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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/10/20 6:32 am • # 76 
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DonaldTrump finally got huge crowds, but not the ones he wanted.

https://twitter.com/ProjectLincoln/stat ... 6756979712


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/10/20 8:20 am • # 77 
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Just in case you think this is going to be over in a few days. Or even weeks....

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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/10/20 12:57 pm • # 78 
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thanks for posting that, shift. I was wondering about that this morning.


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/10/20 1:45 pm • # 79 
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Trump is becoming a bit more unhinged each day. Hope he doesn't cause any irreversible damage...esp. internationally.


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/10/20 5:26 pm • # 80 
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I can't find this on the Washington Post website and I don't know how to convert the vid to an MP4 or transfer it to Youtube

Quote:
The Washington Post analyzed hours of video footage and obtained audio of police communications and other records to assemble the most complete account to date of the June 1 crackdown on protesters in the nation’s capital.

https://www.facebook.com/FactChecker/po ... 6642946949


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/11/20 3:38 am • # 81 
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"Even the president himself -- it's not the same thing as what happened to George Floyd, but it's horrific. He was a vicim of crooked cops. Now, again, not the same circumstnces, I'm not making any comparisons." ~ Fox News' Sean Hannity


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PostPosted: 06/11/20 4:02 am • # 82 
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Image

And they actually thought they were going to get away with it even though they knew they were filmed. That says everything we need to know about that police department.


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/12/20 5:46 am • # 83 
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Sounds about white ....

Masked white nationalists march in Washington with police escort


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https://news.yahoo.com/masked-white-nat ... 40419.html


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/12/20 11:24 am • # 84 
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Even the Palestinians are taking note ...

Palestinians know deadly US police tactics all too well
Two decades of Israeli-US police cooperation includes training in racial profiling and violent suppression of protests.

Mersiha Gadzo

Image
Campaigners are seeking to end US law enforcement exchanges with Israel


Following the killing of George Floyd, as US riot police fired rubber-coated bullets, tear gas canisters, pepper spray and stun grenades at protesters, Palestinians shared tips on social media on how to best deal with the assaults.

Many in the Palestinian territories are well experienced with such tactics by security forces while living under a decades-long occupation by Israeli forces in the occupied West Bank and besieged Gaza Strip.

According to the organisations Jewish Voice for Peace (JVP) and Researching the American-Israeli Alliance (RAIA), one common theme shared between United States and Israel is the exchange of tactics and expertise in state violence, which has been ongoing for 18 years.

Months after the September 11 attacks, US law enforcement delegates attended their first official training expedition to Israel to exchange "best practices" in "counter-terrorism".

Since then ...

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PostPosted: 06/13/20 1:41 pm • # 85 
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13 CHICAGO OFFICERS LOUNGED IN A CONGRESSMAN'S OFFICE DURING DEMONSTRATIONS AND VIOLENCE, SECURITY VIDEO SHOWS
Thirteen Chicago police officers lounged and slept in the congressional campaign office of US Rep. Bobby Rush on June 1 as protests and demonstrations occurred throughout the city, Rush and Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said.

CNN's Ryan Young reports.

Thirteen Chicago police officers lounged and slept in the congressional campaign office of US Rep. Bobby Rush on June 1 as protests and looting occurred throughout the city, Rush and Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said Thursday.

The officers, who included three supervisors, were seen on video lounging in Rush's office, sleeping, eating the congressman's popcorn and talking on the phone, Rush and Lightfoot said.

The incident came to light after Rush reviewed security camera footage from his office, the mayor explained at a news conference. The campaign office was broken into on Sunday, May 31, when the surrounding strip mall was looted, Lightfoot told CNN. She said the police officers entered the campaign office early Monday, June 1.

"They even had the unmitigated gall to go and make coffee for themselves and to pop popcorn -- my popcorn -- in my microwave, while looters were tearing apart businesses within their sight, within their reach," Rush said.

"They were in a mode of relaxation and they did not care about what was happening to businesspeople, to this city. They didn't care. They absolutely didn't care."

At the time, protests were taking place in Chicago in the wake of the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis. Floyd died while in Minneapolis police custody a week earlier.

The Chicago Police Department tweeted Thursday it has launched an internal investigation into the incident, and Lightfoot said they are working to identify the officers involved.

