An Act of Conscience

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An Act of Conscience
File:Aoc2.jpg
Directed by Robbie Leppzer
Produced by Robbie Leppzer
Written by Robbie Leppzer and Sara Elinoff
Starring Randy Kehler and Betsy Corner
Narrated by Martin Sheen
Music by Steven Schoenberg
Cinematography Robbie Leppzer
Edited by Robbie Leppzer
Distributed by Cinemax & Turning Tide Productions
Release dates
1997
Running time
90 minutes
Country USA
Language English

An Act of Conscience is a 1997 documentary film by Robbie Leppzer about the war tax resistance of Randy Kehler and Betsy Corner and years-long struggle that ensued after the IRS seized their home in Colrain, Massachusetts in 1989, to recover $27,000 in unpaid taxes, penalties, and interest.[1] The film premiered at Sundance Film Festival and was shown on Cinemax and the Sundance Channel.[2] It is narrated by Martin Sheen and features cameo appearances by activist-priest Daniel Berrigan and political folksinger Pete Seeger.[1]

Plot

After the house was seized, the couple and their daughter refuse to move out and Kehler is arrested on December 3, 1991, by US Marshals and IRS agents.[1] Community supporters move in, helping them to occupy the house.[3] On February 12, 1992, the still-occupied house—but not the land, which belongs to the Valley Community Land Trust—is sold at auction to Danny Franklin and Terry Charnesky for $5400; the IRS had failed to receive any monetary bids at an earlier auction.[1] The sale results in suits and countersuits between the Franklin-Charnesky family and the Land Trust.[1] Despite the sale of the house, the Kehler-Corner occupiers refuse to leave.[1]

However, on April 15, 1992, while Kehler, Corner, and their supporters are away, Franklin, Charnesky, and their supporters move-in and occupy the house.[1] Kehler, Corner, and their supporters begin a lively protest and round-the-clock vigil just outside the house, eventually even building a small wooden structure to shelter the protesters.[1] On May 28, 1993, the Franklin County Superior court issues an injunction against the Kehler-Corner protests and, subsequently, several protesters are arrested and jailed after violating the injunction.[1] Still, the protest continues until September, when they are finally discontinued.[1] The battle over the house is ended on December 31, 1993, when an out-of-court settlement is reached between the Land Trust and the Franklin-Charnesky family, who agree to leave the house and deed it and the land-lease to the land trust in exchange for an undisclosed sum of money.[4]

References

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External links