SEATTLE -- A federal grand jury in Tacoma, Wash., has indicted five anti-war protesters, including prominent members of the anti-nuclear-weapons movement, on charges of conspiracy, trespass and destruction of government property for entering a secure area at the Naval Base Kitsap-Bangor complex in Washington state last November.
The charges carry penalties of up to 10 years in federal prison.
The five are accused of using bolt cutters to breach three chain-link fences surrounding the so-called Main Limited Area of the base on Nov. 2, which is home to part of the Pacific nuclear submarine fleet. That area is patrolled by armed guards, who confronted the invaders at gunpoint, according to a news release from the U.S. attorney's office.
"All citizens are free to disagree with their government," said U.S. Attorney Jenny Durkan. "But they are not free to destroy property or risk the safety of others."
Durkan said the group -- dubbed the "Bangor 5" in the news release -- entered the naval base "during a time of war," into an area that is clearly marked as off-limits.
"They endangered themselves and prompted military personnel, who are duty-bound to guard the area, to quickly make a decision over the use of force," Durkan said. "These defendants quite literally cross the line and must be held accountable."
According to news accounts, several of the defendants have been arrested for, or charged with, similar actions over the years.
Montgomery spent time in jail in the 1980s after she and other protesters breached security at Martin-Marietta Aerospace Corp.'s defense plant in Orlando, Fla. Court documents indicate that they entered a building where they "hammered and poured blood onto both nuclear and conventional missile launchers and components belonging to the United States Army."
Kelly and another Jesuit were arrested for a Nov. 19, 2006, demonstration at Fort Huachuca near Sierra Vista, Ariz., where they claimed military intelligence officials taught the torture techniques seen at Abu Ghraib.
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