106 Denver arrests, 9 trials, 1 conviction from Democratic National Convention
About 50 protesters in Denver pleaded guilty. Defense lawyers want the remaining cases dropped.
Reporting from Denver — The first wave of trials for protesters arrested during the Democratic National Convention has resulted in a stream of acquittals in what the defendants are calling an embarrassment to Denver and proof that prosecutors ought to drop the rest of the cases.
In trials for the first nine of 106 people arrested during the convention, all but two defendants have won acquittals on charges that they participated in anarchist demonstrations on the opening night of the convention. One was convicted, and another will be retried because the jury deadlocked.
About half of the arrested protesters have pleaded guilty, Denver's city attorney noted.
Democratic convention protests: In an article in Sunday's Section A about trials in Denver for protesters arrested during the Democratic National Convention, the headline said there had been nine trials. There have been four trials involving nine people.
Defense attorneys, citing an "abysmal" conviction rate, challenged city officials Friday to dismiss remaining cases.
"In the midst of an economic crisis, spending taxpayers' dollars to prosecute innocent individuals is itself a crime," said Brian Vicente, director of the People's Law Project, which is defending the accused.
The group also filed an open-records request asking city officials to detail the cost of the prosecutions.
Denver officials said Friday that they were preparing their response. "I don't believe it's a waste of money," said Denver City Atty. David Fine. "If people are violating the law, we don't ignore it."
The majority of the arrests during the Denver convention occurred Aug. 25, when police encircled a group of demonstrators whom they believed were heading to cause problems at delegates' hotels and downtown businesses.
Fine's office has dismissed charges against five defendants, he said.
(Defendants' lawyers put that number at 10.)
In two cases that resulted in acquittals, Fine said, jurors made a point of praising how police handled the situation.
Once, jurors even admonished the defendants, telling them that their actions weren't appropriate, he said.
Fine said he believed the city had succeeded in allowing free expression while protecting the convention.
"There was robust speech all over the city for most of the convention," he said.
"It came off incredibly well, in my view."
But defendants and their lawyers criticized the city, claiming Denver based its prosecutions on a theory of guilt by association.
"They tried to paint me as an anarchist," said Stephanie Catlin, an 18-year-old student at the Art Institute of Colorado who last week was acquitted of blocking the street during the Aug. 25 demonstration.
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