[Onthebarricades] Activist responses to police attack on Los Angeles Mayday march

Andy ldxar1 at tesco.net
Sat May 5 05:48:44 PDT 2007


ANSWER Condemns LAPD Attack on Immigrant Rights Movement
Stop Racist Police Violence! Fire Police Chief Bratton now!

The ANSWER Coalition unequivocally condemns the brutal, unprovoked Los Angeles Police Department attack on immigrant families, media reporters and camerapersons and others in MacArthur Park on May 1. The LAPD's racism and violent nature has been displayed once again for the world to see. 

We demand that Mayor Villaraigosa and all city officials take immediate action to bring the officers involved to justice. We also demand that the Los Angeles Board of Police Commissioners fire LAPD Chief William Bratton.

On May 1, tens of thousands of protesters participated in mass marches for immigrant rights in Los Angeles and around the United States. The march targeted by the LAPD was the second major action in the city that day. It marched from Vermont and 3rd to MacArthur Park.

By all accounts, the march was peaceful-that is, until the cops began their coordinated attack on the participants. 

Soon after the thousands of marchers arrived at MacArthur Park, a police motorcade forced its way into a large circle of people who were enjoying the Aztec Dancers perform an Indigenous ceremony in Alvarado St. near the Southeast corner of the park. The cops pushed people, including Aztec Dancers and children, to the ground.

Next, cops on bicycles rushed through the crowd demanding people evacuate the area. They were followed closely by LAPD "shock troops" on foot, who forced people from the area by hitting onlookers with batons.

The crowd was obviously upset and highly concerned by the unprovoked and violent police attack. In an attempt to defend themselves, people responded by hurling empty water bottles and fruit at the police. 

Contrary to LAPD Chief Bratton's statement that their violence was in response to "certain elements of the crowd . [who] began to create a series of disturbances," it was really the other way around. 

As this was happening at the east corner of the park, several hundred yards away on the other end of the park, dozens of cops in full riot gear cleared the street by pushing people onto the sidewalks. 

The coordinated, military-style actions show a deliberate calculus used by the LAPD. This was a premeditated attack-a police riot. It is standard practice to repress mass movements and working people.

'They were merciless'

      Take action today

      Write an e-mail or contact Mayor Villaraigosa to express your outrage at the attack on immigrant rights marchers and community members.

      ANSWER has set up an easy-to-use mechanism to fax or write a letter to the Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa demanding that Bratton be fired immediately and that his application for reappointment be denied. Click this link to send your letter by fax or email. 
     

The worst was yet to come. Less than one hour after the initial attack, the LAPD began its full assault on the marchers and all people in the park. Well over 100 riot cops, including 30 to 40 shooting pellet guns and rubber-coated bullets began attacking everyone in the park. They fired many times directly at people, many of whom could not get away from the police onslaught. Police also shot tear gas at the protesters. 
One eyewitness to the LAPD violence was Ernesto Arce, ANSWER Coalition organizer and KPFK radio host. Arce, who was hit in the leg with a rubber-coated bullet during the attack, described the scene:

"Without warning, cops descended into a park full of families, homeless and handicapped individuals and street cart vendors. They were merciless. 

"For the next 30 minutes, hundreds of activists and bystanders were shot, beaten by night sticks and run out of the park. The police had no intention of entertaining requests from people who were not able to move quickly enough. They were forcefully hit on the legs until they were immobile. 

"The cops didn't only move people out of the perimeters of the park, they chased through the park firing at anyone who might have been an obstacle. I witnessed many people who were shot at from the back. Children and entire families were being violently pushed or beaten. An elderly woman cried out for help but few were willing to run back in the face of fast-approaching SWAT police.

"We were chased onto 7th street and forced at least 6 blocks west. The police tried to cordon off the entire area, but most protestors didn't stick around. It was frightening for even seasoned protestors."

The cops shut down the organized rally. Many scheduled speakers did not get to speak. In addition, they overturned and destroyed the tables and displays of non-profits inside Macarthur Park. The LAPD claimed that they declared the legally permitted event an "unlawful assembly." But no one heard an official order to disperse or face arrest. In fact, a Fox News reporter heard riot cops say, "Better hustle, it's time to tussle," as they moved in on people with batons and loaded weapons.

