On this appeal from an order of remand by the District Court for the Southern District of New York, we again have the task of interpreting the civil rights removal statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1443, in light of the Supreme Court’s decisions in Georgia v. Rachel,
Petitioners sought removal of five prosecutions in the Criminal Court of the City of New York. Four related to incidents occurring about 12:45 P.M. *699 on October 17, 1968, at Washington Irving High School in the course of a prolonged teachers’ strike. One complaint charged James M. Horelick with criminal trespass, N.Y. Penal Law, McKinney’s Consol.Laws, c. 40, § 140.10, and resisting arrest, N.Y. Penal Law, § 205.30. An affidavit of the school’s custodian engineer alleged that Horelick entered without permission or authority and refused to leave on the custodian’s demand; it averred also that a patrolman had informed the custodian that Horelick had kicked and wrestled with him in resisting arrest. The other two complaints charged Sandra Adickes with resisting arrest and harassment, N.Y. Penal Law § 240.25; the same patrolman averred that she had “attempted to prevent him from effecting an authorized arrest of another person,” to wit, Horelick. A fifth complaint charged Horelick with trespass at the same school on October 20.
After an unsuccessful attempt to have the district court enjoin the state criminal trial because of alleged unconstitutionality of the State’s penal statutes as sought to be applied, the petitioners on the morning of September 30, 1969, the day set for trial, served a petition for removal. 2 The petition alleged that Horelick and Adickes were teachers employed by the New York City Board, of Education; that the strike had been called by the United Federation of Teachers in an effort to block a community plan designed to change and remedy the deleterious effects of de facto segregated education upon black and Puerto Rican school children; and that petitioners did not support the strike and wished to carry on their regular duties. It further alleged that high officers of the Board of Education had authorized designated teachers to open certain schools and conduct classes; that Edward Williams, chairman of the mathematics department, had received a permit to be “Teacher-in-Charge” of Washington Irving High School for this purpose ; that the police nevertheless barred entry of Williams, petitioners and other teachers; that Horelick, under authority delegated by Williams, entered the school but that members of the police department commenced beating him and led him from the building in a battered condition; that the policemen pushed Adickes along with Horelick into an automobile; and that they were driven to the precinct station where charges were filed. Removal was predicated on both subdivisions of § 1443. 2 3 In response to a motion for remand, which did not challenge the factual allegations of the removal petition, defendants submitted affidavits enlarging on their claims with respect to the antagonism of many of the teachers to black and Puerto Rican students and to plans for greater decentralization of control of the *700 school system, the inferior quality of education at schools with a high percentage of such students, and the motivations of the United Federation of Teachers. Judge Ryan ordered a remand without conducting an evidentiary hearing, and this appeal followed, 28 U.S.C. § 1447(d).
Petitioners’ arguments concerning subdivision (1) rest on a claim that various federal statutes, notably § 101(a) of the Civil Rights Act of 1968, 18 U.S. C. § 245(b), put them in a position analogous to the defendants in Rachel. We think it desirable in the first instance to recapitulate the salient aspects of the Supreme Court’s Rachel and Peacock decisions and then to review subsequent developments in the courts of appeals.
After a comprehensive analysis of the history of the civil rights removal statute and the opinions construing it, Mr. Justice Stewart concluded in
Rachel
that decisions up to that time had established that, in order to come within what is now § 1443(1), a petitioner must show that a denial or inability to enforce “a right under any law providing for the equal civil rights of citizens of the United States” in the courts of a state “be manifest in a formal expression of state law,”
In
Peacock
the Court reached a different conclusion. Members of a group engaged in a drive to encourage Negro voter registration in Mississippi were charged in the state courts with various offenses — obstructing public streets, assault, interfering with an officer in the performance of his duties, creating a disturbance in a public place, inciting to riot, parading without a permit, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, operating a motor vehicle with improper license tags, reckless driving, and profanity and the use of vulgar language. The removal petitions alleged that these prosecutions were racially motivated. Section 11(b) of the Voting Rights Act of 1965, 42 U.S.C. § 1973i(b), enacted after the prosecutions were begun but before the eases were decided by the Supreme Court, prohibited any person from intimidating, threatening or coercing, or attempting to intimidate, threaten or coerce, another for urging or aiding any person to vote. Despite this and other federal statutes, the Court held the case to be governed by its previous line of decisions against removal culminating in Kentucky v. Powers,
The
Rachel
principle has been held to allow removal in cases where persons who claimed to be exercising their rights to equal accommodation were prosecuted on what allegedly were trumped up charges of burglary, Wyche v. Louisiana,
More difficulty has been encountered in applying the
Rachel-Peacock
distinction to state prosecutions alleged to impinge on federal civil rights statutes other than the public accommodations act. The first to be considered were the voting rights acts of 1957 and 1965. The earlier statute began with a statement that all citizens shall be entitled to vote without distinction of race, color of previous condition of servitude, 42 U.S.C. § 1971(a) (1), and then prohibited any person from intimidating, threatening or coercing any other person for the purpose of interfering with his voting rights, 42 U.S.C. § 1971(b). The later statute, which we have already noted in our discussion in
Peacock,
prohibited any person from intimidating, threatening or coercing any other person for urging or aiding any person to vote, 42 U.S.C. § 1973i(b). In North Carolina v. Hawkins,
In New York v. Davis,
With this background we approach petitioners’ case. As indicated, the argument for removal is founded on the Civil Rights Act of 1968, 82 Stat. 73, which added to Title 18 of the United States Code § 245, entitled “Federally Protected Activities.” Unlike the statutes on public accommodations, voting rights and' fair housing which we have reviewed, the 1968 Act does not in terms confer substantive rights; it is solely a criminal statute permitting federal prosecution for interference with a long list of activities. Subdivision (b) says that “Whoever, whether or not acting under color of law, by force or threat of force willfully injures, intimidates or interferes with, or attempts to injure, intimidate or interfere with” five broad categories of persons, several divided into subcategories, shall be subject to fine or imprisonment as there described. At least two of the categories, (1) and (3), taken by themselves, would not seem to fit the definition of “equal civil rights” in
Rachel,
to wit, “any law providing for specific civil rights states in terms of racial equality.”
Mere statement suffices to show that § 1443(1) affords no basis for removal by Miss Adickes. Resisting arrest and harassing police outside school premises are not acts affording black and Puerto Rican pupils of a closed school any “opportunity or protection” in attendance. Cf. Orange v. Alabama,
supra,
We reach the same result with respect to Horelick. While the federal statutes he invokes arguably provide for “equal civil rights,” though stated only in terms of federal criminal penalties for their violation, we need not decide this. Neither must we choose between the position reluctantly reached by Judge Sobeloff in North Carolina v. Hawkins, supra, and that of the Fifth Circuit in Whatley v. City of Vidalia, supra, and Davis v. Alabama, supra, on the question whether a prohibition against “intimidation,” as contrasted with one against an “attempt to punish,” can bring a case within Rachel. 4 For it is clear that the statute relied upon by *703 Horelick — 18 U.S.C. § 245(b) — to show that he will be denied a right in the New York state court cannot be read to prevent state prosecution. Unlike the-, voting rights acts, § 245(b) is aimed) only at intimidation “by force or threat; of force,” 5 and that denotes violent activity, not the ordered functioning of state legal processes, whatever the motivation. See also § 245(a) and (c). Since Horelick’s assertion that prosecution itself would deny him equal civil rights is his sole basis for predicting a denial of such rights in the state court, his petition for removal under § 1443(1) must be denied.
All that remains for consideration is the contention that the prosecutions are “for refusing to do any act on the ground that it would be inconsistent with” a federal law providing for equal rights and are thus removable under § 1443(2). But petitioners have not pointed to any federal equal rights law with which a teacher’s submission to arrest or departure from school premises on request would be inconsistent. Apart from the language of the statute, our knowledge of the purpose of this clause is limited to the remarks of Representative Wilson, floor manager of the Civil Rights Act of 1866, quoted in
Peacock,
Affirmed.
Notes
. Recognizing the difficulties in applying this venerable but Delphically worded statute but finding it hard to come up with anything better, the American Law Institute has proposed that Congress leave the statute as is, except for repealing the first clause of § 1443(2), which is superfluous, see Peacock, supra,
. Although 28 U.S.C. § 1446(c) permits the filing of a petition to remove a criminal prosecution “at any time before trial,” and petitioners’ delay here may have been excusable in light of the continuing effort to obtain an injunction, defendants desiring to remove criminal cases should realize that unwarranted delay in seeking removal may well have an unfavorable effect on determinations about which a federal court has discretion, e. g., the staying of a state trial pending appeal from an order of remand. The obvious purpose for permitting a petition for removal to be filed at any time up to the beginning of the state criminal trial was to deal with cases where the trial followed swiftly after the charge, not to afford a means for harassment of state judges and prosecutors and trial delay.
. 28 U.S.C. § 1443 provides:
Any of the following civil actions or criminal prosecutions, commenced in a State court may be removed by the defendant to the district court of the United States for the district and division embracing the place wherein it is pending:
(1) Against any person who is denied or cannot enforce in the courts of such State a right under any law providing for the equal hi vil rights of citizens of the United States, or of all persons within the jurisdiction thereof;
(2) For any act under color of authority derived from any law providing for equal rights, or for refusing to do any act on the ground that it would be inconsistent with such law.
. As a result of further study of the
Peacock
opinion, we are not so sure as a year ago, New York v. Davis,
supra,
. Penalties for violating § 245(b) are graduated according to the degree of harm: for intimidating or coercing by threat of force, a fine of $1000 and/or imprisonment for not more than one year; by inflicting bodily injury, $10,000 and 10 years; for causing death, imprisonment for any term of years or for life.
In describing the purposes of the Act the Senate Committee Report used the terms “violence” or “racial violence” as equivalent to “force or threat of force” and stated that “The purpose of the legislation is to strengthen the capability of the Federal Government to meet the problem of violent interference, for racial or other discriminatory reasons, with a person’s free exercise of civil rights.” S.Rep. No.721, 90th Cong., 2d Sess. (1968) ; 1968 U.S. Code Cong. & Admin.News, pp. 1837, 1938.
. Compare O’Keefe v. New York City Board of Elections,
