Crowd throws bottles and cans; at least 2 officers injured
By Melissa Leu and Stephen Ceasar, Los Angeles Times
July 13, 2012
July 13, 2012 LA Times
A confrontation in downtown Los Angeles late Thursday between police and
Occupy L.A.protesters appeared to have stemmed from a sidewalk
chalk-drawing demonstration, witnesses said.
At least two officers were injured and several arrests had been made.
A woman who identified herself as part ofOccupy L.A. said protesters
attended the monthly L.A. ArtWalk on Thursday night with the intention of
showing support for people previously arrested for chalking on the
sidewalk. A Facebook event advertised the planned demonstration.
Discuss at 9 a.m. Friday: Skirmishes at L.A. ArtWalk
Some of the messages written at the intersection of Spring and 5th streets
included, "May the youth rise" and "End the Fed."
"We were handing out free chalk for freedom of speech," said Cheryl
Aichele, 34, a member of Occupy L.A.
Police arrived at the intersection shortly before 10 p.m. to move
protesters blocking the street. At one point, an unidentified man tossed a
glass bottle over his shoulder that landed in front of a line of LAPD
officers gathered on Spring Street between 4th and 5th streets. The man
was shot with what appeared to be a non-lethal weapon, witnesses said.
PHOTOS: The ArtWalk confrontation
Police used batons and non-lethal projectiles to disperse the crowd, which
in turn threw bottles and cans at officers and chanted, "Whose streets?
Our streets!"
Hundreds of officers in riot gear systematically moved the crowd away
block by block as people gathered in the windows of nearby apartments and
bars to watch and snap cellphone pictures. It took officers about two
hours to quell the protest.
"I came down for ArtWalk and it turned into this," said 25-year-old Susan
Enciso.
Showing posts with label Occupy Movement. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Occupy Movement. Show all posts
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Friday, July 13, 2012
This Morning, Police Raided a House in the Central District Looking for a Black Hoodie, a Pink Scarf, and "Paperwork—Anarchists"
(Or, Since When Are Pamphlets Evidence of a Crime?)
Posted by Brendan Kiley on Tue, Jul 10, 2012 The Stranger
At approximately 5:45 am this morning, L was sleeping in bed with his girlfriend, in his Central District apartment. (L spoke with me before speaking to an attorney, so I've agreed to leave his name out of it until he consults one.) The apartment is on the third story of an old house that's been partitioned off into apartment units.
Around that time, he heard a bang near the main, first-floor entrance. "My first instinct," he said, "was that it was Fourth of July and we were hearing fireworks." Then he says he heard from below: "This is the Seattle Police Department." He hadn't heard fireworks. He'd heard police kicking down his door and throwing flash-bang grenades into the house.
So L crawled out of bed, put on some pants, and knelt on the floor with his hands behind his head—before the police even entered his apartment. L wasn't surprised. He's been a participant in the Occupy events, anarchist circles, and the May Day protests (which thousands of people attended, including myself, in a professional capacity). And in the past few weeks, such people have been visited by FBI agents—who asked them to become informants—and had their houses raided and their telephones confiscated, presumably for social-mapping purposes.
L had heard these stories and was expecting a visit sooner or later. "We knew that SWAT teams tend to come in with automatic guns," he said, "and nobody wanted to test the trigger-happiness of Seattle cops." So they got down on their knees.
He asked the first SWAT officer on the scene three questions:
1. Do you have a warrant?
2. Did you break down the door? ("We rent the place," L told me, "and it'd be a pain in the ass to deal with a broken lock.")
3. Did you knock before you entered? (L said this was his idea of a joke—since he's on the third floor, he wouldn't have heard a knock anyway.)
The SWAT officer, according to L, said "the detectives will be up here soon."
Detective Wesley Friesen (who was busted for drunk driving and threatening to kill his arresting officers in 2004) entered and announced that he was the lead investigator of the May Day smashup. He briefly flashed the warrant in L's face and said he could examine it more closely once the search was over. The morning's occupants of the home—two regular residents and two visitors, including L's girlfriend—had their hands zip-tied and were herded into the living room. Then the search began.
According to the warrant-inventory, signed by Detective Freisen, they took a black sweatshirt, a pink scarf, a pair of black goggles, "papers—notebook," a black bandana, a black stocking hat, and "paperwork—anarchists in the Occupy movement."
L said most of the officers appeared to be from Seattle Police Department, though some had their name tags covered with coats and one appeared to be from the Washington State Patrol. (Why the WSP? The domestic-surveillance information-sharing of our local fusion center might have something to do with it.)
