Watching Chris Hayes in MSNBC right now. Reminded about the time I randomly met him in the first week of Trump presidency. In front of the federal court in Brooklyn as the ACLU argued the first Muslim Ban case. Late night & cold. Thousands of people outside chanting. Short story:
Was at JFK airport earlier doing legal volunteering & protesting. Had gotten home & was just getting ready to crawl into bed when I got word a Brooklyn judge was about to hear the first case arguing for an injunction of the policy. Bundled up & raced to the court 3 miles away.
I wanted to try to get into the courtroom to actually watch the argument. When I got there hundreds of people were already outside chanting. I worked my way to the front. I had clerked for two judges in the courthouse & knew the court officers. They weren’t letting people in yet.
Within 20 or so minutes, the hundreds of people outside had turned to thousands. It was freezing outside but the number of people was making it warm. The legal team was escorted inside. It was just a matter of time when the court officers were going to open the doors. Now recall:
The first week of the Trump presidency felt like it lasted years. We realized right away it was going to be worse than we had imagined. Twitter fury. Xenophobia. Racism. And the Muslim Ban. But there was RESISTANCE. Terrifying times, but incredible energy all over the country.
Back to courthouse. Finally the doors opened & the crowd crushed like a metal show. Tons of fellow protestors were making their way in as people called out “Press!” I was about to make my way in then realized: there was limited space. Press needed in. I started boxing people out.
I was literally grabbing people w/ press passes (remember @macfathom?) & pushing them forward & inside while holding non journalists back, screaming “Let press in!” People started getting it & within 5 minutes doors shut. I was outside. Honestly feeling a bit bummed but whatever.
I wasn’t really on Twitter at all then. Mostly a passive observer. But I noticed people were getting updates on their phone. @JackieVimo from @NILC was inside & was live tweeting. Then about 10 minutes after doors closed, some dude in a hoodie pushed to the front saying “press!”
The guy in the hoodie yelling “press!” gets up to the door & starts trying to get the court officers’ attention. I tell him to his back: “Hey man, they shut it down like 10 minutes ago.” He turns around and he looks familiar and I realize it’s none other than Chris Hayes.
I said “hey Chris” — like we were old friends — mentioned that there’s this immigration attorney live tweeting from inside. He asked what was going on. I updated him that arguments had started & seemed like it was going well. Judge Donnelly was asking the right questions. Then:
And I screamed — THE STAY IS GRANTED!! THE STAY IS GRANTED!! Chris goes: “wait who is saying that?” “Jackie is. The immigration attorney inside.” “Can I see?” I hand him my phone. “Can I hold onto this for a minute?” “Course.” He immediately grabs his phone and dials into MSNBC.
Chris gets on the phone with a producer & then goes live via phone. I remember him saying something like: “Cannot fully confirm, but I’m standing outside the courthouse with some guys phone who is following this immigration attorney on Twitter who says the stay was granted.”
As news starts spreading outside the screams get louder and louder & it’s a damn celebration. We’re all jumping up and down. Hugging strangers. Chris is trying to report and clearly can’t hear a thing. The reporting ends, he hands me back my phone and thanks me with a smile.
I really believe Chris Hayes literally broke the damn story because he happened to show up late, got stuck outside standing next to me, I happened to get on twitter & follow @JackieVimo & handed him my phone. I gave him my biz card. And then got back to celebrating.
Epilogue to the story: ACLU lawyers emerged from that hearing like absolute rockstars. And I ended up in the opening sequence of the ACLU documentary The Fight.

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More from @ScottHech

6 Nov
The NYC mayor Bill de Blasio doesn’t see anything wrong with this.
The NYC mayor Bill de Blasio doesn’t see anything wrong with this.
The NYC mayor Bill de Blasio doesn’t see anything wrong with this. Image
Read 10 tweets
6 Nov
Open this photo up. Zoom in. This is tonight. In Union Square. In NYC. This is how our leaders choose to spend taxpayer money.
I’ve watched hundreds of videos of NYPD policing protests since May. People make light of them, but bicycle cops have been among the most violent & brutal. Just last night video of attacking w/ bikes & dragging a protestor by the neck. This train of bicycle cops is ominous.
The NYPD is *unreformable.* Despite decades of reform, they're still using banned chokeholds. Cars, chemicals, bicycles & batons as weapons. Conduct that, if committed by people I represented, would be prosecuted as violent felonies. Wrote on it here:
nbcnews.com/think/opinion/…
Read 5 tweets
5 Nov
NYPD rioting & assaulting civilians in NYC. This billboard last month. Times Square. Across from NYPD station. “Hey NYPD. It’s us. NYC residents. The ones who pay your salary. We paid $300 million to settle your lawsuits. You paid nothing. We need to talk.”
The $300 million to settle NYPD lawsuits over the last five years could instead fund proven non-police violence interruption programs and summer youth employment in every neighborhood in NYC for the next 5 years.
The $327 million per year that NYC residents pay for police in schools with no impact on public safety, could instead fund full four-year scholarships for over 4000 students to attend NY state colleges.
Read 5 tweets
5 Nov
The best and most unexpected part of this video as it :32 when some dude just nonchalantly walks behind her in a t-shirt reading something & paying her no attention whatsoever like he has no idea she’s even there.
Holy sh*t! He comes back at :46! Walks back the other way. No attention paid. Who is this hero?
And again at :56! What is he reading? And what is that thing draped over his arm? A prayer shawl? A nice cashmere scarf?
Read 5 tweets
5 Nov
“Kettling” is a hyper-violent, dangerous, escalation tactic by police. Traps a crowd of people in a confined space for a prolonged time. Human Rights Watch just found the NYPD committed international human rights violations in the Bronx for the tactic in June. Tonight the NYPD:
The investigation by Human Rights Watch (@hrw) found that NYPD planned a coordinated assault on hundreds of Bronx protestors in June. Trapped them 10 minutes before curfew to justify attacking them for being out past curfew. Hundreds injured. All on film. hrw.org/news/2020/09/3…
The racist, brutal, lying NYPD commissioner Dermot Shea (@NYPDShea) didn’t just refuse to apologize for the brutal planned assault of thousands of peaceful protestors. He CONDEMNED the suggestion the NYPD did anything wrong. And Bill de Blasio stands behind this guy 100%.
Read 4 tweets
3 Nov
Ordinarily you can’t just “turn down” a judge’s order.
In Texas a few years ago a judge raised a Black woman’s bail for “defying” his order to say “yes” instead of “yea.”
Can’t tell you how many times a person I have represented has gotten arrested & charged with criminal contempt for knocking on his moms door after an order protection issued she didn’t even want.
Read 5 tweets

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