Rev. Jackson Pleads Not Guilty To Trespassing After Jobs Protest
FREEPORT (CBS) -- It began as an act of civil disobedience last month. Reverend Jesse Jackson Senior and more than a dozen others arrested on Sensata Plant property in Freeport, protesting the outsourcing of 175 jobs to China.
"There's a thing about being here in Freeport, a town so small and wrapped with such a big idea of free trade and fairness in the workplace," said Jackson outside the Stephenson County Courthouse.
Jackson and the other defendants went before a judge, making the decision to plead not guilty for trespassing and go to trial as a matter of principle.
"This is what it was all about, for us to take a stand and try and keep our jobs here," said Joanne Matthews, an arrested protester.
"We're gonna escalate this protest," said Jackson.
The move follows a decades-long precedent for Jackson, but it also comes during a difficult month for the Jackson family with son Jesse Jackson Junior's resignation from congress amidst a federal investigation and dealing with health issues.
Jackson and the others arrested will be back in Freeport for a trial sometime in the spring, according to the judge, for a problem that the reverend says isn't just happening here, but everywhere.