LAPD strategy

May 1 is International Workers' Day. It started in the United States after police viciously attacked a demonstration of striking workers demanding better working conditions. The police killed several and wounded 200. They blamed the workers for the police violence.

The police strategy is still the same in 2007. This was displayed in L.A. as it has been many times before. 

The LAPD's May 1 attack brings to memory to the violent repression of demonstrators outside the 2000 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles. Similar tactics were used: firing rubber bullets and beating people without cause; chasing people on foot and in police vehicles, and then tackling and clubbing them; using military formations to intimidate and disperse crowds; and then blaming the victims for the aggression.

The police and Mayor Villaraigosa have promised investigations into the police assault in MacArthur Park. But what will come from the LAPD when its chief, Bratton, has already blamed those attacked and said they were throwing "missiles?"  

What will come from a mayor who wants more police on the streets and has been an apologist for police brutality and murder-like the killing of Susie Peña-many times before? Already, Villaraigosa has assured Los Angeles and his wealthy backers that "order has been fully restored"-when it was the LAPD that broke the "order" in the first place. 

Little will happen unless the movement demands justice.

Bratton should be fired. His first term as L.A.'s police chief is over, but he has applied for another. The Los Angeles Police Commission has 90 days to decide whether to reappoint him. His history of condoning police terror at the expense of working and oppressed people is clear. 

Attacking the immigrant rights movement

When mass movements arise-like last year's mass upsurge for immigrant rights-they often are met with repression in order to maintain the status quo. The immigrant rights movement mobilized millions to demand equality and legalization.

Now, the ruling elite want the movement to go away for good. A wave of racist raids and deportations has swept the country in recent months, aiming to strike fear into immigrant communities. The LAPD action on May 1 is part of that strategy.

But the movement is still alive with potential. The April 7 protest in Los Angeles and now the May 1 protests around the country have showed this.

In the face of racist police violence, it is important that the people stay united to demand justice. We in the ANSWER Coalition demand justice, an end to racist police violence and full rights for all immigrants. Fighting against racism, immigrant bashing and police brutality must be a top priority for the anti-war movement and all progressive organizations. 

Take action today

Write an e-mail or contact Mayor Villaraigosa to express your outrage at the attack on immigrant rights marchers and community members. Due to the growing national outrage, Police Chief may try to distance himself from some of the worst police atrocities. But Bratton and other officials must be held responsible since this was a clearly planned and coordinated police assault that lasted a considerable period of time. 

ANSWER has set up an easy-to-use mechanism to fax or write a letter to the Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa demanding that Bratton be fired immediately and that his application for reappointment be denied. Click this link to send your letter by fax or email. 

---------------------------------------------------

A.N.S.W.E.R. Coalition
Act Now to Stop War and End Racism
213-251-1025
http://www.answerla.org 
answerla at answerla.org
137 N. Virgil Ave
Los Angeles, CA 90004
Join us each Tues at 7 pm for A.N.S.W.E.R. Activists Meetings.



================================================================

Just from media coverage at the time, this is true.

On Fri, 4 May 2007, Linda Piera-Avila wrote:

Dear Greens,

This is a must read! It is from Jennifer Snow of Progressive 
Christians 
Uniting. 
<mailto:progressive.christians.uniting at gmail.com>progressive.christians.uniting at gmail.com 
I have met Jennifer and know her to be a gentle and sincere person.

Several of my friends from the Farm were among the dancers she 
describes in the first paragraph. I can't help but think that that 
may have had something to do with the LAPD's instructions to 
attack. The scene Jennifer describes sounds horribly similar to
Wounded Knee in 1890, with the substitution of 
rubber bullets instead of real ones. But, as she said, she 
feels they would have used real ones, had they had them

I remember the day of the eviction from the Farm a group of us 
observers were at one point surrounded by six LAPD who were 
pointing rifles at us. Unreal! I was just talking on the cell 
phone while looking down the barrel of a rifle! This behavior cannot go on!

Linda Piera-Avila

________________________________________________________

May 1: Violence in MacArthur Park
This is what happened.

