Late Night, Oscar Grant by Josh Wolf, http://www.flickr.com/photos/oaklandlocal/4776125399/in/set-72157624455168036
By Carlos Villarreal, Executive Director, National Lawyers Guild SF Bay Area Chapter
NLG Decries Police Tactics, Assaults on Peaceful Protesters
Despite claims by Oakland Police (OPD) and city officials that
law enforcement used restraint during last Thursday’s protests following
the Johannes Mehserle verdict, details emerging paint a very different
picture. Police used excessive force against a largely peaceful
protest, violently attacking a number of people. Police arrested many
demonstrators who had done nothing wrong, and then held them in jail
through the night and in some cases through the weekend and beyond.
Among those arrested were NLGSF member, and prominent Oakland attorney,
Walter Riley. “Thursday’s law enforcement conduct must be investigated.
The police were provocative and seemed determined to instigate
violence, which of course, served their police contract negotiations
with Oakland at a time when they are facing layoffs of 80 officers,”
said Riley. “In the organized rally where protesters, including me,
were helping to ensure peaceful protest, the police helped to perpetuate
a narrative of violence by allowing a small number of people to
vandalize businesses when they could have stopped it.”
Also arrested were Oakland School Board member Jumoke Hinton Hodge,
69-year-old former school principal Susan Harman, journalists and legal
observers. Many of the arrestees were seriously injured by the police,
including a handful who were taken to the hospital from the scene and at
least one individual who was denied medication, causing a potentially
life threatening situation to an elderly member of the community.
“Last Thursday a court in Los Angeles sent a disgraceful message about
police violence, and that message was reinforced by the conduct of
Oakland Police and other law enforcement Thursday evening,” said Carlos
Villarreal, NLGSF Executive Director. “OPD and outside agencies brought
in as reinforcement used overwhelming force on a largely nonviolent
assembly, sweeping up lawyers, legal observers, journalists and
community members, and seriously injuring a number of individuals.”
Several years ago the National Lawyers Guild and ACLU obtained a $2
million settlement in a lawsuit over OPD brutality toward demonstrators,
and at that time OPD adopted new crowd control policies designed to
safeguard freedom of speech in just this sort of volatile situation.
“If OPD had followed its own crowd control policies, the injuries would
have been avoided," explained NLGSF attorney Rachel Lederman. "The
aggressive use of police formations, baton beatings and indiscriminate
arrests were unnecessary and violated people's constitutional right to
protest. To make things even worse, OPD violated state law by jailing
people for long periods of time who had been arrested for very minor
offenses.”
The National Lawyers Guild San Francisco Bay Area Chapter (NLGSF)
condemns the police abuse by OPD and other law enforcement on the scene
and is investigating possible legal action. The NLGSF is a human rights
bar association founded in 1937 with hundreds of members throughout the
Bay Area. Find out more at www.nlgsf.org.
Could we have more on your statement that OPD allowed the vandalism in order to claim that the protest was violent--what opportunities to stop the vandals and thieves did they not take?