CNN has reached out to the union but has not received a response.

Lightfoot said the incident was a "personal embarrassment" for her.

"I can tell you one thing for certain -- not one of these officers will be allowed to hide behind the badge and go on and act like nothing ever happened," Lightfoot said. "Not anymore. Not in my city, not in your city."

The security video picks up around 1 a.m. on June 1 and shows the officers were in the office for at least five hours, Lightfoot said.

There was a core group of eight officers, but at one point the group grew to as many as 13, the mayor added.

"The same time that these 13 officers were popping popcorn, taking a nap, relaxing inside this office," First Deputy Superintendent Anthony Riccio said, "I was standing shoulder to shoulder with hundreds of other officers on State Street as we got pelted with rocks from rioters."

Calling the actions of the officers "completely indefensible," Riccio added, "We had 120 officers injured that night that they sat there. We had 167 vehicles damaged or completely destroyed the night these officers sat there, and countless businesses damaged and looted at the same time that these officers sat there."

Chicago police Superintendent David Brown condemned the officers' actions in the surveillance video.

"If you sleep during a riot, what do you do during a regular shift when there is no riot?" Brown said.

"Step up, or step out. I'm not playing," he added.

Lightfoot told CNN's "AC360" on Thursday that officers are now trying to make excuses for the behavior.

"Today, literally, the officers were, through their various contacts, were trying to say the congressman actually invited us in and he's lying now," she said.

"Bobby Rush is a former Black Panther. He didn't invite the police into his office. And the fact that they would even say that -- and even assuming that was true -- five hours? When literally murder and mayhem is happening everywhere? Police officers are getting the crap beaten out of them?"

Later on June 1, the day the officers were in Rush's office, Lightfoot said attacks on local storefronts and businesses were "nothing short of devastating."

The city's 911 operators had received 65,000 calls in a 24-hour period, about 50,000 more than what the city sees on a typical day, Lightfoot said.

Thursday, Lightfoot said she wanted "the strongest possible action" to be taken against the officers involved and noted that the state's attorney and US attorney will review the case as well.

She also said she wants to use the incident to pass police reform legislation.

"I am ready to work with the governor, and our other great partners in Springfield, to forge a change in state law to require licensing and certification of police officers," Lightfoot said.

SOURCE


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/13/20 2:00 pm • # 86 
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Trump Calls the Concept of Chokeholds 'So Innocent and So Perfect' in Bizarre Fox News Interview
Evan Brechtel

https://secondnexus.com/donald-trump-ch ... nt-perfect


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/13/20 2:57 pm • # 87 
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he's gotta go.


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/14/20 11:28 am • # 88 
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Floyd’s death hastens shift in police pop culture portrayals
NEW YORK (AP) — Gary Phillips, a prize-winning crime novelist from Los Angeles, grew up on TV shows that showed a world nothing like the one he lived in. "I watched them all, ‘Dragnet,’ ‘Adam 12,’ ‘The Wild, Wild West,’ ‘Mannix,’ ‘Cannon,’ ‘Peter Gunn’ reruns and on and on. Now these were white guys and they were tough but fair and even-handed,” he told The Associated Press in a recent email, referring to popular programs mostly from the 1960s and 1970s.


https://www.mail.com/int/entertainment/ ... tage-ss1-2


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/16/20 11:39 am • # 89 
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New questions about Trump’s ugly Bible stunt hint at some dark truths
Greg Sargent

Image


White House image-makers often strive to create iconic moments for presidents, but sometimes history refuses to cooperate. George W. Bush’s “Mission Accomplished” speech on an aircraft carrier, for instance, ultimately came to enshrine his propagandizing about a needless war that spiraled into the greatest U.S. foreign policy disaster in recent times.

Disturbing new details are emerging about the violent crackdown on protesters that preceded President Trump’s Bible photo op near the White House. What was supposed to capture Trump bravely standing up for “law and order” is rapidly coming to typify his megalomania, his terror of looking weak, and — perversely enough — his profound contempt for the rule of law.

The Post has assembled a remarkable reconstruction of the decision-making behind the crackdown, which cleared the way for Trump’s walk across Lafayette Square to a nearby church. It suggests the violations of protesters’ rights were even more serious than we previously thought.

