|  | The Cavalier daily Friday, January 8, 1971 |  | 
Mr. Camblos' Decision
The decision of Charlottesville 
Commonwealth's Attorney John T. Camblos 
to not prosecute the final group of 26 people 
arrested last May must certainly come as a 
relief to those who faced the prospect of a 
trial in this city.
We have a great deal of respect for Mr. 
Camblos but feel that the remarks and 
statement he made yesterday morning are 
inaccurate and misleading.
The City Commonwealth's Attorney feels 
that the arrest of 68 people in the early hours 
of May 9, 1970 helped bring an end to the 
"week-long period of lawlessness on the part 
of University students and others who had 
joined them." In fact, by arresting a pizza 
delivery man, a buildings and grounds 
employee, students attending parties on 
Rugby Road, marshals trying to control the 
crowd and a few demonstrators, the police 
managed to "radicalize" a majority of 
students overnight. If anything the police 
through these arrests inflamed the students 
and was only through the efforts of many 
students, the administration (which had the 
state police leave the Grounds) and a timely 
speech by President Shannon that serious 
disruptions were avoided.
Even so, the night following President 
Shannon's speech saw a crowd of some 500 
students block University Avenue in front of 
the Rotunda. The Charlottesville Police, to 
their credit, kept their cool and the evening 
ended with only one arrest. With that incident 
in mind it is difficult to understand how Mr. 
Camblos could state "no further violence 
occurred" after the arrests, if he considered 
the events of Friday night and Saturday 
morning violent.
Mr. Camblos seems to be quite proud that 
"careful investigation" turned up no cases of 
police misconduct, a fact which only 
reinforces our opinion that citizens in this 
state and community and the police 
themselves have a great deal of tolerance for 
some of the antics performed by professional 
law enforcement officers.
The Commonwealth's Attorney states that 
he could have convicted "most, if not all, of 
those charged," but decided to do his bit to 
keep relations between the city and the 
university on a happy basis. We disagree. 
Although there is little doubt that an order to 
disperse was given before the police charged, 
it is very difficult to find anyone who actually 
heard that order. We are not so naive as to 
believe that any prosecuting attorney will 
drop charges against 26 individuals he feels 
are guilty merely as a favor to the University.
We are more inclined to agree with Lauren 
Selden, Executive Director of the ACLU of 
Virginia who said of the arrests, "no violence 
preceded the arrests; little, if any, police 
warning was given to disperse. Many of those 
arrested were dragged from their rooms as the 
police combed the area in an apparent effort 
to arrest for the sheer exercise of power. The 
police bust was nothing less than an assault 
against the system of law itself."
But perhaps the most galling statement Mr. 
Camblos made was his suggestion that 
students at the University 'have taken a much 
more mature attitude towards those who 
would disrupt the University and the 
community" this fall. It seems to us as if Mr. 
Camblos is saying that as long as students 
don't make waves, he'll overlook a few 
mistakes students may have committed. This 
is almost a threat. Perhaps we read too much 
into his statements, but he should understand 
that stifled dissent only will erupt eventually 
in a much more violent fashion.
We understand the political realities of Mr. 
Camblos' office. But we feel that the man 
who is largely responsible for enforcing the 
law in Charlottesville should pay attention to 
the facts before making such statements.
|  | The Cavalier daily Friday, January 8, 1971 |  | 