The march ended at Wilshire and Alvarado, and the last 
organization in the march was a Native American drumming and dancing 
troupe. They stopped in the street to dance, and a huge circle, 
mostly of families with small children, gathered around them to
watch, cheer, and clap. It was peaceful and jubilant, 
a celebration, not a protest. The police were there, but no one 
was paying any attention to them.

Suddenly there were sirens, very loud and close. Police 
motorcycles drove into the crowd around the dancers. There was no 
announcement - or if there was,
no one could hear it over the sirens. Imagine the deafening noise 
of many sirens only a few feet from you, the motorcycle driving 
towards you, pushing you forward. Imagine the panic of women with 
small children in strollers. People tried to get away from
the motorcycles, but the police would not allow you to walk 
through them. When I tried, I was pushed roughly back in front of 
the motorcycles. I saw three middle
school girls standing hugging each other in front of 
a motorcycle, the wheel pushing against their feet and legs, the 
sirens blasting in their ears, the policeman screaming at them. I 
saw people being pushed off their feet. When I saw the police start striking
someone, I ran over to try to put myself between them. I saw 
people dragging their friends away from the police.

Eventually they pushed us back onto the sidewalk. No one knew why 
they were doing this or what was happening. A line of police in 
riot gear faced us as we crowded on the sidewalk, bewildered and 
bruised and angry. We hadn't been doing anything 
wrong. They hadn't asked us to move, or tried to 
communicate with us in any way other than violence. The noise 
was deafening, terrifying, disorienting. Teenagers with piercings 
yelled at the police. I pointed at the ground, trying to tell the 
police, look, I'm on
the sidewalk. The police yelled at us. You had to yell to be heard.

But the tension faded. The National Lawyers Guild passed the word 
along that as long as we stayed on the sidewalk, there would be no 
problems. Most of the teenagers had calmed down. There was nothing 
to see - just the people lined up on the sidewalk, the
police in the street. People were a little bewildered. Why were 
the police here? What were they doing? Why were there so many of 
them? Why did they have guns and
canisters? But no one was doing anything. We just stood there, 
talking, laughing, drinking water, eating corn, taking pictures. We 
wondered what on earth
there were so many police for.

And then suddenly the kids - the same teenagers that had been 
yelling at the police - ran along the sidewalk, yelling get back, get 
back, they've declared unlawful assembly, they're going to arrest 
everyone. We heard shots. Within the park, from the corner
of Alvarado and 7th, I saw people running. I ran towards them. I 
wanted to make sure that people were not responding violently to the 
police, that no one was being hurt.

No one was violent, but people were indeed being hurt. Keep in mind 
that there had been no announcement - or at least, no effective 
announcement. I had been in the front the entire time, less than two 
feet from the police. Surely I would have heard an announcement if 
there was one. The only announcement had been rumor.
Later on, I would hear a completely unintelligible announcement 
from a helicopter. I could tell that it was in English. Even if I 
had been able to understand it, many in the crowd would not 
have. There were no requests to disperse. There was no warning to the
crowd. There was no explanation. There was no effort to communicate.

The police entered the park shooting gas or smoke 
canisters. People panicked, running in all directions. I saw a 
couple, bewildered, start walking in the wrong direction. I held up 
my hands and said to the police, I'm going to get those people, I am 
going to help those people there, and went down to them, guiding them 
in front of the line and
towards the exit. They didn't speak much English. I continued to 
walk slowly in front of the police. Suddenly I saw a homeless man, 
sleeping under a tree. The police line approached, screaming at 
him. He woke up, confused. Someone with a camera tried to help him, 
but was beaten off. He tottered to his feet, trying to grab his 
suitcase and blanket. The police screamed at him. He held out his 
hands to them. Perhaps that seemed threatening. I saw two policemen 
start hitting him with their batons, one to his
legs, one to his chest. I started back towards him, thinking I 
could put myself between him and the police, but that's all I saw, 
because then the police had me.

I was thrown to the ground. A policeman screamed move! move!, 
pushing me and hitting me with the baton.

John Johnson
Change-Links Progressive Newspaper
change at pacbell.net or change-links at change-links.org
http://change-links.org
Subscribe to our list server. Email change-links-subscribe at yahoogroups.com
(818) 782-1412
Cell (818) 681-7448.


