Cape Cod Activists 'Guilty' for Plymouth Nuclear Plant Protest

Three years after Fukushima, and approximately one year after their acts of civil resistance, 12 Massachusetts residents were found guilty Friday in Plymouth (MA) District Court for illegally entering the grounds of the Pilgrim Nuclear Power Plant located on the Cape Cod coast.

The activists admitted to entering the Plymouth facility, but using the ‘necessity defense,’ declared they were innocent of “trespassing” because they were trying to prevent a greater and imminent public danger from occuring.

Diana Turco, co-founder of , Cape Cod residents who want the nuclear plant permanently shut down, was one of the 12 defendants.

“There are cancers caused by the nuclear power plant. There is no assurance of public safety in the evacuation plans. Those are huge issues,” Turco said. “The verdict doesn’t matter; the truth got out.”

Bruce Taub, trial counsel to the defendants, told Common Dreams that “part of our triumph was that use of the necessity defense was allowed, it just wasn’t sufficient to persuade a judge that the defendants in this action weren’t guilty of trespass.”

“The defendants were clear that their principal goal all along was to “put Entergy on trial” and to use their arrests to serve that end. We were very fortunate to draw a judge who gave us remarkably free range to put forward our case against Entergy, to advance the necessity defense, and to present our expert and lay evidence at trial and thereby to the public,” Taub said.

The judge ruled the standards for the necessity defense were not met.

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