Eagle Rock Defenders camp ‘crushed’ by Police

Dozens of heav­i­ly armed Police and State Troop­ers have raid­ed the peace­ful defend­ers camp at Eagle Rock in Michi­gan’s Upper Penin­su­la; “crush­ing” the month-long effort to pro­tect the sacred site from a con­tro­ver­sial sul­fide mine.

Eagle Rock flag
Dozens of heav­i­ly armed Police and State Troop­ers have raid­ed the peace­ful defend­ers camp at Eagle Rock in Michi­gan’s Upper Penin­su­la; “crush­ing” the month-long effort to pro­tect the sacred site from a con­tro­ver­sial sul­fide mine.

Raid at Eagle Rock; Two campers arrest­ed, camp destroyed

BIG BAY, Mich. – The defend­ers of sacred Eagle Rock sat in a cir­cle and wept as they were sur­round­ed by dozens of heav­i­ly armed state and local police offi­cers who raid­ed the Eagle Rock encamp­ment the morn­ing of May 27 arrest­ing two campers at the request of Ken­necott Eagle Min­er­als, who wast­ed no time destroy­ing the month-old camp to make way for their nick­el and cop­per mine.

Wit­ness­es say there were about six peo­ple at Eagle Rock when police moved in includ­ing four campers who had spent the night and two sup­port­ers who arrived with a warn­ing the raid was immi­nent. Armed with high-pow­ered rifles, Michi­gan State Police and mine secu­ri­ty could be seen atop Eagle Rock scan­ning the vast Yel­low Dog Plains with binoc­u­lars appar­ent­ly look­ing for tres­passers.

Two hand­cuffed campers, who refused to leave when ordered by police, were tak­en away by sheriff’s deputies and dri­ven near­ly one hour to the Mar­quette Coun­ty Jail and were released on bond. Arrest­ed were Keweenaw Bay Indi­an Com­mu­ni­ty mem­bers Chris Chosa, 28, and Char­lotte Loons­foot, 37, both of Bara­ga, Mich.

Loons­foot was one of three women who set up the encamp­ment April 23 protest­ing the arrest three days ear­li­er of envi­ron­men­tal­ist Cyn­thia Pry­or and hop­ing to pro­tect Eagle Rock from the Eagle Project nick­el and cop­per mine. Despite fed­er­al treaties that allow Ojib­wa to hunt, fish and gath­er on the Yel­low Dog Plains, the state of Michi­gan leased the land to Ken­necott to open a sul­fide mine. The mine por­tal is planned near the front of Eagle Rock and the tun­nel will trav­el under­neath the rock.

“Today, we got a mes­sage in camp that police were on their way,” said non-Native camper Cather­ine Park­er of the warn­ing from two mem­bers of the Yel­low Dog Water­shed Pre­serve who arrived short­ly before police. “Char­lotte and Chris had no inten­tion of leav­ing vol­un­tar­i­ly.”

Park­er said the Eagle Rock defend­ers wept for the land as they sat in a cir­cle.

“There were a lot of tears and pas­sion­ate remarks because the peo­ple have come to care a lot about each oth­er out here,” said Park­er of Mar­quette, Mich. “We have all been work­ing togeth­er, Native Amer­i­cans and whites to pro­tect some­thing that is tremen­dous­ly impor­tant to us.”

After police arrived, “we stayed as long as we could, we kept ask­ing to stay with our friends (Chosa and Loons­foot),” said Park­er, wip­ing away a tear. “We sat down with them repeat­ed­ly, we were pushed ver­bal­ly numer­ous times by law enforce­ment.”

“It’s break­ing my heart,” said a cry­ing Park­er as she wit­nessed heavy equip­ment roar­ing up the entrance to Eagle Rock. “This mine is not going to per­form (safe­ly) as they say it will. What is going to hap­pen if the mine col­laps­es into the Trout Salmon Riv­er?”

Police from sev­er­al agen­cies “lit­er­al­ly sur­round­ed us in a big cir­cle,” said Kalvin Hartwig, a mem­ber of the Sault Ste. Marie Tribe of Chippe­wa who spent the night of May 26 at Eagle Rock but was not arrest­ed after agree­ing to leave the prop­er­ty with his car.

When police arrived, “three of us and two vis­i­tors were down by the sacred fire and anoth­er one of our campers (Char­lotte Loons­foot) was up on the hill fast­ing,” Hartwig said. “I think this whole sit­u­a­tion is pret­ty sad.

“The water and this land is at-risk. These peo­ple (Ken­necott) are here ille­gal­ly about to destroy it.”

Accord­ing to the Save The Wild UP Web site, about 20 police cars were sent and warned to expect a riot that nev­er occurred. Many sup­port­ers and the media rushed to the scene after hear­ing the Pow­ell Town­ship emer­gency per­son­nel dis­patched with instruc­tions to stage at the main entrance to the mine includ­ing an ambu­lance and fire trucks. No injuries were report­ed.

Atop a pole at the entrance to the camp, a lone eagle feath­er flut­tered in the dusty wind as heavy equip­ment moved in. Mine offi­cials doused the grand­fa­ther fire, uproot­ed the Eagle Rock Com­mu­ni­ty Gar­den, removed two flags from atop Eagle Rock and bull­dozed the camp.

Deputies blocked the dusty, remote, sea­son­al Triple A Road at the mine entrance but allowed the media and campers to walk the three-quar­ters of a mile to the for­mer entrance to the camp that was blocked by heavy machin­ery as mine employ­ees erect­ed a met­al cyclone fence. The media was not allowed to see the remains of the encamp­ment.

“They are putting up a fence and they are wreck­ing our gar­den we plant­ed,” said Gabriel Caplett, who has post­ed dai­ly updates about the campers activ­i­ties on the Stand for the Land Blog and has writ­ten count­less sto­ries about the fight to stop the mine since it was announced in 2004. “They are putting out the sacred fire” that has burned since the first night.

There was no word on what hap­pened to the tents and a large cache of food and oth­er sup­plies donat­ed by sup­port­ers. About 10 campers spent the night of May 25 at Eagle Rock, but sev­er­al left to pre­pare for activ­i­ties planned at the rock for Memo­r­i­al Day week­end.

Two non-Native campers, not present for the raid, broke into tears while walk­ing to Eagle Rock.

“It’s heart­break­ing, it’s real­ly dis­con­cert­ing to feel the rights of the cor­po­ra­tions have been put above and beyond the rights of the peo­ple,” said Amy Conover of Mar­quette, Mich. When politi­cians “get into pow­er they don’t act on behalf of the peo­ple, they act on behalf of the mon­ey.”

A Detroit native attend­ing nurs­ing school in Mar­quette said she “can’t under­stand how hard­ened the hearts have become of the peo­ple who are doing this.”

“To not feel how wrong it actu­al­ly is – is a very scary thing,” said Lau­ra Nagle. “The police offi­cer said this is a ‘bum­mer’ this was hap­pen­ing, it is not a bum­mer, it is a cat­a­stro­phe, a tragedy and a mis­for­tune for us all. This can still be stopped.”