A noted Jesuit peace activist who has spent over a decade in jail for
nonviolent protest actions, mostly over nuclear weapons issues, has
been returned to prison for probation violations.
Fr. Steve Kelly, who has been on probation since June 2012 after
serving a 15-month sentence for breaking into a nuclear weapons
facility, was sent back to prison May 20 by a federal judge.
Kelly, 64, was transported from the SeaTac Detention Center to the
United States District Court, Western District of Washington at Tacoma,
to receive the 60-day sentence. With time served, he is expected to be
released May 29.
More than a dozen friends and supporters, including members of
Tacoma’s St. Leo parish community and his Jesuit superior Fr. John
Fuchs, attended the hearing. Some also attended a vigil outside the
courthouse an hour before Kelly’s court appearance.
Kelly was arrested March 29, Good Friday, for blocking a road outside
the Lockheed Martin missile plant in Sunnyvale, Calif. A trespassing
charge was later dropped, but he was taken into custody for an
outstanding federal warrant associated with probation violations.
Kelly was on probation for the 2009 Disarm Now Plowshares action, during which he and four other activists cut through multiple security fences
and accessed highly sensitive areas of the U.S. Navy’s Strategic
Weapons Facility, Pacific in Bangor, Wash., where more than 2,300
nuclear weapons are believed to be stored.
After serving 15 months in prison for that action, Kelly was released
June 21, and his first probation violation occurred within 72 hours
when he failed to contact his probation officer.
He violated his
probation again a couple months later when he traveled to Atherton,
Calif., for the funeral of Sacred Heart Sr. Ann Montgomery, a longtime
activist and friend who had been part of the Disarm Now Plowshares
action.
In court May 20, Kelly made an emotional appeal for the abolition of
nuclear weapons and the healing of divisions between people. Other
testimonies praised Kelly’s character and commitment to peace.
Fuchs addressed the judge on Kelly’s behalf stating, “Fr. Steve Kelly
is one of my brother Jesuits … Our religious Constitutions commit us to
working for peace and justice in our world, resisting all forms of
violence and unjust war, following our consciences regardless of the
consequences. Steve is being faithful to his vocation as a Jesuit.
“I know Fr. Steve very well, having directed him in a number of
spiritual retreats, and I can assure you … that he is one of the most
nonviolent, gentle and committed persons I know,” Fuchs said. “I only
wish that I and the rest of us could be nearly as courageous as he has
been in following his call.”
Over the past two decades, Kelly has been imprisoned for an estimated
12 years, according to St. Leo parishioner and friend Joe Power-Drutis.
Kelly has been held often in solitary confinement because as a matter
of conscience he refuses to work for the Bureau of Prisons while
incarcerated.
Kelly discussed his unique witness in a 1998 interview with America magazine. “My hope is that the church will really become a peace church,” he said.
“I realize that what I’ve done is not what most people would call
being an effective witness. I don’t expect the culture as a whole to
change overnight. The people I would like to reach are people of faith
and belief. As for what I’ll be doing in the future, as long as nuclear
weapons are being made for use on human beings, I’ll try to resist their
creation.”