========================================================

May Day 2007 Statement
-Cop Watch Los Angeles

On May 1, 2007 (May Day), Cop Watch Los Angeles participated in the march
and rally organized by MIWON (Multi-Ethnic Immigrant Workers Organizing
Network) in McArthur Park. Our role during the march was to observe and
document police harassment and brutality, and to defend the people in the
community as well, at the request of MIWON organizers. As the police began
their attack on peaceful protestors, Cop Watch Los Angeles and other
community members directed families to safety, acting as a buffer between
police and the people.

At no point did Cop Watch LA provoke the mass beating and shooting of
demonstrators that occurred on May 1st. There is no justification for the
actions of the Los Angeles Police Department. In some cases, community
members attempted to defend themselves as they were being brutalized,
acting on their human instinct of self-preservation, by throwing water
bottles or food; this level of defense is far removed from the injurious
rubber bullets, beanbags and tear gas being fired indiscriminately into a
park filled with thousands of people, including families, children and
elders.

The attack commenced when the police disturbed a sacred indigenous
ceremony by plowing their motorcycles into the participants. Armed with
only angry words, Cop Watch LA members and the community took on a
defensive position during the assault and posed no offensive physical
threat to the police's weapons and technology. Cop Watch LA does not
control the imagination and will of other young people who want to take
any sort of action against the police, or imitate our organization in an
undisciplined manner. Our role was to defend those people and stand with
them. Members from Cop Watch LA were heard saying, "We need to get
children out of here, the police are about to attack." There is also
video footage of members putting their bodies on the line for the people
to get them out of harms way.

Many organizations and media outlets have begun to place blame on youth
and anarchists, asserting that throwing trash necessitates a full-scale
police assault on peaceful protestors and families. Video footage from
numerous angles and at several locations clearly discredits those
accusations - it is unmistakable that the police are at fault.

Contacts from the Mayor's office have confirmed that the attack on
protestors and the community of Pico Union was pre-meditated due to the
desire to test out months of counter-terrorism training and last year's
embarrassment, when the LAPD could not stop the people from taking the
streets.

The strategy by the LAPD, the media, and even some "progressive"
organizations has been to focus on Cop Watch LA as the direct cause of the
May 1st incident is an attempt to get the people on the side of the state
and to isolate CWLA from the communities we live in and organize in. This
is the same tactics that were used by COINTELPRO (Counter Intelligence
Program) to destroy organizations like the Black Panther Party, American
Indian Movement, and other groups who focused on making fundamental change
in society. Today as we live under the Patriot Act, these tactics of the
police state continue to go after anybody who resists the status quo. We
hope that organizations and individuals don't fall into the divide and
conquer methods of the state.

The scapegoating of anarchists today is reminiscent of 1886 Chicago
Haymarket Square Massacre in the first May Day ever celebrated, where
police instigated a massacre during a worker's strike. The state blamed
the anarchist organizers and railroaded eight innocent people into prison
and hung four (while the other committed suicide).

We must also hold the organizers, organizations, and individuals who are
falling into this accountable. We have to stand on the side of the
people, not the police state.

The mayor Antonio Villaraigosa found himself in El Salvador, on a trip,
while this attacked happened right in the middle of the biggest
concentration of Central American people outside of Central America. Then
he has the nerve to guarantee Chief William Bratton a second term. They
are both responsible for implementing this type of policing and repression
that our communities are facing today.

This attack is not unprecedented! It has happened before and will happen
again - until we put a stop to it. In communities where populations are
predominantly working class or unemployed people of color, police abuse
and harassment is an everyday occurrence. For years, our communities have
struggled to overcome oppression at the hands of those sworn to "protect
and serve." Still, death tolls and brutality cases continue to climb in
the neighborhoods of South Central, Compton, Watts, Pico Union, Maywood
and Boyle Heights.

Cop Watch's main goal is to put an end to the injustices that plague our
streets and to oppressive institutions like the Los Angeles Police
Department.

We stand on the side of the people and always will.

Cop Watch Los Angeles

May 4, 2007

¡Ya Basta!

