Alex and Dr. Cornel West
Charlottesville, VA August 2017
Alex Stokes Contompasis is an independent journalist and artist from Albany, NY.
On January 6, 2021, protestors, led by the white nationalist right-wing extremist groups the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers, gathered outside the New York State Capitol in Albany, NY in support of the Stop the Steal rally in Washington DC. Alex attended to document the event with a handful of counter protesters assembled at the rally. A member of the counter-protest was tased in the neck by a Proud Boy and a short melee broke out. Alex, watching from the sidelines, ran to help. His wrist was broken during the fighting. Uniformed and undercover police, on the scene, did not intervene until the violence had ended. Ultimately Alex and three Black activists were arrested. Alex was charged with several violent felonies. Even though the protestors initiated and engaged in the violence, only one was arrested at the scene. The Proud Boy, who tasered a Black man in the neck, was later arrested and sentenced to 30 days of community service.
After being arrested, Alex was under a court-ordered gag-order for over a year which limited his journalistic career and prevented him from telling “his story.”
After waiting nearly two years, Alex was denied adequate defense during his rushed three-day trial. Even though Alex wrote a piece on the rally prior to the rally, the court determined that his previous work and experience as a journalist reporting on dangerous hate groups were inadmissible for his defense. But the prosecution was allowed to pick apart his social media accounts and portrayed his actions as premeditated.
He was found guilty on two separate counts of assault and a weapons charge and sentenced to 20 years in prison; a 12-year and 8-year sentences served consecutively instead of concurrently.
Alex has no previous violent criminal history, has lifelong ties to the Albany community, and was sentenced far more severely than most who committed reckless and premeditated acts of violence. No one died and neither stabbing victim received life-altering injuries. In fact, one began an EMT job just 6 weeks later. Yet, Alex’s sentence is longer than those who assaulted a police officer at the US Capitol on January 6, 2021 and longer than those that organized the US Capitol insurrection.
Alex’s family and friends maintain that he was railroaded by the system, and he is currently appealing his conviction.
In addition to art and journalism, Alex was taking classes and preparing to become an Emergency Medical Technician.
Alex’s journalistic work documenting social unrest began in 2014, when he started hosting a local public access channel called News World: Albany Banana Corps. He and others commented on news stories; filmed demonstrations against police brutality, environmental issues and other local matters; as well as music performances, public events and meetings. He interviewed local activists and politicians, law enforcement officers, and concerned citizens. Watch his collection on the Videos page.
He was arrested in 2017 in Washington, DC, during the Disrupt J20 inaugural protests and co-represented over 200 counter-protestors and independent journalists that were rounded up and falsely charged. He was in Charlottesville, VA during the summer protests in 2017. He routinely attended and recorded Black Lives Matter protests in Albany in 2020. He also regularly revealed local white supremacist groups and members.
Notable Mentions
Alex’s work has been referenced by other journalists over the years.
Mass Arrests On Inauguration Day Swept Up Journalists And Legal Observers — And Their Phones Buzzfeed News April 9, 2017
When They Come For You by David Kirby, 2019