First, we need to foreground a crucial fact: Trump and his handlers have gone to extraordinary lengths to showcase this moment as ...

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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/16/20 6:12 pm • # 90 
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In case you were wondering how #MartinGugino is doing since his "fall" …

Buffalo protester Martin Gugino has a fractured skull and cannot walk

By Jacqueline Rose and Eric Levenson

Martin Gugino, the 75-year-old protester who was pushed by two Buffalo, New York, police officers earlier this month, has a fractured skull and is not able to walk, his lawyer said in a statement provided to CNN on Monday.

"I am not at liberty to elaborate at this time other than to confirm that his skull was fractured," Gugino's attorney Kelly Zarcone said. "While he is not able to walk yet, we were able to have a short conversation before he became too tired. He is appreciative of ...

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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/18/20 6:52 pm • # 91 
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Yes he actually said that

Quote:
Trump Says He Couldn't Watch The Whole Video Of George Floyd's Murder Because It's 'Over Eight Minutes' Long

https://www.comicsands.com/trump-hannit ... 99908.html

vid or him saying that at source


When I saw the above article I thought it was a joke but it's true:

https://www.washingtonpost.com/nation/2 ... video-fox/


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PostPosted: 06/19/20 6:06 am • # 92 
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Air Force Investigates Military Planes That Monitored Protesters
The Air Force inspector general is examining whether secretive National Guard surveillance aircraft improperly monitored demonstrators in Washington and Minneapolis.


Image
The West Virginia Air National Guard sent a RC-26 aircraft, like the one above, to help observe protests in Washington this month.Credit...


https://www.nytimes.com/2020/06/18/us/p ... tests.html


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/24/20 8:59 am • # 93 
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Hackers just leaked sensitive files from over 200 police departments that are searchable by badge number

https://www.businessinsider.com/bluelea ... nts-2020-6


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/24/20 9:03 am • # 94 
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shiftless2 wrote:
Hackers just leaked sensitive files from over 200 police departments that are searchable by badge number

https://www.businessinsider.com/bluelea ... nts-2020-6


Resignations, anyone?


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PostPosted: 06/24/20 9:12 am • # 95 
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Class-action suit against LAPD adds fresh claims of injury, anguish among protesters
KEVIN RECTOR

A lawsuit alleging violent abuses of power by Los Angeles police during recent protests has been greatly expanded to include more details on demonstrators’ injuries and their allegations of mistreatment, as well as explicit claims of poor leadership among top police brass.

First filed earlier this month by the Los Angeles chapter of the National Lawyers Guild, Black Lives Matter and Los Angeles Community Action Network, the lawsuit was amended Sunday to provide a more complete breakdown of arrests — there were more than 3,000 over the course of several days — and accuses the LAPD of repeatedly misapplying the law to clear the streets. The lawsuit says demonstrators’ constitutional rights were violated and many were left bloodied and bruised.

“We wanted to show the scope of what happened over all of these days and the range of injuries,” said Carol Sobel, a longtime civil rights attorney who is helping to represent the plaintiffs. “What’s extraordinary about this is how many people got shot in the upper torso or the head, because those are potentially deadly strikes.”

The updated lawsuit also elaborates on the possible exposure of arrestees to the coronavirus after being crammed on buses for hours, often for infractions that the plaintiffs argue do not legally justify arrest or detention, only citations on the street. It accuses LAPD Chief Michel Moore of condoning such arrests despite knowing the risks posed by the virus, and of ordering the types of force that can severely wound demonstrators, including the firing of foam and sponge bullets into crowds.

“These were not just poorly trained officers,” Sobel said. “These were mis-trained officers being directed by the chief.”

Police declined to comment on the specific allegations.

The expansion of the class-action lawsuit, based on new information and images from more than 1,000 people who have been in touch with the Lawyers Guild and other attorneys in the case, follows a Times investigation that found LAPD officers wounded many demonstrators using batons and less-lethal projectiles, often in ways that likely violated protocol.

It also comes amid mounting litigation over the LAPD’s response to days of protest at the end of last month and early this month over the killing of George Floyd in Minneapolis and the killings of other black men and women at the hands of police across the country.

