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East Village Activist Rev. Billy Arrested for Dumping Pile of Dirt at Chase Bank

By Patrick Hedlund | April 6, 2010 1:30pm | Updated on April 6, 2010 12:34pm
Rev. Billy stands outside the Chase bank branch in Astor Place Sunday after dumping a pile of dirt in the ATM vestibule in protest of the company's involvement in coal mining.
Rev. Billy stands outside the Chase bank branch in Astor Place Sunday after dumping a pile of dirt in the ATM vestibule in protest of the company's involvement in coal mining.
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Flickr/Rev Billy & The Church of Life After Shopping

By Patrick Hedlund

DNAinfo News Editor

Police arrested rabble-rousing anti-corporate activist Rev. Billy on Sunday for dumping a pile of dirt in an East Village bank branch to protest the company’s involvement in coal-mining operations.

Rev. Billy, real name Bill Talen, took to a series of Chase banks with his costumed choir in tow to place a “holy hex” on the company for allegedly funding companies responsible for mountaintop mining in the U.S., the Courthouse News Service reported.

The activist and formal mayoral candidate performed the same ceremonial-style act without incident at a Chase bank on 10th Street and Second Avenue last month, but was arrested at the branch in Astor Place on Easter Sunday after refusing to remove the mud mound under police orders.

Activists placed another pile of mud inside the Chase Bank branch at East 10th Street and Second Avenue in March.
Activists placed another pile of mud inside the Chase Bank branch at East 10th Street and Second Avenue in March.
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revbilly.com

“We didn’t know and didn’t go in anticipating [an arrest] one way or another,” said Talen, who’a led numerous public demonstrations in the past, including another dirt-piling at a Chase branch on Second Avenue at St. Mark’s Place just before his arrest.

“I know that the Astor Place Chase is much more prominent, and it’s a location where Rev. Billy’s been traditionally taken from to various holding tanks.”

Talen and advocates have targeted JPMorgan Chase for financing 80 percent of mountaintop strip-mining in the Appalachians, a controversial practice that involves removing entire portions of mountaintops and ridges to access the underlying coal.

At the Astor Place branch, a police officer gave Talen the opportunity to clean up the mess, and arrested the activist only after he declined.

Talen said he was issued summonses for littering and disorderly conduct, and released without charges.

Nonetheless, he explained he will continue to build his “lobby mountains” to raise awareness of the bank’s out-of-state actions, which he considers a local issue because of Chase’s prominence in the neighborhood.

“There’s a JPMorgan Chase with that sky-blue swastika on every corner,” he said. “We always start with what’s happening in our neighborhood. We certainly have what we call the ‘demon monoculture’ in our midst here.”