict shows signs of intensifying

BreakingNews.ie

timean hour ago

  • BreakingNews.ie

Trump to depart G7 early as Israel-Iran conflict shows signs of intensifying

President Donald Trump is abruptly leaving the G7 summit, departing a day early on Monday as the conflict between Israel and Iran intensifies and the US leader has declared that Tehran should be evacuated 'immediately'. World leaders had gathered in Canada with the specific goal of helping to defuse a series of global pressure points, only to be disrupted by a showdown over Iran's nuclear programme that could escalate in dangerous and uncontrollable ways. Advertisement Israel launched an aerial bombardment campaign against Iran four days ago. Canada's Prime Minister Mark Carney, US President Donald Trump and Britain's Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer participate in a group photo at the G7 Summit (Mark Schiefelbein/AP) At the summit, Mr Trump warned that Tehran needs to curb its nuclear programme before it is 'too late'. He said Iranian leaders would 'like to talk' but they had already had 60 days to reach an agreement on their nuclear ambitions and failed to do so before the Israeli aerial assault began. 'They have to make a deal,' he said. Advertisement Asked what it would take for the US to get involved in the conflict militarily, Mr Trump said on Monday morning: 'I don't want to talk about that.' But by Monday afternoon, Mr Trump warned ominously on social media, 'Everyone should immediately evacuate Tehran!' Shortly after that, Mr Trump decided to leave the summit and skip a series of Tuesday meetings that would address the ongoing war in Ukraine and global trade issues. As Mr Trump posed for a picture on Monday evening with the other G7 leaders, he said simply: 'I have to be back, very important.' Advertisement Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney, the host, said: 'I am very grateful for the president's presence and I fully understand.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store