Separately on Monday, a 22-year-old woman named Laura Montilla filed her own lawsuit against the LAPD and other law enforcement officials, alleging abuses — including that she was surrounded, or “kettled,” by police officers ahead of an evening curfew that had been bumped up without much warning, then blocked from leaving, arrested, and left in handcuffs for hours.

Suits against the LAPD also include one brought by a woman who said she was shot in the head with a police projectile while in her car near protests in the Fairfax district, as well as lawsuits by the ACLU and other advocacy organizations over the department’s implementation of curfews in the city for several nights in a row.

Capt. Gisselle Espinoza, an LAPD spokeswoman, said the department didn’t comment on pending litigation but was “fully committed to investigating every allegation of misconduct or excessive force related to the recent protests” and had assigned 40 internal affairs investigators to the task.

The department has previously acknowledged receiving at least 74 complaints against officers, about 40 of them alleging excessive force. It has placed at least 10 officers on desk duty pending the outcome of investigations but has not punished any officers.

According to protocol, officers can use batons to push people in large crowds that they are trying to disperse but are only meant to strike people with batons when those individuals present a danger. Officers are allowed to shoot projectiles at people’s belt line but not at their heads or necks. They are not supposed to shoot projectiles into crowds but at specific targets, and they are not supposed to shoot them at people who are running away.

The expanded lawsuit alleges the LAPD violated many of its own rules, as well as other laws governing how and whether police can confront protesters in the street.

One plaintiff, Abigail Rodas, said she was trying to leave a protest in the Fairfax district on May 30 when LAPD officers started shooting projectiles at her and a friend. She said she was shot in the face and lost consciousness. The lawsuit includes a picture of Rodas’ bloodied mouth with gauze coming out of it.

Rodas was driven to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, where she was diagnosed with a severe fracture to her right mandible and rushed into surgery, the lawsuit claims. She left the hospital two days later with stitches inside and outside her mouth and a steel plate along her jawbone, it claims.

“She was unable to talk for about 10 days. For one week, she could only drink liquids and is still on a soft-food diet,” the lawsuit states. “Nearly three weeks after the injury, she has screws in her gums and rubber bands to immobilize her jaw while the bones rejoin.”

Another plaintiff, Jeffrey Trotter, 51, who lives at the Rosslyn Hotel on skid row, said he was walking home when officers in riot gear confronted him and asked him where he was going. After he said he was returning home from a walk to Rite-Aid, the lawsuit states, the officer without further discussion “took a few steps back and shot plaintiff with hard rubber or foam projectiles at close range four times, once in the chest, twice in the stomach, and once on the left hand.”

He was in intense pain for more than a week, the lawsuit says, and the projectiles tore skin from his chest and hand.

In her own lawsuit, filed Monday against Moore, Los Angeles County Sheriff Alex Villanueva and other unidentified officers, Montilla claims that she was sexually assaulted by officers.

Multiple officers groped her breasts and vagina, she claims in the lawsuit. She did not identify the officers. She also said an LAPD officer handcuffed her so tightly in zip ties that she lost feeling in her right hand and had “abrasions and a bruise” on her wrist for days. She said she and others arrested alongside her, including homeless individuals who would have been exempt from the curfew, were subjected to “torturous, inhumane conditions.”

She said she was loaded on a bus along with others, who started to panic and scream in the dark. She said they were given no explanation by police as to where they were being taken and that officers subjected them to blaring heavy metal music.

“Every single officer who was present that day was complicit in that cruelty,” Montilla said in an interview Monday. “The police I encountered did what they did because they are protected by a system that does not hold them accountable.”

The sheriff’s office said it did not comment on pending litigation.

Both Montilla and the plaintiffs in the expanded lawsuit argue that the LAPD unnecessarily exposed them to the coronavirus, including by not requiring officers to wear masks. Medical experts have criticized the department’s use of crowded buses to transport nonviolent curfew violators, given the ongoing pandemic.

The advocate organizations that filed the expanded lawsuit laid the blame for that and for many of the most severe injuries to protesters directly at the feet of Moore, who oversaw the department’s response and was personally on the scene in the Fairfax District on May 30, when some of the most brutal police enforcement occurred.

“Chief Moore authorized, approved, and ratified the unwarranted assault on the protesters with projectiles and batons,” the lawsuit states. “Alternatively, he did nothing to stop the assault on the protesters as he witnessed it.”

