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WSWS : News
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Los Angeles police attack protesters outside LAPD headquarters
By John Andrews
25 October 2000
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Squads of riot-clad Los Angeles Police Department (LAPD) officers
attacked a crowd of over 1,000 people who were peacefully demonstrating
against police abuse and the death penalty outside LAPD headquarters
last Sunday. The scene was reminiscent of the actions taken against
protestors at the Democratic National Convention last August.
After marching from downtown to the Parker Center police headquarters,
a group of young demonstrators split off to go around the rear
of the building to continue protesting. As they were about halfway
around the block, police on foot and on horseback moved in, beating
people with batons. As the protesters retreated, police fired
several salvos of painful and dangerous non-lethal
plastic bullets at them. Police officers claimed they were responding
to protesters who threw refuse at them.
After the assault more than 200 police officers, including
many on horseback, surrounded those who gathered to listen to
speakers whose loved ones were killed or injured by police. The
demonstration was part of a national day of protests against police
brutality.
Just as they did during the Democratic National Convention,
police officers carried out counter-demonstrations of their own.
In one incident a police officer rammed his bicycle into a group
of protesters, yelling, Go back to your country if you don't
like it. Two other officers drove their motorcycles into
observers from the National Lawyers Guild, including former Santa
Monica City Attorney Bob Myers.
A group of Native American dancers led the protest, followed
by a truck with loudspeakers and pictures of people killed by
police, including Tyisha Miller, the teenage girl gunned down
by Riverside, California police last year. Another group was marching
from San Diego to San Francisco to call for abolishing the death
penalty. Some marchers carried signs protesting against the frame-up
of former Black Panther and death row prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal.
Afterwards, several people displayed welts and bruises for
the media. Two were bleeding. Among those hit with rubber bullets
was a reporter covering the demonstration for the Spanish language
newspaper La Opinion. I could see them coming and
then suddenly, bang, bang, bang, bang, and I was hit, said
the reporter, Edwin Tamara, showing a small bruise on his left
shoulder.
All we were doing was walking and chanting when the cops
shot us, Gonzalo Islas told reporters, displaying a rubber
bullet injury on his right calf.
Police arrested two men and a woman on suspicion of felony
assault with a deadly weapon for throwing things at the police.
John King, 27, who was arrested with his wife Therese Garcia,
said he was struck with batons and kicked by an officer on horseback
before being seized on suspicion of resisting a police officera
misdemeanor. After their arrest King and his wife said they were
subjected to further abuse. Garcia said her wrists were bound
so tightly by plastic restraints that her fingers turned blue.
When they tried to get an officer's help, he responded: Life
is tough, they told the Los Angeles Times.
After the attack the American Civil Liberties Union condemned
the LAPD for intervening with a heavy hand and without warning
on horseback and in riot gear, dispersing the crowd by indiscriminately
using batons and shooting rubber bullets.
One of the topics of the demonstration was the ongoing revelations
from the trial of LAPD officers from the Rampart Division who
were involved in drug dealing, brutality, murder and the planting
of evidence to frame up victims. On the same day as the protest
the Times reported the results of its investigation, showing
that Los Angeles County prosecutors have routinely covered up
criminal activity by police and refused to bring charges in hundreds
of cases, despite having substantial evidence of guilt.
The authorities' effort to suppress the freedom of expression,
moreover, is part of a national pattern. Just three days before
the Los Angeles incident, New York City police officers broke
into an apartment in the Bronx and arrested political activists
and the neighborhood residents they were speaking to about the
national day of protest against police brutality. According to
a statement by attorney Stacey Gray, officers from the 43rd Precinct
used excessive force and guns before they arrested all the occupants
of the apartment. The attorney said police have carried out ongoing
surveillance against political groups and residents of the Soundview
neighborhood, where West African immigrant Amadou Diallo was gunned
down by police in February 1999.
See Also:
Los
Angeles police attack protesters at Democratic convention
[17 August 2000]
The
Los Angeles police scandal and its social roots
[13 March 2000]
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