Michael Justesen
Michael Thomas Justesen | |
---|---|
Born | May 17, 1950 |
Known for | Former member of the SLF, SDS , and Weather Underground Organization |
Michael Justesen (born May 17, 1950) is a former member of Students for a Democratic Society (SDS), the Seattle Liberation Front (SLF) and Weather Underground Organization (WUO).
Early education and activism
Two different sources give conflicting places of birth for Michael Justesen. According to the FBI Surveillance Files, Justesen was born in Sacramento, California. However, Michael Justesen was born in Seattle, Washington, according to Susan Stern, the author of With the Weathermen: The Personal Journal of a Revolutionary Woman. Justesen attended the University of Washington as a freshman in 1968. Justesen's first involvement with politics was participating in the University of Washington draft resistance in 1968, and he consequently withdrew from the University to devote all his time to the revolution. He became active in SDS soon after.[1]
SDS
Justesen was a part of the SDS leadership in the Seattle collective.[2] From August to mid September 1969, Justesen traveled to Japan to attend the Second International Anti-Imperialist Conference to make contact with "Red Army" student activists.[3][4] The focus of the conference was opposition to the United States in Vietnam and Korea and support for the Vietnamese people.[3] On October 8–11, 1969, Justesen volunteered to co-ordinate and send bail for SDS members from Seattle who were in Chicago, Illinois for the protest demonstrations for "Days of Rage." [5] Justesen attended the "War Council" meetings in Flint, Michigan on December 27–31, 1969.[6]
Seattle Weatherman
Michael Justesen played a leading role in the Seattle Weatherman collective. On December 1, 1969, Justesen led a group whom attacked the University of Washington Army ROTC.[7]
Seattle Liberation Front
Justesen attended the Seattle Liberation Fronts first meeting on January 19, 1970 led by the visiting University of Washington philosophy professor Michael Lerner.[8] Susan Stern, the author of With the Weatherman, wrote "The SLF was based on premises exactly opposite to Weatherman, and we were not invited to the first meeting, or to any others for that matter." [8] The SLF issued a call for people to shut down the Seattle Federal Courthouse. This was in response to the Chicago 7 trial verdict. Dozens were arrested, not including Justesen, on February 17, 1970. On April 16, 1970 a Federal Grand Jury in Seattle indicted eight people, for conspiracy to cause damage to Federal property at "The Day After." Justesen was charged along with Susan Stern, Roger Lippman, Joe Kelly, Jeff Dowd, Michael Lerner, Chip Marshall, and Mike Abeles. Before the trial began, Justesen went underground in early 1970.[9] The remaining members charged were called the Seattle 7. Judge Boldt declared a mistrial "because the defendants have seriously prejudiced themselves." [10]
Weather Underground Organization
Michael Justesen's fingerprints as well as Karen Ashley, Naomi Jaffe, Bill Ayers, Julie Nichamin, and 16 other Weather Underground member's prints were found by FBI in an abandoned apartment dubbed "Pine Street Bomb Factory" in San Francisco, California. Weather Underground members used the apartment during April 1970 to mid April 1971. FBI inspections found explosives and bomb making paraphernalia.[11]
"The Puget Sound Partisan" was a publication that identified with the Seattle Liberation Front. In the July 15, 1979 edition, volume 1, #1 appeared a letter from Michael Justesen expressing his feelings. Click here to view the letter.
Notes
References
- Federal Bureau of Investigation, "Weather Underground Organization (Weatherman)", (Illinois: Chicago Field Office, 1976).
- Roger Lippman, "Looking Back on the Seattle Conspiracy Trial." December 1990. http://terrasol.home.igc.org/trial.htm
- Susan Stern, "With the Weathermen: The Personal Journal of a Revolutionary Woman", (New York: Doubleday & Company, Inc.) 1975.
- Time Magazine, "Infiltrating the Underground." January 9, 1976. http://www.time.com/time/magazine.