OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) — Under
cover of darkness early Tuesday, hundreds of police swept into Oakland's Occupy
Wall Street protest, firing tear gas and beanbag rounds before clearing out an
encampment that demonstrators had hoped would stir a revolution.
In less than an hour, the
two-week-old, miniature makeshift city was in ruins.
Scattered across the area
were overturned tents, pillows, sleeping bags, yoga mats, tarps, backpacks,
food wrappers and water bottles. Signs decrying corporations and police still
hung from lampposts or lay on the ground.
Protesters had stayed awake
through the night, waiting for the expected raid. Officers and sheriff's
deputies from across the San
Francisco Bay
area surrounded the plaza in front of City Hall at around 5 a.m. and closed in.
Eighty-five people were arrested, mostly on suspicion of misdemeanor unlawful
assembly and illegal camping, police said.
About 170 protesters were at
the site, but no one was injured, Interim Oakland Police Chief Howard Jordan
said at a news conference following the raid.
"I'm very pleased with
the way things went," Jordan
said.
Television news footage
showed protesters being taken away in plastic handcuffs without incident,
though some protesters complained of rough handling by police.
Officers fired tear gas and
bean bags when one group of demonstrators pelted officers with rocks and
bottles near the camp's kitchen area, Jordan said.
"It was definitely
chaos. People didn't want to get gassed," said protester Anthony Owens,
40, a computer programmer from Oakland
who was at the scene when police moved in but was not arrested.
Some people in the camp left
as word spread about possible police action, Owens said. Many of the remaining
protesters locked arms and shouted as officers surrounded the plaza and moved
in.
Witnesses reported seeing
smoke rising from the area. The plaza was "contained" at around 5:30
a.m., city officials said.
By midmorning, city workers
had started collecting the debris. Some would be held for protesters to
reclaim, the rest would be thrown away, the city said.
The Oakland site was among numerous camps that
have sprung up around the country, as protesters rally against what they see as
corporate greed and a wide range of other economic issues. The protests have
attracted a wide range of people, including college students looking for work
and the homeless.
In Oakland , tensions between the city and
protesters escalated last week as officials complained about what they
described as deteriorating safety, sanitation and health issues at the site.
City officials had
originally been supportive of protesters, with Oakland Mayor Jean Quan saying
that sometimes "democracy is messy."
But the city later warned
the protesters that they were breaking the law and couldn't stay in the
encampment overnight. They cited concerns about rats, fire hazards, public
urination and acts of violence at the site, which had grown to more than 150
tents and included areas for health care, child care and cooking.
"Many Oaklanders
support the goals of the national Occupy
Wall Street movement," Quan said in a
statement on Tuesday. "However, over the last week it was apparent that
neither the demonstrators nor the City could maintain safe or sanitary
conditions or control the ongoing vandalism."
There were reports of a sex
assault and a severe beating and fire and paramedics were denied access to the
camp, according to city officials, who said they had also received numerous
complaints of intimidating and threatening behavior.
Protesters disputed the
city's claims about conditions at the camp. They said the protest was dominated
by a spirit of cooperation that helped keep the site clean and allowed disputes
to be resolved peacefully.
Lauren Richardson, a
24-year-old college student from Oakland ,
complained that the disheveled state of the camp following the police raid gave
a false impression. She said volunteers collected garbage and recycling every
six hours, that water was boiled before being used to wash dishes and that rats
had infested the park long before the camp went up.
"It was very neat. It
was very organized," Richardson
said.
Volunteers at the medical
tent erected on the site said paramedics had not been kept away.
On Thursday, the city
ordered the protesters to vacate, though they did not set a deadline.
Protesters said the number of people at the camp had steadily dwindled since
the city posted the letter, while those who remained understood they would
likely face a confrontation with police.
After Tuesday's raid, police
maintained a heavy presence around downtown Oakland . Streets were closed off by police
barricades, and at least two helicopters were in the air shining lights down.
Dozens of officers were on the streets, and police in riot gear were seen
facing off with shouting protesters, who briefly blocked traffic on a busy
thoroughfare.
City officials advised
downtown businesses to delay opening and city employees to come in late.
Police also cleared a
smaller encampment from a park near the plaza on Tuesday morning.
The city said protesters
would be allowed to return to the plaza after it was cleaned up and could stay
between the hours of 6 a.m. and 10 p.m. but not overnight.
Many protesters said the
raid had only served to strengthen their resolve that the protests would
continue. A flier handed out along the police barricades at the edge of the
plaza Tuesday morning asked Occupy Oakland demonstrators to reconvene at the
city's public library in the afternoon.
In Sacramento ,
District Attorney Jan Scully said Monday she would not file charges against
more than 70 protesters arrested while occupying the city's Cesar E. Chavez Plaza .
But The Sacramento Bee
reports that city officials said they would still seek to prosecute the
protesters for violating a city ordinance against loitering after curfew. Those
cases would be handled by the city attorney's office rather than the district
attorney.
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