Naked In The Elm City


New Haven’s Mayor John DeStefano took to the air waves this morning to defend the City’s actions yesterday on the New Haven Green. He’s defending his police chief, Dean Esserman, against charges that Esserman jumped the gun in efforts to evict protestors from the Green. I take full responsibility, the Mayor said.

Okay, Mayor. Have I your way: You are the culprit.

If you aren’t from New Haven, you probably have not been following the drama surrounding the city’s efforts to evict protestors who have been living on the Green since October 15, 2011. The group loosely calls itself Occupy New Haven. I represent a handful of the protestors.

The City has been trying to force them off the Green for a month now. In March, we obtained a court order to prevent the city from acting from a federal judge and got a two week stay of the proceedings, forcing the city to wait until another judge could more fully consider the issue. That judge held an evidentiary hearing over the city’s objection, and then granted another stay while he considered the matter. The city wasn’t happy.

On Monday of this week, United States District Court Judge Mark Kravitz ruled that the protestors had to go. He gave them until noon on Tuesday.

I confess, the fight was pretty well knocked out of me at that point. But I met with the clients Monday night, and they asked us to go the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in New York City to seek review and another stay. We agreed to do so. Papers were drafted late Monday night, and we set off for Manhattan on the 6:23 a.m. train from New Haven.

After reviewing our papers, we sent a copy of a motion for an emergency stay pending appeal and the supporting papers to the lawyers in the case by use of an email thread from the District Court at 7:21 on Tuesday morning. We were in court in Manhattan by nine, begging the clerks for a chance to see a judge, any judge, before the stay expired at noon.

It was a long and frustrating morning. By eleven a.m., we still had heard nothing. I called New Haven’s lawyer and asked if the city would agree to stand down and not attempt to evict the occupiers until after a judge had considered our papers. A half an hour or so later, I was told no deal. As noon approached we heard that police officers had assembled on the Green, with heavy equipment designed to flatten and remove the protestors’ compound.

I called the appellate court clerk’s office again at about 11:50. "There are police officers assembling. They will move in to evict folks if there is no action." The clerk was polite. She told me that the matter was before a judge. There was nothing more I could do.

I sat in a coffee shop with Dan Erwin, who has worked on the case with me. I explained to him all hope was lost. The city would be free to act at noon. We had done all we could. We notified our clients, and sent a message on Twitter. At noon, I called the city’s lawyer to report we still had no word from the court. Dan and I sat finishing our coffee, watching the sands of hope slide through the hourglass.

The just after noon we got a call from a federal clerk. A "very brief" stay was ordered, she said. An order was being written as we spoke. I rushed off the phone and called the city’s lawyer, tracking him down by cell phone. "We got the stay," I told him. "Oh, shit," he responded, and he was off, I presume to tell his client, Mayor Destafano. That call took place at 12:03.

The press reports that it took the city 40 minutes to stop the police juggernaut that began promptly at noon. The mayor let that happen because he wants these protestors off the Green. Just why now after tolerating them for months? I am sure Yale University wants the Green reseeded for commencement ceremonies.

So it was the mayor’s decision to press on despite knowing that the matter was before a federal judge. It was the mayor’s decision to continue on even though he undoubtedly knew through his counsel that an order staying the city’s hand had issued. He did all this because, as he explained later in the day, these proceedings could drag on for some time. He wants the Green restored to the use of all the people. That’s gibberish. The protestors occupy a small portion of the sixteen acre Green. No one has been prevented from using this public space because of the presence of the protestors.

The Mayor was on a local radio station this morning. He was frustrated but defiant. The protestors are hypocrites, he said, turning to the courts for relief but then engaging in civil disobedience when it suits them. A politician accusing someone of hypocrisy? The Mayor has been living off the public teat too long; his perpetual campaign for office has made it impossible for him distinguish a campaign promise from the truth. The truth is the Mayor DeStefano had an itchy trigger finger yesterday, and he kept firing well after he knew he shouldn’t have.

The Mayor took a shot at me on the radio this morning. I was in the case for the free advertising, he suggested. This coming from a press-fleshing ward-heeler with the moral compass of a three-legged donkey. Can he spell principle?

Mayor DeStefano is a small-town politician who just can’t seem to muster support beyond city limits. His efforts to get statewide office have been rebuffed. He is feared by some, but trusted by few – you know the truth is for sale when you see his lips move. He has cost the city millions in legal fees given his outsized ego and impetuous maneuvering.

But the city keeps electing him. We get the government we deserve. If things are a little ragged and unstrung in New Haven, I guess we like it that way. So does Mayor DeStefano. Today he’s proud of jumping the gun and getting his face slapped by a federal judge. Call him the Emperor of New Haven. Yesterday he was naked for all to see. Today he calls that a victory. Some victory.

Comments: (2)

  • Occupy New Haven
    not a big fan of the Mayor either but I agree it's time for them to go. It sure would be nice on a sunny day to be able to sit and have a peacful lunch on the Green or enjoy the great summer concerts. Why should thier rights infringe on every one else's? Do they pay the taxes in NH?
    Posted on April 11, 2012 at 11:41 am by Jim
  • Frivolous Comment
    Frivolous comment, Jimbo. Adds nothing to the debate.
    Posted on April 12, 2012 at 3:16 pm by william doriss

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