Asked on Monday about the claims in the lawsuit, Moore deferred to Espinoza’s statement, adding only that officers were “the subject of countless assaults as well as witnessed vandalism, fires and looting.”

Moore previously said he was forced to give dispersal orders and to enforce curfews at various points during the protests because things were spiraling out of control and people’s lives were in danger.

He also said he saw some things he didn’t like, including the use of batons by some officers, and made some orders in the field to halt them.

Police previously said that dozens of officers were injured, including an officer whose skull was fractured.

SOURCE


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/25/20 4:42 am • # 96 
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“... there is a clear bias and selective culture/practice when it comes to issuing timely amber alerts and missing person reports in Milwaukee for POC.”

Missing Black Girls Found After Cops Don’t Issue Amber Alert Amid Sex Trafficking Suspicions: Report
Milwaukee police have a history of being accused of not taking Black missing person reports seriously.


pair of Black girls missing for days from Milwaukee was found by a search party of residents who banded together after police decided against issuing child abduction emergency alerts for them, according to reports across social media reports and from local media. It all unfolded against the backdrop of an alleged child sex trafficking ring the girls’ relatives suspected they could have been taken to be a part of.

The girls first went missing on Sunday, but ...

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Quote:
According to a CNN report last year, “data shows that missing white children receive far more media coverage than missing black and brown children, despite higher rates of missing children among communities of color.”


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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/28/20 9:14 am • # 97 
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Quote:
Military officials later revealed that the whole Lafayette Park debacle was their desperate attempt to keep Trump from taking an even more extraordinary measure and ordering nearby active-duty combat troops into the D.C. city limits. Such a step would involve Trump invoking the 1807 Insurrection Act.


Trump Ramps Up Misuse Of The Military For Political Gain
“The idea of fighting American citizens on American soil is not what the military does and not what the American people expect the military to do,” one critic said.

Molly Redden

Starting with the chaotic assault on White House protesters, President Donald Trump and his military deputies have spent the past several weeks threatening an outsized military response against anti-fascists, protesters and other groups he perceives as his enemies.

And on Thursday, the administration turned those military efforts back to a favorite bogeyman: undocumented immigrants at the U.S.-Mexico border. The Pentagon announced it would re-up its military presence by deploying 4,000 troops to the border, mostly drawn from the National Guard, in October.

Unauthorized immigration is down substantially this year. But there is an election coming.

“It’s misusing the military and doing so for political reasons,” said David Lapan, Trump’s former Department of Homeland Security press secretary and a former Defense Department official.

The Pentagon said it was ...

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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/30/20 4:25 am • # 98 
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On Stonewall anniversary, the NYPD launched a brutal unprovoked attack on LGBTQ people
As Mayor Bill de Blasio tweeted about honoring Stonewall, the NYPD was unleashing pepper spray on LGBTQ people dancing in celebration.

By Bil Browning

Image


The NYPD may have apologized last year for raiding the Stonewall Inn, spawning days of riots and police brutality, but they apparently haven’t decided to stop the behavior. As Mayor Bill de Blasio tweeted about honoring Stonewall, the cops were unleashing pepper spray on LGBTQ people dancing in celebration.

Yesterday, as the Queer Liberation March wound down and participants celebrated in nearby Washington Square Park, police charged into the crowd, swinging batons, shoving people to the ground, and arresting a handful of participants. The officers kept their badge numbers covered.

Quote:
Erin Taylor @erinisaway

the nypd are brutalizing protesters at the queer liberation march on Pride of all days. remember that Stonewall started as a riot against the police.

Quote:
Eliel Cruz @elielcruz

They’re fighting people

vid here

“Using pepper spray against the Black and queer community, beating LGBTQIA+ protestors with batons and bicycles, and intimidating our right to peacefully assemble, reflects the wanton disregard that the mayor, along with the NYPD, have for the lives and safety all Black and queer New Yorkers,” organizers told BuzzFeed News.

“It was very peaceful, very chill. I didn’t see much police presence. Then I saw 20 cops on bikes and a few cop cars speed up right away, so I walked a little quicker,” Eliel Cruz told the outlet. “I walked by five or six people on the ground who were pepper sprayed and were washing their eyes.”

