A San Francisco judge has dismissed most of the charges against an activist group arrested in April for a protest that shut down morning commute traffic on the Golden Gate Bridge.
Judge Brendan P. Conroy on Friday dismissed 32 of the 44 charges against 26 Bay Area activists known as the GG26, arrested during an April 15 protest on the Golden Gate Bridge, according to a news release. One individual was dismissed from the case entirely.
The judge also signaled openness to reducing felony charges against eight protesters to misdemeanors and could adjust restitution amounts at the next hearing on Dec. 6, authorities noted.
“Today’s decision is a huge win for our clients and the community at large,” said Jeff Wozniak, an attorney representing the protestors facing felony charges. “The clients know their actions were just, taken to speak up for the thousands of Palestinians murdered in the past year and that the initial, overly-harsh charges were merely an effort to silence their activism.”
The demonstration, which called for an end to U.S. support of Israeli actions in Gaza and an arms embargo against Israel, briefly disrupted traffic on the bridge, authorities said.
The post Judge dismisses majority of charges against Gaza protesters who disrupted bridge traffic appeared first on Local News Matters.