Statement Signed and Supported by:

Youth Justice Coalition, Revolutionary Autonomous Communities, Asians for
Jericho and Mumia, Unity Mission to Free the 8,


=================================================================

From: JGGORGEOUS at aol. com [mailto:JGGORGEOUS@ aol.com] 
Sent: Wednesday, May 02, 2007 7:11 PM
Subject: Re: May 1 police attacks

As one of the attorneys that has agreed to handle cases of people victimized by LAPD officers during yesterday's May 1 rally, I wish to address the following subjects to organizers of the event.

1.  We have recruited at least four lawyers to collaborate on litigation representing victims and organizations in a class action which will seek more than just monetary damages.  All of us are associated with the National Lawyer's Guild, and have lengthy experience in handling police brutality and class action litigation.

The legal team will be headed by Robert Mann and Donald Cook of MANN & COOK.  Their phone number will be publicly disseminated to victims, witnesses, and potential litigants.  It is 213.252.9444 .  They have several staff members available to interview people, including in Spanish.  We may need assistance with interpreters if other languages are needed.

Additionally, myself, Jorge Gonzalez ( 213.670.0063 ) and Cynthia Anderson-Barker ( 213.381.3246 ) will be on the team.   Their may be others added to the list by tomorrow.

2.  I will dedicate the next two days (Thursday and Friday) to be available to interview people, victims, witnesses, organizers, etc., at the offices of CARECEN.  All people who have inquiries, were victimized, are potential witnesses, and who have photographic or video evidence of the events should be encouraged to contact me there.  My office phone will forward calls to my cell phone ( 213.598.3278 - not for public dissemination) .  I will meet at noon on Thursday with organizers as a group to discuss potential interviews by Internal Affairs or the Inspector General.  DO NOT agree to be interviewed by anyone, not IA, the IG, or the media without talking with me first so that you are properly prepared.  My suggestion is that all interviews be coordinated by myself so that an attorney is present and tapes each interview.

3.  Everyone and every organization who has compiled a list of witnesses or victims, should forward this information to me.  In other words, I will act as the liason with the lawyers and will serve as a clearinghouse for the information.  We will need to interview everyone in a formal manner, and I will try to coordinate that.  WE can use volunteers for this effort, and anyone interested and available should let me know.  We will need to do at least a perfunctory training for this.  Anyone who was present during the march should at least make an effort to write down their experiences.  Do not worry about completeness, grammar, etc., the idea is to let us know who might have possible useful information.  

4.  Both CHIRLA and CARECEN will consider being a named plaintiff, and even if you did not suffer injuries, you may be a potential litigant also.  The point to class action litigation is we intend to represent everyone who as a class (to be defined) might be injured in the same fashion in the future in any subsequent demonstration, march or rally.

5.  It will be especially helpful to compile all known sources of recording of the events, particularly digital photographs and videos.  We have already identified some, and people should be encouraged to provide it to us on cd.  Emailing it may be alright, but I am concerned some files might be too big to exchange via internet, and a cd or flashdisk would be more practical.  NOTE: for any such documentation to be useful in court, we need the identity, address, and telephone number of the person taking the photos or videos.

6.  My mind is running a hundred miles an hour and I'm sure much is being left out, but I can be contacted the next couple days at CARECEN to discuss these issues more.  Please encourage anyone who has information which might be useful to make an effort to contact me.  Please disseminate this to all organizers, organizations, or persons of interest so that this message can get out as widely as possible.

Saludos y gracias.

Jorge Gonzalez
A PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION
Post Office Box 2739
San Gabriel, California 91778-2739
Tel. 213.670.0063

----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Community Organizers Demand the Resignation of Chief Bratton. 



Union del Barrio and Frente Contra Las Redadas, respond to May 1st Police Brutality 



By Jose X



May 2nd, 2007



Los Angeles, Occupied Mexico - With repeated chants of "Fire Chief Bratton" filling the air, Union del Barrio and Frente Contra Las Redadas, a collation of over 30 organizations dedicated to protecting Raza from racist I.C.E. Raids, demanded justice for all the demonstrators that were viciously attacked at the May 1st demonstration at Macarthur Park. 



Over 150 people gathered for the protest and press conference on a windy Wednesday afternoon in front of LAPD headquarters in downtown LA. 



