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Four Former '70s Radicals Sentenced
AP News vai New York Times ^ | February 14, 2003 | By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Posted on 02/14/2003 12:55:42 PM PST by 68skylark

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) -- Four graying former members of the Symbionese Liberation Army -- the '70s radical group that kidnapped newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst -- were sentenced to prison terms ranging from six to eight years Friday for a murderous 1975 bank robbery.

The sentences were largely spelled out in a plea bargain reached by the former radicals in November.

Before they were sentenced, three of the four apologized to the family of Myrna Opsahl, a bank customer who was killed by a shotgun blast during the holdup in surburban Sacramento 27 years ago while depositing her church collection.

``I will be sorry for the rest of my life,'' said Emily Montague, 55, who was formerly known as Emily Harris. It was her gun that fired the deadly blast; she has said it went off accidentally.

Montague's ex-husband, William Harris, 58, addressed Opsahl's son, saying: ``I've thought about your mother a lot. Your mother was never an abstraction to me. It's absolutely unacceptable that this happened.''

Montague was sentenced to eight years in prison, Harris to seven years, and Michael Bortin, 54, and Sarah Jane Olson, 55, to six years each. Olson -- who was known as Kathleen Soliah during her SLA days -- was the only one who did not address the court but apologized in a letter included in her probation report.

``If we had foreseen her killing, we would never have robbed the bank,'' she wrote. ``We were young and foolish. We felt we were committing an idealized, ideological action to obtain government-insured money and that we were not stealing from ordinary people. ... In the end we stole someone's life.''

All four had pleaded guilty to murder.

Superior Court Judge Thomas Cecil acknowledged that the Board of Prison Terms could still extend the sentences agreed to by all sides, but he discouraged such an action, saying he and everyone involved had carefully considered the long history of the case in making their recommendations.

``We recognize the seriousness of the crimes that occurred in 1975,'' he said. But he said the prospects of the defendants are clear: ``We need not guess whether these defendants will function in society. We have seen it.''

He referred to their upstanding lives since the crime and said, ``In my view and in the view of the district attorney, none of these defendants poses a danger to society.''

A fifth defendant, James Kilgore, 55, is also charged in the case. After decades underground, he was captured last year in South Africa, where he had assumed a new identity and was working as a professor.

Opsahl's son, Dr. Jon Opsahl, read a statement in which he told of the anguish his family has endured and how he had come to believe in ``monsters'' after his mother was killed. He said that ``a group of pathetic, deranged revolutionaries decided to make my mother instantly expendable.''

But he said he agreed to the plea bargain and felt that it was ironically more devastating to the defendants now than it would have been had they been captured, tried and sentenced back in the '70s.

``Back then, they were angry and foolish with nothing to lose,'' he said. ``Back then, some might have thought they were martyrs. ... Now they are more tolerant, a bit wiser and with so much more to lose. Maybe now the defendants will come to terms with what they did.''

Among the most gripping statements to the court during the sentencing was that of a bank teller who was there during the robbery.

``I was among the 25 people in the bank. There is not a day that goes by that we do not relive that tragedy,'' Rachel Harp said. ``We were threatened with guns held to our heads. We were kicked and left on the ground as if we did not matter.''

She wept as she went on: ``I was only 22 years old and it changed me. Life's journeys change us, but this one was not for the better. We were all victims.''

It was Olson's capture in 1999 after 25 years as a fugitive that began the chain of events leading to the plea agreements. She had assumed a new name and built an ordinary life as a married mother of three children in St. Paul, Minn.

In 2001, she pleaded guilty to trying to blow up two Los Angeles police cars during the '70s and was sentenced to 14 years in prison.

Harris' wife and two sons were in the courtroom, along with Olson's physician husband and two grown daughters.

The Harrises spent eight years in prison for the Hearst kidnapping nearly three decades ago. They divorced after their release. Emily Harris took up computer work and he ex-husband became an investigator for a San Francisco law firm, where he met and married a lawyer.

Bortin worked as flooring contractor.


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption
KEYWORDS: sla; terrorism
While we're focused on the evil that threatens us from overseas, we have to deal with home-grown evil as well.
1 posted on 02/14/2003 12:55:42 PM PST by 68skylark
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To: 68skylark
Despite her lack of public remorse, Miss Olson is very, very sorry -- sorry that she got CAUGHT and that she can conjure the depth of public support she thought she might get from the simpleton set.
2 posted on 02/14/2003 12:59:09 PM PST by laconic
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To: 68skylark
Only 6-8 years for murder? Sheesh.....
3 posted on 02/14/2003 1:00:00 PM PST by egarvue (Martin Sheen is not my president...)
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To: laconic
Miss Olson is very, very sorry -- sorry that she got CAUGHT and that she can conjure the depth of public support she thought she might get from the simpleton set.

