Basic
human kindness is not a crime
Truthout photo |
"The
government failed in its attempt to criminalize basic human kindness,"
Warren, a volunteer worker with advocacy group No More Deaths, said from the steps of the Arizona
courthouse following his acquittal.
"As we stand here, people's brothers, sister, father, spouses, and children are in the midst of the perilous desert crossing. The need for humanitarian aid continues."
"As we stand here, people's brothers, sister, father, spouses, and children are in the midst of the perilous desert crossing. The need for humanitarian aid continues."
"Yet
again, No More Deaths has withstood the government's attempts to criminalize
basic human compassion," the group said.
"This verdict is validation of what we have always known: that humanitarian aid is never a crime. We will continue to provide food, water, and medical aid to all those who need it, until the day that no one dies or disappears while crossing the deserts and oceans of the world."
"This verdict is validation of what we have always known: that humanitarian aid is never a crime. We will continue to provide food, water, and medical aid to all those who need it, until the day that no one dies or disappears while crossing the deserts and oceans of the world."
If
convicted, Warren would have faced up to a decade in prison.
As Reuters reported, the Tucson jury took just over
two hours to find Warren not guilty on two federal charges.
After the case concluded Wednesday, one of the jurors told The Intercept's Ryan Devereaux outside the courthouse, "I think we all agreed that what he and these people do is fantastic."
Devereaux reported on Twitter that "we also
received a very significant decision in Warren's misdemeanor case from earlier
this year: the judge found that that Warren's religious freedom defense
overcame that charge he faced for leaving water for migrants on public
lands."
Erika
Guevara-Rosas, Americas director at Amnesty International, which supported
Warren throughout the legal process, applauded the verdict in a statement Wednesday night.
"Sense
has prevailed today with the jury exonerating Dr. Scott Warren for a simple
reason: humanitarian aid is never a crime," Guevara-Rosas said.
"The Trump administration is wrong to try to prosecute people who are only trying to save lives. By threatening Dr. Warren with a decade in prison, the U.S. government sought to criminalize compassion and weaponize the deadly desert against people who make the perilous journey to the United States in search of safety."
"The Trump administration is wrong to try to prosecute people who are only trying to save lives. By threatening Dr. Warren with a decade in prison, the U.S. government sought to criminalize compassion and weaponize the deadly desert against people who make the perilous journey to the United States in search of safety."
Before
the trial began, Amnesty circulated a petition pushing the government
to #DropTheCharges. Warren's trial that
wrapped up Wednesday followed a trial that ended with a hung jury in June.
Prosecutors announced in July that they were dropping a conspiracy charge but would retry him for harboring.
Prosecutors announced in July that they were dropping a conspiracy charge but would retry him for harboring.
Dozens
of Warren's supporters and fellow volunteers gathered outside the courthouse
Wednesday to celebrate the acquittal.
Jamil
Dakwar, director of the ACLU's Human Rights Program, took to Twitter Wednesday
night to celebrate the jury's verdict. "Excellent news!" he wrote. "Advocacy for migrants' rights
and human compassion are not a crime."
"Human
compassion shouldn't be illegal," the caucus tweeted. "Providing food
and water to those in need should not be illegal. We must stand by our values
and help immigrants in need, just as Scott did."
Sen.
Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.), a top-tier candidate in the 2020 Democratic
presidential primary race, acknowledged Warren's acquittal in a tweet Thursday
morning, writing that "if we criminalize compassion, we have lost our way
as a society."
The
grassroots group New Sanctuary Coalition tied Warren's case to the broader
circumstances surrounding his volunteer work, tweeting: "Now, we demand an end to
the Trump administration's continued targeting of migrant justice activists,
the dehumanization of migrants and refugees."