by Rania Khalek
As the number of Occupy Wall
Street arrests nears 1,000,
instances of police brutality continue to pile up. Felix
Rivera-Pitre was punched in the face in New York during a march
through the city’s financial district; Ryan
Hadar was dragged out of the street by his thumbs at Occupy San
Francisco; and at Occupy
Boston, members of Veterans for Peace were shoved
to the ground and dragged away for chanting and peacefully occupying a
local park.
These efforts to intimidate
the protesters are symptoms of three decades of policies that have militarized
civilian law enforcement. Sgt. Shamar Thomas, a U.S. marine at the Occupy Wall
Street protests, was so appalled by the behavior of the NYPD that he loudly
confronted a group of 30 officers, shouting at
them:
"This is not a war
zone. These are unarmed people. It does not make you tough to hurt these
people. If you want to go fight, go to Iraq
or Afghanistan .
Stop hurting these people, man, why y’all doing this to our people? Why are
y’all gearing up like this is war? There are no bullets flying out here."
Police repression in America is
hardly new. Low-income neighborhoods, communities of color and political
activists have always had to deal with unneccassary shows of force by some
police officers. Thanks to a populist uprising threatening a status quo that
benefits the top tier of American society to the detriment of the bottom 99
percent, many Americans for the first time are witnessing the U.S. police
state in action.
As Occupation Spreads, So
Does the Police State
A clear pattern has emerged
in the response to occupations throughout the country, from San
Francisco to Denver ,
involving midnight raids by heavily armed paramilitary units of riot police
deployed to enforce park curfews.
Protesters at Occupy
San Francisco are familiar with the routine. They have endured
multiple late-night police raids on their encampment in Justin Herman
Plaza , the most brutal of
which took place Sunday, Oct. 16. Minutes before midnight and with the approval
of Mayor Ed Lee (who is currently running for reelection and claims to be
supportive of the movement's overall message), 70 police officers decked out in
full riot gear marched into the encampment to enforce a 10pm curfew. They
dismantled tents, tarps, the medical station and the kitchen, along with some
personal belongings, all of which were loaded onto Department of Public Works
trucks.
Some 200 protesters resisted
peacefully, locking arms to prevent the police invasion, which was met with a
frighteningly violent response. According to theSan
Francisco Bay Guardian, one protester received a lengthy beat-down for
duct-taping his body to a pole inside the camp. The police allegedly "ripped
him off the pole, threw him to the ground and struck him in the head and ribs.
When he left by ambulance a few hours later, he appeared to be convulsing or
seizing," reported the Bay Guardian.
Protesters using their
bodies to block the DPW trucks from leaving were dragged out of the street,
some by their fingers and thumbs. Those who locked arms to form a human chain
were pulled apart and thrown onto the sidewalk.
Ryan Hadar, 19, described
his experience to the Guardian: “They bent back my thumbs, trying
to pry me away from the people I was locking arms with. When I asked if they
were trying to break my thumbs [one officer] replied, ‘Only if I have to.’ Then
they dragged me to the sidewalk by my index finger. I asked if they were trying
to break my finger, and this time they replied, ‘Yes.’"
After destroying the
campsite, sending one activist to the hospital and arresting at least five
protesters, the police departed from the scene around 1:40am.
Days earlier, an eerily
similar situation unfolded at Occupy
Denver. Just as Zuccotti Park was celebrating victory over Mayor Bloomberg's
failed eviction attempt last Friday, Denver 's
occupation of Lincoln Park
was being dismantled at the request of Colorado Gov. John Hickenlooper. With
the combined efforts of the Colorado State Patrol and Denver Police, two dozen
protesters were arrested and charged with unlawful conduct on public land.
Two weeks ago, protesters at
Occupy Boston in Dewey Park faced police suppression in a late-night raid that
led to 129
arrests and multiple injuries involving several members of Veterans for
Peace. According to the Associated Press, nine
protesters occupying Sacramento 's Cesar Chavez
Park were arrested late
Wednesday night for failing to leave the park after closing, bringing the total
of Occupy Sacramento arrests to 67.
The authorities justify
these late-night raids as necessary to enforce park curfews. Yet, even during
the day, the mere presence of heavily armed riot police inevitably results in
some police action that baffles the mind. For example, Debra
Lynn Peardon was arrested for opening her umbrella while seated, a
violation of a new city
ban on the use of umbrellas as makeshift structures regardless of the weather.
Peaceful Arrests In Chicago
With the blessing of Chicago 's mayor, Rahm
Emanuel, the Chicago Police Department arrested
175 protesters last weekend for refusing to leave Grant Park, the site
of Occupy Chicago, citing a violation of the park's curfew. As reported by Joe
Macaré of In These Times, protesters showered praise on
the Chicago Police Department for showing restraint by arresting them "One
by one, and by all accounts as peacefully as possible," in stark contrast
to the violent arrests experienced at other occupations.
But the jailing of peaceful
protesters is wrong, even when carried out free of beatings and pepper spray.
This was epitomized by the arrest of Princeton
University professor and
civil rights activist Cornel
West on the steps outside the Supreme Court, where it is illegal to
hold a political sign. A ban on political protest outside the halls of the
highest court in the country is an ironic symbol of how little regard is given
to the First Amendment of the constitution.
Inevitable Outcomes of
Militarized Law Enforcement
Occupy Wall Street has
revealed to the country and the world an American police state apparatus that
rivals most standing armies in both weaponry and magnitude.
Nowhere is this more clear
than in New York City ,
where a perimeter of metal barricades surrounds and even follows protesters
from Zuccotti Square
on their daily marches. Nick Turse recently documented the extent of the NYPD's
mini-police state for AlterNet:
I counted seven squad cars,
two full-size police vans, one police minivan and one, to lapse into political
incorrectness, “paddy wagon.”
Later in the morning, the
total count had increased to 16 police vehicles, in addition to a number of
unmarked cars, most of which proved to belong to police officers, too.
Across Broadway and up
Liberty Street, the security forces maintained a reserve contingent of 11
police cars, five police vans, and one paddy wagon from precincts all over the
city: the 1st, 5th, 9th, 10th, 13th, 20th, 83rd, 94th (Brooklyn!), as well as the Fleet
Services Division which oversees the NYPD’s inventory of cars.
This level of overwhelming
police presence, along with the disproportionate and combative force directed
at peaceful, unarmed protesters, alarms Americans previously unaware of the
increasingly militaristic nature of American law enforcement.
Rania Khalek is an
associate writer for AlterNet. Follow her on Twitter @RaniaKhalek.
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