DC Police Raid Occupy Encampment in Washington | Common
Dreams
Common Dreams staff , February 4, 2012
Common Dreams staff , February 4, 2012
Police arrived before dawn this morning in McPherson Square
in Washington, DC.
UPDATE: (2:35 PM) AP reports:
Police by mid-day had arrested six people, including four
protesters who refused to move from beneath a statute and two others for
crossing a police line.
The National Park Service, which has tolerated the
protesters for months and protected their constitutional rights to freedom of
speech and assembly, has said it will give protesters notice if police decide
to clear the park. Police on Saturday were careful to say they were not
evicting the protesters or closing the park, but were instead stepping up
enforcement of an existing ban on camping.
Regulations allow protesters to remain onsite at all hours
with tents, though they are not allowed to camp out on blankets or other
bedding materials. Police said tents that broke the rules would be seized and
their owners threatened with arrest.
The park service had said it would start enforcing the ban
last Monday, and though protesters had then braced for a confrontation, it
wasn't until Saturday that police cracked down.
Some protesters said Saturday's enforcement amounted to
eviction even if the police wouldn't admit it.
"This is a slow, media-friendly eviction," said
protester Melissa Byrne. "We're on federal property, so they have to make
it look good."
The live stream from Occupy DC:
Just before dawn on Saturday morning police, including some
dressed in riot gear and accompanied by officers on horseback and others in
protective suits, descended in McPherson Square where Occupy protesters have
been camped since last year.
Occupy DC protestors confront U.S. Park Police in McPherson Square before dawn as police enforce a no camping law on Occupy DC protestors in Washington, one of the nation's last remaining Occupy sites, Saturday, Feb. 4, 2012. McPherson Square is a federal park near the White House, where demonstrators have enjoyed special First Amendment protections by virtue of the square's designation as park service property. The regulations permit protesters to remain onsite at all hours with tents, but bars them from camping or laying down bedding material. (AP Photo/Cliff Owen)
The Washington Post reports this
morning:
U.S. Park Police Capt. Phil Beck told protesters they would
be clearing the area around the historic statue, where protesters had erected a
blue tarp dubbed the “Tent of Dreams,” and checking to see if there was
unauthorized bedding in tents.
Under the rules, protesters are allowed to conduct a 24
-hour vigil in the federal park but not camp out overnight.
Shortly before 6 a.m., a large contingent of mounted police
and others with riot shields arrived at the camp, erecting barricades as
protesters shouted “wake up” and chanted.
“We are not evicting people from the park,” Beck said. “We
are asking folks to come into compliance.”
After a lengthy negotiation, protesters agreed to remove the
“Tent of Dreams” that they had draped on the statue of Maj. Gen. James B.
McPherson on Monday. Protesters chanted “Solidarity forever” as the tarp came
down and some suggested it be preserved in the Smithsonian as part of the
history of the Occupy movement.
Protective eyegear was distributed and emergency medical
personnel were stationed nearby, but by sunrise no pepper spray had been used
by police.
Protesters said they had expected the raid, but some were
surprised at the magnitude of the response, which included dozens of officers,
fire hoses and a paddy wagon.
“It’s pretty excessive if all they wanted us to do was take
down the tarp,” said Ricky Lehner, a protester.
And Reuters adds:
Protesters are targeting the growing income gap, corporate
greed and what they see as unfair tax structure favoring the richest 1 percent
of Americans.
News footage from the site showed police speaking with the
"Occupy DC" protesters in the park and removing a large tarp
decorated with stars and moons over a statue of U.S. Civil War General James
McPherson at the center of the square.
While similar "Occupy" protests against social and
economic inequality in other U.S. cities have been shut down by police, the
demonstrations in the capital have survived an unusually warm winter and a
permissive approach by federal authorities reluctant to provoke confrontation.
And The Hill reports:
The NPS will allow protesters to remain in the square but is
removing all “camping equipment” and will ensure that temporary structures are
open at least on one side.
The park service has come under pressure from Republicans in
Congress to end the camping in the two federal parks.
House Oversight Committee Republicans, led by Chairman
Darrell Issa (R-Calif.) have questioned why the NPS allowed protesters to
degrade McPherson Square which had just been renovated using money from
President Obama's stimulus package.
The Occupy DC movement says it is non-partisan, but its
rallying cry pitting the 99 percent against the richest 1 percent has
underscored Obama's message that the wealthy are not paying their fair share in
taxes and helping to reduce the deficit.
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