Quote:
NYC Protest Updates 2020 @protest_nyc

NYPD is pushing on #QueerLiberationMarch and have made arrests near Washington Square Park. Tensions are rising.

vid here

NPYD says they were trying to arrest two people for graffiti when a crowd gathered and starte chanting, “Let them go!”

“The man who was arrested was crying and saying he was hurting and the cops were dragging him by his hands so his weight was against his shoulders pulling [on] the sockets,” volunteer Pippa Bianco told Gothamist, saying erupted when two officers in white shirts “sprinted into the crowd and started shoving us.” Another group of cops on motorcycles started pushing their vehicles through the crowd, striking protesters.

MORE>

more vids at source


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PostPosted: 06/30/20 4:40 am • # 99 
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Masked stormtroopers attacking a peaceful vigil. But no... there isn’t a problem.

Where are the “good cops” we keep hearing about trying to stop this? Or quitting because of this behaviour? *crickets*


Cops in Riot Gear Stormed a Violin Vigil for Elijah McClain

By Claire Lampen

Image
Protesters close to the police line at a peaceful rally and march convened in memory of Elijah McClain on June 27


On Saturday, activists in Aurora, Colorado, convened for a peaceful rally and march to demand justice for Elijah McClain, a 23-year-old Black man who died after a brutal arrest by local police last August. The event included a violin vigil, a nod to the fact that McClain was an accomplished violinist who was known for spending his lunch breaks putting on concerts for the cats and dogs at a community animal shelter. Footage from the event shows a group of quiet participants, most of them socially distanced, holding signs and observing as a few violinists perform at dusk — and then the arrival of a group of officers in riot gear, charging into the crowd. According to attendees, the police went on to deploy pepper spray and use physical force.

Images shared on social media show lines of officers in helmets, bulletproof vests, and gas masks marching onto a lawn outside the Aurora Municipal Center on Saturday evening, aggressively dispersing people. Attendees say police used, or threatened to use, tear gas — a chemical weapon — on protesters. A spokesperson for the APD denied this allegation on Sunday, telling the Cut: “Tear gas was not used yesterday. There was pepper spray deployed but tear gas was not used.”

multiple vids at source


Saturday’s events began with a rally and march organized by Denver’s Party for Socialism and Liberation, scheduled to begin at 1 p.m. in the park between the APD headquarters and the Aurora Municipal Center. That would be followed by a student-led rally and another march, which took off from the adjacent Municipal Center sometime after 5 p.m. Violinists — including six-time Grammy nominee Ashanti Floyd, from Georgia, and Lee England Jr., of New York City — planned a vigil in to conclude the day’s actions later that evening, in Aurora’s City Center Park.

According to those in attendance, the event started out peacefully, though many noticed a strong police presence. At around 8:30 p.m. — about a half hour into the vigil — officers in full riot gear began closing in on the gathering. Police “quickly started moving in on just all protesters, getting them to move away and step back,” Carlos Espino, who was at the event, told the Cut. He saw a “smoke plume in the air,” which he believed was tear gas. “We could smell it from where we were, which was several hundred yards away.” Other protesters speculated that ...

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 Post subject: Re: Minneapolis
PostPosted: 06/30/20 4:49 am • # 100 
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Since the police like to claim that they didn't use tear gas. It was pepper spray, it's worth looking at the subject: tear gas vs pepper spray.

Semantics. It seems to be a case of a distinction without a difference

Quote:
U.S. Park Police says officers used “pepper balls,” not “tear gas.” It’s true pepper balls, which contain a pepper spray-like irritant, have a different makeup than another chemical typical referred to as “tear gas” (and which USPP specifically says it didn’t use). But some sources consider pepper spray a type of tear gas, while others say both chemicals have the same effect on people.

According to the Scientific American and the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, pepper spray is a type of “tear gas” or “riot control agent.”

Dr. Ranit Mishori, senior medical adviser for Physicians for Human Rights and a Georgetown University professor of family medicine, told us in an email: “Tear gas and pepper spray both belong to a class of crowd-control weapons known as chemical irritants.” The chemical makeup is different, but the impact on people is similar. “During a protest, it is impossible to tell what chemical is being used as the clinical manifestations are the same.”

https://www.factcheck.org/2020/06/the-s ... per-spray/


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