The officers rifled through drawers and closets and knocked books around, including L's Shakespeare books. "It's funny," he said. "When they knocked the Shakespeare books off the shelves, I thought of the line from Coriolanus (a play about a military man who becomes a politician during a period of civil unrest): 'You may as well strike at the heaven with your staves as lift them against the Roman state.'"
Detective Friesen approached L with a stack of photographs, asking him to identify people in them, but L immediately declined to speak without an attorney present.
"If you're gonna refuse to cooperate," L said Friesen said, "this is gonna take a lot longer and be a lot harder for you guys."
The officers rifled through stuff, took stuff, and left without arresting anyone. L said that Friesen gave a parting shot: "You're gonna go to jail after this investigation is over for assault and malicious mischief."
SPD spokesperson Sean Whitcomb said: "I've seen some stuff on social media that has said that this is an overreaction—that a SWAT team doing a search-warrant service for a vandalism investigation is heavy-handed. I'd say the May Day violence was the worst I'd seen since WTO... and not a message to corporations, but to individuals, such as people who had parked on the street and had their car windows smashed out. And incendiary devices such as smoke bombs—knowing what we do about violence across the globe, anytime anyone has an incendiary device, it is a cause of great concern."
Understood. But police seizing political pamphlets as "evidence" for a crime? That seems wrong.
Since when does political writing—even, gasp, radical political philosophy—count as "evidence"? I suppose if you beat someone over the head with a hardback book by Bakunin, that would count.
But last time I checked, pamphlets and unpopular political opinions weren't against the law.
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
SWAT raid on organizers of Occupy Seattle & E4E
July 10, 2012 Kasama Project

Kasama received this shortly after the police ended their ransacking of the Seattle apartment. We will cover events and statements as they emerge.
Early morning, July 10, SWAT police forced their way into the Seattle apartment of organizers from the Occupy movement. The sleeping residents scrambled to put on clothes as they were confronted with automatic weapons.
The neighbor Natalio Perez heard the attack from downstairs: “Suddenly we heard the bang of their grenade, and the crashing as police entered the apartment. The crashing and stomping continued for a long time as they tore the place apart.”
After the raid, the residents pored over the papers handed them by a detective. One explained: “This warrant says that they were specifically looking for ‘anarchist materials’ — which lays out the political police state nature of this right there. In addition they were looking for specific pieces of clothing supposedly connected with a May First incident.
When the police finally left, they did not arrest anyone.
This action targets well known activists from Occupy Seattle and the Red Spark Collective (part of the national Kasama network).
This apartment has been a hub for organizing the Everything 4 Everyone festival in August – to bring together West Coast forces for a cultural and political event building on the year of Occupy.
The raid is a heavy-handed threat delivered by armed police aimed at intimidating specific people – but also st suppressing the work to continue the Occupy movement in Seattle, and create E4E as a space for radical gathering.
The E4E site will update this with more as we receive it, including hopefully statement from those involved. http://www.everythingforeveryone.org/
Contact: Liam Wright, Red Spark Collective, redsparkcollective@gmail.com
Door beaten in by SWAT police raid.
Early morning, July 10, SWAT police forced their way into the Seattle apartment of organizers from the Occupy movement. The sleeping residents scrambled to put on clothes as they were confronted with automatic weapons.
The neighbor Natalio Perez heard the attack from downstairs: “Suddenly we heard the bang of their grenade, and the crashing as police entered the apartment. The crashing and stomping continued for a long time as they tore the place apart.”
After the raid, the residents pored over the papers handed them by a detective. One explained: “This warrant says that they were specifically looking for ‘anarchist materials’ — which lays out the political police state nature of this right there. In addition they were looking for specific pieces of clothing supposedly connected with a May First incident.
When the police finally left, they did not arrest anyone.
This action targets well known activists from Occupy Seattle and the Red Spark Collective (part of the national Kasama network).
This apartment has been a hub for organizing the Everything 4 Everyone festival in August – to bring together West Coast forces for a cultural and political event building on the year of Occupy.
The raid is a heavy-handed threat delivered by armed police aimed at intimidating specific people – but also st suppressing the work to continue the Occupy movement in Seattle, and create E4E as a space for radical gathering.
The E4E site will update this with more as we receive it, including hopefully statement from those involved. http://www.everythingforeveryone.org/
Contact: Liam Wright, Red Spark Collective, redsparkcollective@gmail.com
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