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Submitted by Phil Owen on Mon, 02/26/2007 - 5:50am.
A young man squints against the camera flash. His long dark hair falls on shoulders hunched beneath an orange jail suit. He looks uneasy…. His uneasiness is not that of an embarrassing moment or an uncomfortable situation; it is the deep uncertainty that comes when the world falls out from under you. He flinches against the mug shot. The next day his face appears on the front page of the local newspaper under the headline: “Rape suspect lived in Watershed. Man appears to have stayed in underground hole.” In the following days, the newspaper prints sensational photos of his underground “bunker”, photos of his belongings strewn about by the police, and short clips – taken out of context – from his private journal. The article directly above his reads, “Olympia Council tells A young woman pulls a trash bag, heavy with the weight of two days’ garbage, out of a can and ties the ends. She moves quickly, collecting heaping ashtrays and wiping surfaces in a single motion. Kandace, 19 years old, is a resident of “It’s about brainstorming solutions together for poor people to survive in today’s economically challenged world,” she says of the Union, “…about helping people who don’t have other options to have an option. Including myself.”
David Lukas Lynch, age 23, was accused of raping an 11 year old girl. The rape occurred on February 5th. The attacker entered the girl’s home and raped her at knife point while her family slept. Police found David the next day, huddled in a church parking lot. They asked him if he hurt anyone the night before, and he said, “Yes, I think so.” They arrested him and searched his camp, finding a hunting knife and a journal in which David mentioned his desire to quit “child hunting”. The Olympian reported later that David was behaving “irrationally” and was so “out of control” that he had to be placed in four point restraints and put on suicide watch. The judge presiding over his case ordered a mental health evaluation to determine if he was capable of standing trial. Kandace grew up in foster care and was left to survive on her own at 18, when she aged out of the program. After bouncing between shelters, camps, and friends’ couches, Kandace discovered the PPU and the plans for a new tent city, which she described as “a doorway to something new, a way to be productive.” Asked about her opinion of the ordinance, Kandace commented that “the safest place for [homeless women] to be is on the sidewalks where there is light and people around.” The encampment was initially sited on a vacant City-owned lot at the corner of State and Camp residents checked in regularly with neighboring businesses to make sure they had no complaints. They set up security patrols, and organized volunteers to pick up trash in the neighborhood. When an elderly, senile woman who had been thrown out of the Salvation Army showed up at the camp, residents took her under wing and made sure she had a good tent and food to eat. David Lynch’s underground camp was impressive. About the size of a fifth-wheel trailer and built with plywood, it even sported a window, and was well hidden from public view. Sensing a hot story, the Olympian published lavish photos of the camp, calling it an “underground lair” in one “breaking news” update on their website. Readers commented on the Olympian’s website: “Put him back in the bunker and cover up the hole. Its a good place for someone who rapes an 11 year old.” “This guy is transient because he is lazy. He is a predator because he is wired wrong.” “I hope [he] gets repeatedly raped in prison until he has to wear diapers for the rest of his miserable life.” “Put him in with the rest of the houseless in prison.” When contacted for a sensational tidbit by the daily Olympian, David’s ex-girlfriend replied, “I want people to understand that he is a brilliant man and a complex thinker and a poet… [David] doesn't have a bad heart." The City of Neither the City Manager nor the Olympian noted the fact that 120 people, mostly members of the PPU, showed up at a November public hearing to express their opposition to the proposed sidewalk ordinance. After one week at the downtown location, On Thursday, February 8th, the Board of the Olympia Unitarian Universalist Congregation, sensing the urgency of But the City of The tent city is alive and well today, standing on property belonging to the Unitarian Universalist church. The church has offered to let But the City of On the morning of February 21st, the following headline appeared in the Olympian: “DNA tests clear rape suspect.” David Lynch is innocent. He did not commit the crime. Yet he was declared guilty in the court of public opinion. He was sentenced to several weeks locked in the Olympian stocks and pillory, with his life and home splayed out for the world to see and scorn. Christ once said, “What you do unto the least of these, you do unto me.” If David’s story