Three activists with the Uhuru Movement will be sentenced by a Florida judge Monday as part of a legal saga that began when the FBI raided the group in 2022, accusing the antiwar Black liberation group of working as Russian agents. The “Uhuru 3” are Omali Yeshitela, chair of the African People’s Socialist Party, and white solidarity activists Penny Hess and Jesse Nevel. A jury acquitted them in September of acting as illegal agents of the Russian government, but convicted them on the lesser charge of conspiracy to act as agents of a foreign government — something they reject. The activists face up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine but plan to appeal the ruling. Yeshitela spoke with Democracy Now! ahead of the sentencing hearing and called it “ridiculous” that prosecutors suggested the movement’s antiwar position was inspired by Russia. “The Black liberation movement in this country has historically been opposed to those wars, and that’s been a strategic problem for the United States,” Yeshitela said. “It’s a thought crime that they have convicted us for, and we fought it all along, and we continue to fight that.”
This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.