That name sure is familiar, but the '70s were a long, long time ago.

Did she have a twin?

4 posted on 02/14/2003 1:03:06 PM PST by Willie Green (Go Pat Go!!!)
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To: laconic
She wept as she went on: ``I was only 22 years old and it changed me. Life's journeys change us, but this one was not for the better. We were all victims.''

If she's a victim, why is she still alive? Why doesn't she realize that Myrna Opsahl was the victim? Opsahl was the one that got killed. Idiots!

5 posted on 02/14/2003 1:03:43 PM PST by xJones
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To: laconic
Four Former '70s Radicals Sentenced

FORMER radical? I suppose that now she fits in at most Democratic conventions means that she is NOT a radical now? Where do these journalists come from?

6 posted on 02/14/2003 1:08:15 PM PST by 11th Earl of Mar
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To: xJones
One was the victim of murder and one was the victim of a traumatic experience. You are showing a lack of compassion. These are lenient sentences for a murder for sure. The SLA was a group of self indulgent and self absorbed murderous brats.
7 posted on 02/14/2003 1:09:21 PM PST by Movemout
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To: Movemout
These are lenient sentences for a murder for sure

Yes, they sure are but we can only hope that they get sent to real prisons with some of today's "misguided youths", then they will get what they deserve...

8 posted on 02/14/2003 1:19:47 PM PST by NativeSon (Nothing says "Love" like a new gun!)
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To: NativeSon
They've already done some time, some of them anyway. The Harris woman is a highly paid computer consultant after her prison computer training and Disney Corp (thanks Disney!) apprenticeship. One of the members of the Manson gang, I recently read, earned a Master's Degree in prison. What a country!

While the prosecutors are to be commended for pursuing this case despite some opposition in their offices and a total lack of interest on the part of the public, these sentences are a joke!

9 posted on 02/14/2003 1:24:29 PM PST by Revolting cat! (Someone left the cake out in the rain I dont think that I can take it coz it took so long to bake it)
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To: 68skylark
'"We were young and foolish."'

Only a generation weaned on Timothy Leary and George McGovern would consider armed robbery and murder "just a phase". These are the people who voted for the Clintons twice in a LSD flashback.

10 posted on 02/14/2003 1:29:34 PM PST by Middle Man
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To: 68skylark
Harsh sentences considering that O.J. Simpson got off scot free.
11 posted on 02/14/2003 1:52:52 PM PST by hgro
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To: laconic
She initially received a great deal of support from people here in the Twin Cites. They raised $1 million for her bail, and began a fund for her defense. Fund-raising techniques included taking donations over the website and publishing a cookbook. All of this, of course, was predicated on the idea that their little activist friend was, you know, like, INNOCENT!

I like to think of Soliah's supporters as her latest victims.

12 posted on 02/14/2003 1:57:27 PM PST by ChiefsMan
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To: xJones
Saying "we were all victims" salves her conscience. She's not a victim in the slightest, other than of her own free will and evil ways. I hope they put her cooking talents to good use in the prison kitchen, where she can do her culinary wonders with Hormel chili, Spam and baked beans.
13 posted on 02/14/2003 3:44:56 PM PST by laconic
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To: laconic
Among the most gripping statements to the court during the sentencing was that of a bank teller who was there during the robbery.

``I was among the 25 people in the bank. There is not a day that goes by that we do not relive that tragedy,'' Rachel Harp said. ``We were threatened with guns held to our heads. We were kicked and left on the ground as if we did not matter.''

She wept as she went on: ``I was only 22 years old and it changed me. Life's journeys change us, but this one was not for the better. We were all victims.''

You may not have read this section carefully enough. This is not one of the defendants speaking, but rather a victim impact statement introduced by the prosecution.

14 posted on 02/14/2003 5:16:41 PM PST by TheMole
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To: TheMole
Well, it certainly SOUNDS like something that Olson/Soliah (who led a very carefree life and wrote a cookbook with a mocking title before she was Caught) would have said, so I make no apologies.
15 posted on 02/14/2003 5:28:11 PM PST by laconic
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