19 February 2014 | 17:48

Nun, 84, gets three years in US prison for nuclear break-in

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Sister Megan Rice. Photo courtesy of worldculturepictorial.com Sister Megan Rice. Photo courtesy of worldculturepictorial.com

An elderly nun who broke into what was supposed to be one of the most carefully guarded nuclear facilities in the United States was sentenced to nearly three years in prison, AFP reports according to the local media. Sister Megan Rice, 84, cut through fences and several layers of security at the Y-12 National Security Complex in Tennessee along with two other members of Transform Now Plowshares -- a pacifist group -- in July 2012. They spent two hours in the complex before being caught by security guards. In that time, they hoisted banners, spray painted messages like "work for peace not war" and tossed human blood on a building used to store and process the highly-enriched uranium used to make nuclear bombs. The incident prompted a congressional review of security at US nuclear facilities. Rice, who has been held in jail since her conviction last year, urged the judge to impose the maximum sentence for her crimes at a four-hour sentencing hearing. "Please have no leniency on me," the Tennessean newspaper quoted Rice as saying. "To remain in prison for the rest of my life would be the greatest honor you could give me." Federal judge Amul Thapar said he struggled to find the right sentence to balance Rice's past good works with the need to deter others from breaking the law to pursue political goals. Thapar didn't oblige but did say that breaking the law was not the right way to pursue political goals. He said he hoped a significant prison sentence would deter others from following the same path and bring them "back to the political system I fear that they have given up on." He sentenced Rice to 35 months in prison, the newspaper reported. Fellow anti-nuclear activists Michael Walli, 64, and Greg Boertje-Obed, 58, were sentenced to five years and two months in prison because of their criminal histories. The court's records were not immediately updated to reflect the sentences imposed and neither the prosecutors nor the Plowshares group could immediately be reached for comment. The New York Times says Rice, a native New Yorker, has been arrested as many as 50 times for acts of civil disobedience and once served a six-month jail term. It said that in 1998 she was arrested in a protest at the School of the Americas, an Army school in Georgia that taught Latin American soldiers to fight leftist insurgencies. It said some went on to commit human rights abuses. Rice served six months in federal prison. "It was a great eye-opener," she said in an interview with the Times in 2012. "When you've had a prison experience, it minimizes your needs very much." Rice said nuclear arms were "the issue," the most pressing one of our times. "It's the criminality of this 70-year industry," she said, according to the Times. "We spend more on nuclear arms than on the departments of education, health, transportation, disaster relief and a number of other government agencies that I can't remember."


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An elderly nun who broke into what was supposed to be one of the most carefully guarded nuclear facilities in the United States was sentenced to nearly three years in prison, AFP reports according to the local media. Sister Megan Rice, 84, cut through fences and several layers of security at the Y-12 National Security Complex in Tennessee along with two other members of Transform Now Plowshares -- a pacifist group -- in July 2012. They spent two hours in the complex before being caught by security guards. In that time, they hoisted banners, spray painted messages like "work for peace not war" and tossed human blood on a building used to store and process the highly-enriched uranium used to make nuclear bombs. The incident prompted a congressional review of security at US nuclear facilities. Rice, who has been held in jail since her conviction last year, urged the judge to impose the maximum sentence for her crimes at a four-hour sentencing hearing. "Please have no leniency on me," the Tennessean newspaper quoted Rice as saying. "To remain in prison for the rest of my life would be the greatest honor you could give me." Federal judge Amul Thapar said he struggled to find the right sentence to balance Rice's past good works with the need to deter others from breaking the law to pursue political goals. Thapar didn't oblige but did say that breaking the law was not the right way to pursue political goals. He said he hoped a significant prison sentence would deter others from following the same path and bring them "back to the political system I fear that they have given up on." He sentenced Rice to 35 months in prison, the newspaper reported. Fellow anti-nuclear activists Michael Walli, 64, and Greg Boertje-Obed, 58, were sentenced to five years and two months in prison because of their criminal histories. The court's records were not immediately updated to reflect the sentences imposed and neither the prosecutors nor the Plowshares group could immediately be reached for comment. The New York Times says Rice, a native New Yorker, has been arrested as many as 50 times for acts of civil disobedience and once served a six-month jail term. It said that in 1998 she was arrested in a protest at the School of the Americas, an Army school in Georgia that taught Latin American soldiers to fight leftist insurgencies. It said some went on to commit human rights abuses. Rice served six months in federal prison. "It was a great eye-opener," she said in an interview with the Times in 2012. "When you've had a prison experience, it minimizes your needs very much." Rice said nuclear arms were "the issue," the most pressing one of our times. "It's the criminality of this 70-year industry," she said, according to the Times. "We spend more on nuclear arms than on the departments of education, health, transportation, disaster relief and a number of other government agencies that I can't remember."
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