Daniel Montes of Union Del Barrio exposed the irony of Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa being in El Salvador to sign an agreement to train police in that country, while LAPD beat peaceful protesters in Los Angeles. "Where is Mayor Villaraigosa?" demanded one of the protesters, "He must be held accountable. The police chief does not act alone, but reposts directly to the mayors office. Both Villaraigosa and [Chief] Bratton must assume responsibility for what happened."   



Other speakers pointed out the inherent racism within the LAPD. Ron Gochez, another member of Union del Barrio stated "If the people at the park would have been White, under no circumstance would the police have launched tear gas canisters and shot rubber bullets at men, women and children without warning."  



Gerardo Gomez, one of the victims that was shot with rubber bullets at the march, displayed his wounds and also demanded the resignation of Chief Bratton. "We can change the chief of police, but that will not change the system. We need to change the system!"



The protest and press conference ended with chants of "Queremos Legalización No Represión (We want Legalization not Repression) and "Renuncia, renuncia, renuncia Chief Bratton (resign, resign, resign Chief Bratton)." 



The event can be best summed up by a student organizer from the Coordinadora Estudiantil de la Raza, Vicente Jimenez, who stated, "What surprises me is that I am not surprised. This has been occurring to us Mexicans since 1846 when they attacked us to take our land. This is not over yet."  

====================================================================

From: dorinda moreno 
To: Aztlannet News 
Sent: Friday, May 04, 2007 8:02 PM
Subject: [Aztlannet_News] MacArthur's Park is Screaming


MacArthur's Park is Screaming 
John Calvin Jones



City of Tolerance or Tokenism?

In the 1970s and 1980s, Los Angeles had a Black mayor, Tom Bradley.  A product of the LAPD, some of us figured that a Black mayor might help mitigate or reduce the levels of racism and abuse visited on the citizens of Los Angeles, especially the Black citizenry, by the LAPD.  The legacy of Darryl Gates, the DARE program, and Rodney King's beating cured our delusions.  

A generation later, a broad coalition of Latinos, Democrats, activists, and wishful thinkers elected the first Latino mayor of Los Angeles, Antonio Villaraigosa.  Aside from his record where the new mayor: (1) tried to usurp power and violate the State Constitution by taking over the school system - and its budget; (2) has both squandered political capital and disavowed the idea that he has commonsense by pushing for three miles of underground train-track costing billions of dollars in lieu of more and better busses; and (3) has sought to criminalize association via indiscriminate injunctions against gangs, people still had hope that Villaraigosa would be more than another impotent who would stand aside when police oppressed people of color.  

Do As I Say or Not

Are we surprised then that on May 1, 2007, when thousands of Latinos across LA, throughout Southern California, and the nation would join together, march and talk about rights for immigrants and workers, Villaraigosa would be in El Salvador, preaching both capitalism and "advising" the Salvadorans on how to control their LA-based gangs.  (In regards to the Mara Salvatrucha, perhaps Villaraigosa might confess that trade and globalization is not always good).

And while the "mouse" was away, the cats in riot gear came out to play.  The police force that originated SWAT teams and military-style training (i.e. kill and maim first, keep the peace and ask questions later), was in force and raided a public park - commando style.  How uncanny is it for a city which still has roller skaters to also have a MacArthur Park.  MacArthur Park is that title of the song made famous by the Queen of Disco, Donna Summer.  In the song, MacArthur Park is a metaphor for social unrest of Vietnam, race riots, COINTELPRO and the struggles for freedom and tolerance of "hippies," homosexuals, American Indians and others.  Once voted the worst Top-40 song of all-time, given the recent acts of LAPD, it is time to revisit the words to MacArthur Park, when the thick green icing is flowing down.  I have taken the liberty to update the lyrics.



***



May Day was never about fear

Just to celebrate our lives

But cops won't give us a chance



MacArthur's Park is screaming from the shots

All the sweet baton blows, flowing down

Cops in riot gear saw a march

I don't think the crowd can take it

'Cause their rights don't let them make it

No those Mexicans won't never march again



I recall the camera crews

And the kids

On the ground and running scared

Tear-stained mothers clutch tender babies

And the Uniforms beating heads in the breeze



MacArthur's Park is bleeding after dark

And the feet of Riot Cops stomping down

Someone saw them beat us and the pain

I didn't think that LA would do it

But they got power, they abuse it

And Telemundo has it all on film .


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