Photo credit: Michael Wan
Photo credit: Michael Wan

By Adam Iscoe

OAKLAND — About 30 students, workers and Berkeley community members gathered at the Wiley W. Manuel Courthouse on Tuesday to show support for John Penilla, who appeared in court after he was arrested during a campus protest in March.

Penilla, who is being charged for misdemeanor trespassing and misdemeanor battery, according to his attorney EmilyRose Johns, overtook the stage at Zellerbach Hall during a campus event March 2, protesting the campus’s treatment of subcontracted workers.

During the Tuesday arraignment, Johns requested that Penilla’s arraignment be moved to a later date in order to demur the complaint. Johns said she filed a motion challenging the sufficiency of the evidence cited in the complaint and added that she is working to get the case dismissed.

“This case is a political prosecution in order to suppress students’ First Amendment activities,” Johns said. “If they don’t have the facts, they’ll drop it. Otherwise, they’ll amend the complaint.”

Demonstrators from the Student Labor Committee and AFSCME Local 3299, a labor union representing UC workers, have organized a number of protests, sit-ins and rallies since August, urging the campus to insource its subcontracted workers and compensate them as UC employees.

Several protesters were detained and cited for trespassing at the March protest, as previously stated by UCPD spokesperson Sabrina Reich, though they were released later that evening. Reich said Penilla was arrested for disobeying police officers’ orders and resisting arrest.

“It’s unfair and cruel that a student has to go through this burden. It’s obviously an intimidation tactic — they don’t want student organizers to organize,” said campus senior and SLC member Giancarlo Escobar. “It’s a tactic for the university to hinder our voice and movement.”

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[Source]: The Daily Californian