is apparently equivalent to participating in a demonstration.
According to the original bail conditions he was, among other conditions, supposed to refrain from participating in "demonstrations." He was then re-arrested for participating on a panel discussion at a university as the cops said was equivalent to a "demonstration."
Alex Hundert's G20 nightmare began on June 26th when Toronto Police raided his home at 4am, arresting he and his partner Leah Henderson at gunpoint. One month later they were released from prison on $100,000 bail each, with 20 stringent conditions, including conditional house arrest, non-associations with some of their best friends, and a ban on posting to the internet and attending or planning any public demonstrations. Upon his release, Hundert gave a handful of interviews to the media, and the police tried to return him to prison for breaking his 'no demonstration' condition. A judge ruled in September that speaking to the media was protected and didn't break the condition. Four days later Hundert was arrested again immediately after participating as an invited speaker on a university panel. This time, after spending an additional four weeks in prison, a judge sided with the police that Hundert did break the 'no demonstration' condition. Hundert's bail was amended to include a total ban on voicing any political view, specifically mentioning that he not speak with the media.
From our research this represents a modern first in Canada, and many are gearing up to fight it.
http://therealnews.com/t2/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=31&Itemid=74&jumival=5741