Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 5
Seven Golden Gate Gaza Protesters Face 15 Years Over 4-Hour Bridge Shutdown
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 5

Seven Golden Gate Gaza Protesters Face 15 Years Over 4-Hour Bridge Shutdown

3 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 5

Summary

  • Seven protesters who locked themselves together during a 4-hour Golden Gate Bridge blockade on April 15, 2024 are now on trial in San Francisco Superior Court, facing up to 14 or 15 years in prison.
  • At 7:55 a.m. that Tax Day, 26 activists stopped cars midspan to protest U.S. tax dollars supporting Israel’s military campaign in Gaza; the seven defendants were the group that refused to move.
  • Thousands of vehicles backed up into Marin County before arrests and towing reopened the bridge about four hours later; commuters missed work and medical appointments, though no injuries were reported.
  • The potential sentence stands out in the Bay Area, where roadway protests have long been common and similar actions have often ended with community service and restitution rather than felony-level punishment.
  • The case could test how far prosecutors will go in treating disruptive Gaza-war demonstrations as serious criminal conduct in a region known for protest tolerance.

Insights

Why could a traffic protest on the Golden Gate Bridge now lead to a 15-year prison sentence?
Can police seize your private messages for attending a protest? This trial could set a new precedent.