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		Statue of Liberty climber sentenced to 
		community service, probation 
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		 [March 20, 2019] 
		By Brendan Pierson 
 NEW YORK (Reuters) - A woman convicted of 
		trespassing and disorderly conduct after she climbed the Statue of 
		Liberty's stone pedestal on July 4 last year to protest U.S. immigration 
		policy was sentenced to 200 hours of community service and five years' 
		probation on Tuesday.
 
 Therese Patricia Okoumou arrived at her sentencing hearing before U.S. 
		Magistrate Judge Gabriel Gorenstein in Manhattan with her whole face in 
		clear tape, wearing a headband that said "I CARE". She removed the tape 
		after Gorenstein said he would not proceed otherwise.
 
 Okoumou was arrested after she scaled the base of the statue and began a 
		three-hour standoff with police that led to the evacuation of Liberty 
		Island on one of the landmark's busiest days of the year.
 
 
		
		 
		She and her lawyer, Ron Kuby, later said her act of civil disobedience 
		was primarily to demonstrate against the Trump administration's policy 
		of separating migrant children from parents caught crossing the U.S. 
		border illegally.
 
 Administration officials said the policy was needed to secure the 
		border, but it was ended in June after images of separated youngsters 
		held in cage-like detention facilities sparked a furor both at home and 
		abroad.
 
 "This case is a fight against injustice," Okoumou, a U.S. citizen born 
		in the Democratic Republic of Congo, said before she was sentenced in a 
		courtroom packed with her supporters. "Well into the 21st century, some 
		are justifying the caging of migrant children."
 
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			Therese Patricia Okoumou speaks to the media after her sentencing 
			for conviction on attempted scaling of the Statue of Liberty to 
			protest the U.S. immigration policy, outside a federal court in New 
			York, U.S., March 19, 2019. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton 
            
 
            Prosecutors had asked that Okoumou spend at least a month in prison. 
			Gorenstein said that was unnecessary to deter her from committing 
			crimes, but he rebuked her for putting the lives of her rescuers in 
			danger.
 "A person with some empathy might have said today, 'I'm sorry that I 
			risked the lives of others,'" the judge said.
 
 Gorenstein said he would consider a motion to end the probation 
			early if Okoumou adhered to its terms.
 
 Kuby said at the hearing that Okoumou had recently been offered a 
			job at the nonprofit Salvage Art Institute.
 
 (Reporting by Brendan Pierson in New York; Editing by Richard Chang)
 
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