Greenpeace activists arrested in Senate building after protest aimed at Alaska Sen. Murkowski
by The Associated Press
Mar 08, 2010 | 1142 views | 2 2 comments | 7 7 recommendations | email to a friend | print
A protest banner featuring Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, hangs on Hart Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday, March 8, 2010. Three Greenpeace activists were arrested Monday after their balloon-powered banner criticizing Murkowski building.
A protest banner featuring Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, hangs on Hart Senate Office Building on Capitol Hill in Washington, Monday, March 8, 2010. Three Greenpeace activists were arrested Monday after their balloon-powered banner criticizing Murkowski building.
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WASHINGTON — Three Greenpeace activists were arrested Monday after their balloon-powered banner criticizing Sen. Lisa Murkowski, R-Alaska, was released in the Senate Hart Office Building.

Sgt. Kimberly Schneider, a Capitol Police spokeswoman, said they would be charged with unlawful conduct, demonstrating in a Capitol building.

The banner that rose to the ceiling of the building’s 90-foot atrium said “Lisa Murkowski, Happily matched since 2004” and had the logos of three companies: Exxon, Chevron and Southern Co.

Greenpeace spokesman Joe Smyth said Greenpeace was protesting ties between Murkowski and polluters.

Murkowski spokesman Michael Brumas said, “This is another desperate attempt by an outside group to distract from the merits of the debate. Sen. Murkowski has legitimate concerns about the economic consequences of EPA regulating greenhouse gases and believes the American people deserve a full debate on the issue. It’s unfortunate that some extreme groups have to resort to breaking the law to try to quash that debate.”

Smyth identified the three who were arrested as Rachel Humphreys and Alec Rothman of Washington, D.C., and Samantha Corbin of New York City.

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March 09, 2010
How about they explain how Greenpeace was able to smuggle this giant poster into the high security Hart Building? What, is it now more difficult to board a flight than it is to get into the Senate office building, which has trams that lead to the Capital Building itself.

I think somebody must have let them in.
AggressiveProgressive
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March 08, 2010
While they're debating the validity of cap and trade legislation, how about they debate the validity of the two trillion-dollar invasions of nations who weren't threats to us.
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