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» Friday, August 22, 2003

Oklahoma teenager facing felony for writing a story

This Wired article tells the story of Brian Robertson, a creative writer and journalism student. One day at Moore High School (Moore is part of greater Oklahoma City, just north of Norman, and is where both of the big tornadoes of the past four years went through), Brian found a Notepad file containing a paragraph called "evacuation orders" about how to evacuate people in case of disaster. He thought it was interesting and turned it into a short story about an armed assault on his school.

A few months later, other students found the story on the computer and turned it in to school officials. They called the police, and under a 2001 Oklahoma law intended to prevent school shootings that makes it a felony to "plan, attempt, conspire, or endeavor to perform an act of violence" against someone else, he was arrested and charged with a felony.

The key word is "plan," as it turns out, because that criminalizes thought. The DA isn't wild about the law, the judge originally ruled it as "vague" and "overbroad," but a higher court reinstated it and now the kid has to go to trial. In the interim two years he's been kicked out of school, can't hold a job, and of course his family is tens of thousands of dollars in the hole (including $1000 per year just to keep him out on bond). People in Moore are spreading all kinds of rumors that he had planted a bomb (untrue), or had weapons (they searched for weeks and couldn't find anything, nor any of the twenty other people it would take to carry out the plot of the story). Friends who stand up for him are getting fired from their jobs simply for telling the court-documented truth about the case.

All for writing a story. It's unbelievable, and I'm only mildly disturbed that I hadn't even heard about it before now. I drove through Moore yesterday.

I've put up a button in the sidebar that links to the Save Brian site, run by his mother, including a Weblog and ways to offer support. Please click through, and please support how you can (even with a link) - this is horribly important stuff.

This is a criminal case and would put a felony record on the kid for life. The state is happy to see the law tested and perhaps overturned, but to do that, they need a defendant, and that's this kid. If he's convicted but a higher court overturns the law, he'll still spend up to five years in prison. And if he's acquitted, because it's a criminal case, he has no way to recover any of his costs from the state. A state legislator has already told the family that they don't want to amend the law until they see what happens to Brian - at his expense. It's a time to do something.

# - Posted to Liberty on 8/22/03; 10:03:39 AM - Discuss -

Zzzzzzz.

It's not as much that I've had "problems" sleeping for the past few years, it's just that I rarely sleep at the same time two weeks in a row. And, many times, I sleep in shifts, like two four-hour naps per day. That was really doing bad things for me.

Earlier this year, I got some medicine to help me regulate the sleep cycle, but I found it to only be marginally effective, so I got permission to increase the dosage. (I am, after all, a fairly large fellow.)

I didn't actually do that until this past week, though, and what a difference it's made - when I go to sleep, I sleep for 7-8 hours at a time, very little tossing and turning, and when I'm awake, I'm focused and ready. It's been a great help.

The downside is that after I've been awake for about 16 hours, my body just stops. If I just need an extra 60-90 minutes to get something finished, like an issue or a project, it doesn't matter - I'm out. That's hard to get used to, but I'm trying. On the other hand, going to bed when it's dark and waking up when it's light outside (instead of the other way around) has been a pretty refreshing experience. I haven't done much of that in the past eight years, and I kind of like it.

# - Posted to Personal on 8/22/03; 9:12:32 AM - Discuss (1 response) -

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