has one lesson to share, it is that we as a society have failed to end the practice of crucifying our Lord. The problem isn’t that the cops made a mistake, nor is it that the media was out of line. They made the same assumptions that any reasonable person would make. They found a young, disheveled, confused, mentally ill man who lived in a hole very near to the victim’s home. He possessed hunting knives. He mentioned “child hunting” in his journal. He was homeless. Almost anyone would have found him to be suspicious. The problem that must be faced, however, is that there was no concrete evidence of David’s guilt. In fact, the little girl who was attacked described her attacker as brown skinned, with short dark hair, a pointed goatee and mustache, and wearing glasses. David is pale, with long shoulder length hair and a clean shaven face. He did not fit the victim’s description of the attacker. David was merely mentally ill and in the wrong neighborhood. So the problem was not that anyone was out of line… The problem is that sometimes being reasonable can have dramatic and harmful consequences. It was normal, reasonable people whose assumptions led them to burn young women to death for the practice of “witchcraft”. It was normal, reasonable people who endorsed and participated in the Jim Crow system. It was normal, reasonable people who crucified Jesus. And today it is normal, reasonable people who believe that the mentally ill and the homeless are a danger to society. The truth is that reasonable people are a far greater threat to the homeless than the homeless are to society. And because of this, the homeless are vulnerable when they camp alone. They are not safe from us. This is why Jesus said, “Blessed are the poor.” The homeless do not have many of the worldly comforts that the rest of us enjoy. But God’s Kingdom isn’t about worldly comforts. It is about what we do and who we are. The residents at Maybe if we start paying attention to the poor, if we start noticing the way they share their most basic resources like food and blankets, maybe we just might discover what it means to be “blessed”, or holy. And maybe we’ll think twice before we persecute the next David Lynch.
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Camp Quixote |
Thank You Phil, that was
Submitted by Rob Richards on Mon, 02/26/2007 - 10:06am.“One man scorned and covered with scars still strove with his last ounce of courage to reach the unreachable stars; and the world was better for this.
Crapola!
Submitted by Phil Owen on Mon, 02/26/2007 - 2:09am.Must always plug one's blog when participating in a public forum:
The Canaanite's Call
The timing of the young
Submitted by Mike on Mon, 02/26/2007 - 7:08am.Thanks for posting about the more complete picture around this arrest and Camp Quixote.
I've thought a lot about
Submitted by Rob Richards on Mon, 02/26/2007 - 6:06pm.“One man scorned and covered with scars still strove with his last ounce of courage to reach the unreachable stars; and the world was better for this.
Amen
Submitted by Norm on Mon, 02/26/2007 - 11:11pm.Several people talked to me
Submitted by Mike on Mon, 02/26/2007 - 8:42pm.I thought that Camp Quixote downtown had a lot of power. It was a community within a community. It is not so visible to me now. Maybe it was somewhat easier to sweep away with or without any open communication about the "lynch rape?"
How long did it take us here at OB to start talking about it?
Thank you for writing
Submitted by OperaGirl on Mon, 02/26/2007 - 8:15am.Thank you for writing this.
“Tell me, what is it you plan on doing with your one wild and precious life?” ~ Mary Oliver
Good Write up Phil
Submitted by Norm on Mon, 02/26/2007 - 3:10pm.I'm glad you do so much to help people out, but I think you may have missed your calling as a pro-writer.
Nah...
Submitted by Phil Owen on Mon, 02/26/2007 - 5:35pm.The great thing about being a catholic worker is that I get to do a lot of different things. I get to be a chef, a carpenter, an advocate, a janitor, a writer, and a friend... sometimes all in a single day! So I don't have to miss out on the things I am good at and love to do.
No boss and no landlord makes for a hell of a lot of freedom.
The Canaanite's Call
A note on Lynch's journal...
Submitted by Phil Owen on Tue, 02/27/2007 - 1:29am.When the Olympian printed that Lynch had written about "child hunting" they provided very little context. I had a look at his Myspace blog, and found that a great deal of his writing is so incredibly garbled that when taken as a whole it is incomprehensible. When taking a single line out of context, there may be quite a bit that would be damning. Yet when you put that line back in context, next to the preceding line, in loses its threatening quality.
The Canaanite's Call
Thanks, Phil
Submitted by enpen on Tue, 02/27/2007 - 5:55am.While we don't share assumptions of faith, your words share well. Thank you.
"Anybody who doesn't know that politics is crime has got a few screws loose."