"In February of 1987, Amy Carter walked into a courthouse in Massachusetts not as a former first daughter seeking sympathy, but as a college student and activist facing criminal charges for protesting CIA recruitment at the University of Massachusetts, and what happened next proved she'd been learning far more in the White House than anyone realized. She and fourteen other activists were arrested for trespassing during a sit-in against CIA involvement in Central America, and instead of hiding behind her famous name or pleading for special treatment, Amy helped mount a necessity defense that turned the trial into a referendum on American foreign policy itself. Her legal team called expert witnesses including former CIA agents and diplomats who testified about covert operations in Nicaragua, essentially putting the government on trial while Amy sat calmly in the defendant's chair, no longer the kid with the treehouse but a young woman wielding her platform for something bigger than herself. The jury acquitted her and her co-defendants, validating their argument that civil disobedience was necessary to prevent greater harm, and suddenly everyone who'd dismissed her as the awkward presidential daughter had to reckon with the fact that she'd been paying attention all along. She wasn't performing activism for cameras or clinging to faded relevance; she was risking her freedom for beliefs formed during a childhood spent watching power operate from the inside, understanding its costs in ways most activists only theorize about. Amy could have coasted on her father's legacy, accepted speaking fees and board positions, lived comfortably on her historical footnote, but instead she chose arrests and protests and the hard work of living according to conscience rather than convenience.
Wikipedia gives this:


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