At issue was the claim of 15  Occupy NH activists that the “right to revolution” expressed in the  State Constitution gave them the right — and the obligation — to violate  Manchester’s city curfew last October. With the legal leadership of  Barbara Keshen, staff attorney for the NH Civil Liberties Union, they  made a good case. 
The facts of the case are not in dispute. After several days in which Occupy activists  maintained an encampment in Manchester’s Victory Park they were told by  police that the City would insist on enforcing its curfew ordinance,  which calls for parks to be empty of human persons between the hours of  11 pm and 7 am. On October 19, they shifted their encampment to Veterans  Park, a more visible location a few blocks away. At 11 pm, police  warned the activists they would be cited for violating the curfew if  they refused to leave. Most of the people in the park (including me)  scurried to the outside of the fence on Merrimack Street. Most of those  who remained were given a summons for the curfew violation and left the  park on their own steam. The few who still refused to leave were placed  under arrest, charged with trespass in addition to the curfew violation,  and taken to the Manchester Police Station. (See my earlier posts for details.) 
What is in dispute is whether  Constitutional protections of speech and assembly trump the curfew. Also  in dispute is whether Part One, Article Ten of the New Hampshire Constitution, titled “Right to Revolution,” has any bearing.
From InZane Times, 
Notes from an Occupy Trial; Could a Curfew Violation be Ruled a Constitutionally Protected Revolutionary Act? Hat tip to Seth Cohn.