Address of sender omitted
RE: Sen. Bill SB1796
Dear Gov. Davis:
I write to you with hopes that you will sign State Senate Bill SB l796. This bill protects the constitutional right to picket without fear of arrest.
This bill limits the penalties for misdemeanors committed for purposes of political expression that do not threaten to or actually cause physical harm to property or persons.
The passage of this bill will allow those who wish to protest, protection from arrest and confinement for merely exercising their constitutional rights. In a time when many of our rights are being subjected to scrutiny by those who wish to undo what has "worked" for 200 years, I find the passage of this bill eliminates at least one instance of silencing those who want to be able to carry a picket sign in protest. What better way can the public know of abuses that are carried out each day by unethical organizations?
The conviction of my friend, Keith Henson is a perfect example to show the need for your signature on this bill. I have enclosed a copy of his daughters letter to you asking for his pardon. This man was a productive American citizen, paying taxes, taking care of his family. Because of his effort to bring to the public what he felt was their "right to know," he was arrested.
I met you Governor Davis, here in Hemet when you were seeking office. I had hoped when I voted for you that you would represent my interests. I have followed your career since l977 when someone in your office during Gov. Browns tenure pointed me in the right direction for help. I thanked that party then and I thank you now for considering this most important bill .
Sincerely,
Ida J. Camburn
Enclosure
From: idaj007@aol.com (IDA J 007)
Date: 05 Sep 2002 05:17:46 GMT
Subject: Amber Henson Letter to Gov. Davis. enclosed with Camburn letter
Message-ID: <20020905011746.24528.00001676@mb-mr.aol.com>
Ambers address omitted
August 10, 2002
Governor Gray Davis Governor's Office State Capitol Attention: Legal Affairs Secretary Sacramento, CA 95814
Dear Governor Davis:
This letter is a request for you to pardon my father, Keith Henson.
He was convicted last year by a Scientology controlled DA and Court in, what I and many other people see, as a miscarriage of justice. As I understand it, the court would not even permit him to speak in his defense. After the trial my father left the country for fear he would be killed by Scientology agents in the Riverside jail and, eventually, was accepted as a refugee in Canada.
Since he left, my grandfather (his father) has died and my father was unable to attend the funeral. Just very recently, his mother died, and he was unable to go to her hospice bedside and say good-bye, or attend the funeral.
What sometimes keeps me up at night and makes me cry myself to sleep is when I worry that my dad won't be able to come to my wedding. I know that I'm not getting married anytime soon, but I don't know how long this is going to go on for. And I can't have my wedding in Canada, not that I don't like it there, because I made a promise to my friend that I would get married in her back yard. And I know she'll be living in Southern California for at least the next 15 years.
I don't think that my dad did anything wrong, and I think that if you look at the "evidence" (on the web) you'll see that, too.
I have dreams, nightmares really, where my dad is back in the states and I'm scared that he's going to be caught and taken back. I have these nightmares a lot. There's only one way I can see to make that stop.
My dad used to be my dad. Be there for me to sit and have conversations with me in person. Be there when my car needed work. I know that I wouldn't be living with him all the time, as I'm in college. But it'd be nice to have a family to return to in the summer instead of having to make my way on my own.
My friends miss my dad. They miss his crazy stories. They think of him as a peer. My dad likes the group of guys I hang out with. With five daughters, my dad deserves to have some kind of "son he never had." My boyfriend of eight months has never even met my father.
Also, I need my dad to be the engineer he's always been to me. I need him to fix my car, explain stuff to me, and help my mom out fixing the house appliances.
Wow, my mom. You don't know how much easier my life would be if I didn't have to worry about my mom.
These aren't things a 19-year-old girl in college ought to be worrying about: money, whether or not her parents are spending enough time with her, will her dad be arrested. Please, use your abilities to help out a fellow citizen. I'm not asking for much, just a simple pardon for a man who never did anything wrong so that he can be with his family again. Please.
Thank you for your time,
Amber Henson
From: idaj007@aol.com (IDA J 007)
Date: 05 Sep 2002 05:26:08 GMT
Subject: Food for Thought
Message-ID: <20020905012608.24528.00001679@mb-mr.aol.com>
A message from Clarence Seward Darrow
"The litigants and their lawyers are supposed to want justice, but in reality
, there is no justice, either in or out of court. In fact, the word can not be
defined..in the last analysis, most jury trials are contests between the rich
and the poor. Crimianl cases, however, practically always have the poor on
trial" --- Clarence Seward Darrow
One would hope that someday this would not be so true!
Ida J. Camburn