Green Leader Elizabeth May gets $1,500 fine for contempt in pipeline arrest
VANCOUVER — Green Leader Elizabeth May pleaded guilty to a criminal contempt of court charge Monday, moments before a British Columbia Supreme Court judge said the MP exploited her position to encourage others to also break the law by violating his injunction at a Kinder Morgan work site.
Justice Kenneth Affleck said May is also a lawyer and therefore had a responsibility to obey his order and to persuade others to do so.
Affleck issued an injunction more than two months ago preventing people from protesting within five metres of two work sites in Burnaby.
On Monday, Affleck said his order preserved the right to peaceful, lawful and safe protests but May, 63, chose to protest at a main gate to Kinder Morgan’s pipeline terminal, where she was arrested.
