- H.D. Thoreau
Aloha. My name is Cody Jo. I am a 3rd-year undergrad at the University of New Mexico, currently studying existentialism, peace/justice studies, and non-fiction. As a seeker of truth, I have been inspired by the global enthusiasm to create a better way, and have been present at some of the (un)Occupy Albuquerque events, but I would not define myself as an active member of the movement. My presence as a student and compassionate observer is my primary occupation.
I represent one student, reading a book - the most fundamental function of being a student - while on university grounds, at Yale Park - a crime which I was arrested for on Wednesday evening October 26. Was it a bad place to read a book? I considered my environment to be a sphere of learning and was allowed to sit on a bench, undisturbed for twenty minutes. After the news crews packed up, the police approached me, but other than threats to arrest me for "disobedience," could offer me no logical explanation for my sudden expulsion from the park. Any one else might have just walked away, and seeing as I was the only person there who was arrested Wednesday evening, I imagine everyone else did. The point is, I shouldn't have had to walk away. I asked the police if I was in danger or if I posed a threat and they said no; what it came down to was 'you do what we tell you to do because our boss told us to do this.' Well that notion just happens to run completely counter to a personal principle of mine, so I resolutely defied their order. I was yanked from my seat and arrested. I did not resist but was man-handled to the point of painful bruising. In coming to this university I do not remember signing any kind of contract that ordained campus security as my superiors. I was under the impression that campus security is there to protect me, not to oppress me. UNMPD were overzealous in their methods but they believed they were just following orders, which means President Something Schmidley is the one responsible for this spot of trouble. As a private citizen in a public park where I was breaking no laws, I wasn't compelled to obey Schmidley's paranoid mandate. Only after I was handcuffed did the officers take the book I had been reading out of my hands. There were a dozen or so witnesses and, fortunately, a fellow student was fast enough to catch my unlawful arrest on film...
If the role of the president is to arrest a student on the grounds that they are in violation of his impromptu Draconian laws, then every student is at risk! I experienced direct violence, harsh detainment, and the establishment of a criminal record as a result of President Schmidley's inability to negotiate with experienced peace-keepers. I cannot guess at his motive there but it seems like something a desperate dictator might do - isolate himself, bark orders, and apply militaristic pressure to dissidents and bystanders alike. I know that nobody in the (un)Occupy Albuquerque movement would ever harm me in any way, but what I did not know is that agents of the university would harm me, while in my functions as a student. I have lost confidence in President Schmidley's ability to protect his students from himself. I call for his immediate resignation and for the easement of tensions between university administration and peaceful organizers.
A Record of Events leading up to & following my arrest...







