MALAK BEHROUZNAMI, JOURNALIST, TRNN: On April 1, 2009, Tim
DeChristopher, also known as Bidder 70, was indicted on two felony
counts for his participation during a US Bureau of Land Management gas
and oil lease auction that took place December 19, 2008, in Salt Lake
City. DeChristopher is being accused of disrupting the auction by
purchasing 22,000 of 130,000 bids in an attempt to save the land from
gas and oil development. The bids comprise a total of $1.7 million,
which DeChristopher is unable to pay for.
TIM
DECHRISTOPHER, ACTIVIST, PEACEFULUPRISING.ORG: Well, I showed up at the
auction, which was very controversial because there was a lot of
concerns about the legitimacy of the auction. It was the very last one
of the Bush administration. They were auctioning off huge tracts of land
outside of Arches and Canyonlands National Park for oil and gas
development. So I walked in, and they asked me if I wanted to be a
bidder, and so I said yes and ended up with a bidder paddle and then got
inside and saw an opportunity to make a really serious stand against
this auction. So I started bidding first to drive up the prices, and
then actually winning parcels. And I ended up winning 14 parcels before
they stopped the auction and took me out and interrogated me at that
point.BEHROUZNAMI: On January 17, 2009, the Bureau of Land
Management was found to be at fault for violating environmental
protection laws concerning air quality and historic preservation.
Federal Judge Ricardo Urbina temporarily froze the sale of 77 parcels.
On February 4, 2009, the Obama administration's interior secretary, Ken
Salazar, pulled the 77 leases, which included DeChristopher's bids.DECHRISTOPHER:
There were several issues involved in this auction. Probably the one
that's gotten the most attention was just the destruction of our
national heritage. These were pristine lands right outside of Arches and
Canyonlands national parks. And I think a bigger factor is the threat
to our climate that's associated with this drill now, think later
mentality that is posing a massive threat to our future. And then the
other issue involved in it is the lack of a democratic and transparent
process, where the BLM wasn't following their own rules in holding this
auction. And that's really the reason that it was overturned later on is
that the government admitted that the BLM hadn't done an adequate
environmental impact statement, they hadn't weighed the consequences,
they hadn't discussed things with other government agencies the way they
were supposed to. And it also later turned out that the BLM was in
violation of a law that went into effect in 2001 requiring them to weigh
the impacts of climate change with any decision like this that they
make.BEHROUZNAMI: DeChristopher and his legal team were
not permitted to admit this information as evidence during his trial.
Also omitted from the trial was the fact that DeChristopher had
fundraised $100,000 for the initial payment of $45,000 on the land. In
March 2010, DeChristopher's attorneys made a motion to prosecutors
requesting more documents on other bidders who had defaulted on their
payments. But District Judge Dee Benson didn't push prosecutors to
provide the files.DECHRISTOPHER: You know, there are
certainly a lot of people that have talked about the fact that I'm
facing ten years and, you know, Tony Hayward and the others from BP
haven't faced any consequences [incompr.] action. Don Blankenship and
the others responsible for the Big Branch mining disaster that killed 29
miners in West Virginia last year. They're not facing anything. You
know, the Halliburton executives who have scammed the United States
government and played a role in our wars and that sort of thing aren't
facing anything. And a lot of people have talked to me about that and
said it doesn't make sense. And I think that in a certain way it does
actually make sense that the legal system is a tool of those in power,
and so it's going to be used to protect their power. So what I was doing
was threatening their power or challenging their power. And so it makes
sense that they're going to use that legal system against me. We
shouldn't expect those in power to use the legal system against
themselves, because it's their tool and they control it. If we want to
hold those people accountable for their crimes, there have to be other
ways to do it. That's the job of the citizen, not the job of the legal
system, because it's really just the tool of those in power.BEHROUZNAMI:
DeChristopher faces up to ten years in prison and is currently awaiting
his sentencing by a judge, which will take place June 23. This is Malak
Behrouznami for The Real News Network.
End of Transcript
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