A group of UC Berkeley faculty members is calling upon Chancellor Robert Birgeneau to request that charges filed against demonstrators involved in Nov. 9 protests be dropped.

The Berkeley Faculty Association is currently circulating a petition that states that the chancellor should ask the Alameda County district attorney to drop all charges that have been filed against several protesters. Students Ricardo Gomez, Zakary Habash and Ramon Quintero and associate English professor Celeste Langan face several charges, including resisting arrest and remaining at the scene of a riot, according to county criminal dockets.

The petition — which has garnered about 300 signatures online so far — is only for campus faculty members, according to the association’s website. In addition to calling for the campus administration to condemn legal actions that constitute a “significant chilling of free speech and rights of free assembly on campus,” the petition references the campus division of the Academic Senate’s Nov. 28 vote to endorse four resolutions criticizing the administration’s handling of the Occupy Cal protest.

The petition was developed by professors Judith Baker, Richard Walker and Shannon Steen. Butler also authored a proposal that was passed by the Berkeley Division of the Academic Senate last semester condemning the administration’s response and handling of the events of Nov. 9.

“We are calling for all charges against all protesters to be dropped,” Butler said about the faculty members’ petition in an email, adding that the petition will be circulated “as long as this process is ongoing.”

A similar petition — which was posted today and currently seeks 1,000 signatures from non-Berkeley faculty and students — is being circulated by UC Santa Barbara Professor Christopher Newfield, according to Butler.

Since those resolutions determined that the campus administration and police “were in the wrong” in the way they handled the protest, “legal and financial responsibility for the defense of the students and faculty charged falls squarely on the university,” the petition states.

Additionally, the petition asks that the administration be open to dialogue about the protest events with students. The campus Police Review Board has already held several public meetings in its investigation of the Nov. 9 protest events, which have allowed campus police and protesters to provide verbal and video testimony about police use of force. The board will submit a report to Birgeneau with recommendations for future practices during protests.

Read the full text of the petition below: