MEDIA ROOTS — In a predawn raid this morning, under direct orders from Oakland Mayor Jean Quan, riot police stormed the Occupy Oakland
encampment at Oscar Grant Plaza in another coordinated multi-agency “mutual aid” operation
costing the City of Oakland upwards of half a million dollars in an attempt to
crush the peaceful Occupy Oakland (OO) movement once and for all.
Similar raids occurred this weekend with mass arrests against Occupy Movement encampments, including in Eureka, California; Portland, Oregon; Salt Lake City, Utah; Denver, Colorado; and Albany, New York, as well as the brutal police state beatings
by riot police of student protesters attempting to establish an Occupy
encampment at UC Berkeley on Wednesday to exercise their First Amendment rights at the birthplace of the Free Speech Movement.
Rioting cops beating students at UC Berkeley illegally wore no name tags to
hide their identities. Observers at Occupy
Portland have also reported similar violations by riot cops. We can thank Obama for the
Federalisation/militarisation of local police.
As with the ‘mutual aid’ repression of dissent at Occupy Oakland, riot
cops at Occupy Portland have consisted of Portland cops and other police
agencies from neighbouring forces.
Initially, Oakland Mayor Jean Quan appeared interested in co-opting OO through
photo ops with MoveOn.org, a tool of her Democrat political party. On October 15, 2011, during a MoveOn ‘Jobs
Not Cuts’ rally following a march from Laney College, widely misreported as an official
OO event, adjacent to Oscar Grant Plaza, Quan refused to abide by the horizontalist
ethic of OO when she refused to wait her turn to speak before the OO General
Assembly. Filmmaker Michael
Moore made note of this fact during his visit of solidarity to OO, noting Quan
“didn’t wanna wait in line.” MoveOn was
even asked by OO not to end their march at the plaza, which they disregarded.
After the failed attempt to attach establishment politics to OO and before conveniently skipping town to D.C., Quan gave
the green light to Oakland Police Chief Jordan’s militarised storm-troopers to
attack the OO encampment with chemical agents, flash-bang grenades, and ‘less-than-lethal’
projectiles.
Many were injured by the police assaults and at least one, Scott Olsen,
an Iraq War veteran, was sent to the hospital in critical condition with a fractured skull after being shot in the head at point-blank range by a police projectile. Quan attempted to
navigate the backlash against the police brutality by absurdly claiming the
police showed restraint and suffered abuse.
This absurd drama led up to the historic OO
General Strike earlier this month.
The following night, the Oakland City Council heard from an overflow crowd
of OO supporters, including 118 overwhelmingly supportive speakers, during public
comment. Public comment speakers pointed
out many demonstrators attempted to intervene to stop vandals during the
General Strike marches.
Quan, Oakland Police, and reactionary City Council Members were now fully determined
to smear and crush OO. Quan shifted to exploiting
pre-existing rat infestations, sanitation issues, and other persistent issues
in Downtown Oakland as pretexts for smearing OO.
One speaker before the Oakland City Council, seminarian Suzi Spangenberg, countered
the allegations against OO:
“If you’ve been to an Oakland Raiders game, you have seen people engaging
in violent acts. You do not hold everyone at that game responsible for the acts
of a few.”
Indeed, there were some 100 arrests late in the evening after the OO General
Strike shut down the Port of Oakland; we’re talking less than 1% of the
peaceful demonstrators. And most of those arrested were either unrelated ‘Black Bloc’ opportunists engaging in property damage or innocent bystanders corralled by the riot police. Aerial estimates
have confirmed the participants numbered in the tens of thousands. No, we cannot hold the 99% guilty for the
crimes of the 1%.
James Vann, a longtime Oakland housing advocate and a
central figure in Oakland Mayor Jean Quan’s election campaign, was one of the
first to speak during the Public Forum.
He spoke with KPFA radio, which covered the entire City Council meeting
live:
“Yes. I think it
was a beautiful day. For the most part
everything went beautifully, went well, went exceedingly well. And it was only late last night, and I guess
part of the march against the banks yesterday, where there’s a dissident group
among the occupiers who don’t respect law and order.
“I think last night this group pretty much identified
themselves, by taking over another building.
That was not part of the Occupy Oakland activity. And so that group, I think many of those in
that group, ultimately, were arrested last night. So, the City now, the police, can identify
most of those people in the dissident group.
“Yes, unfortunately there were some who broke
away. There were also members of the Occupier
contingent who attempted to try to control that and put themselves between
these dissidents and the rest of the march.
But they were intent on destruction.
So, this is a group that does not respect the general objectives of the Occupy
Movement.”
In the wake of today’s latest raid against OO, Quan has also claimed OO had
moved away from its original goals to further justify her actions. The claim
is baseless, but the Democrat Mayor was determined to smear and clear the encampment
by any means.
With Wall Street-driven elections coming up on the horizon, the ruling-class
cannot allow the Occupy Wall Street (OWS) Movement to continue to have the kind of impact its had
upon the national body politic and its discourse, which has forced local,
state, and Federal leaders to acknowledge the glaring problems with a socioeconomic
system run for the benefit of the ruling-class 1% of the population controlling
almost half of its wealth against the interests of the working-class, the 99%.
Instead of acknowledging the glaring timeliness of the global OWS Movement during the nation’s worst economic crisis since the Great
Depression and OWS’s historic significance as a political force that isn’t going
away, even in the face of police-state repression, local city governments
have treated OWS encampments as public nuisances to be swept under the rug. The nationwide crackdowns appear to be encouraged at the behest of a nation-wide Homeland Security-type repression of dissent in line with the P.A.T.R.I.O.T. Act.
In
the aftermath of the brutal police state crackdowns against OO on October 25, Oakland-based community organiser with the Oscar Grant Committee Against Police Brutality and State Repression, OO supporter, Rachel Jackson spoke with Pacifica Radio’s “Flashpoints” to contextualise the
militarisation of local police toward the repression of political organisation
and dissent:
“I
think it’s important, too, to remember that this is coming on the heels of what
we saw of three years now, of this ‘mutual aid’ being enacted in response to
uprisings against the murder of Oscar Grant ever since January of 2009. We’ve seen the people of Oakland, and really
a lot of the real base of Oakland and the [historic] section of Oakland, the
people of colour, and low-income communities have burst out onto the
scene. And it was that mass action that
forced the state and the [now-retired] District Attorney [Thomas Jensen
Orloff], in particular, to bring charges against Johannes Mehserle for the
murder of Oscar Grant in the first place.
“And,
so there was this, you know, we’re not confused about the fact that these
test-cases and these drills, operations, this sort of, this testing living
laboratories of police state is happening here in Oakland, not because we’re
weak, but, in fact, because we are strong.
And we know that the tear gas canisters, and the pepper spray, the
flash-bang grenades, the canister and concussion grenades that has put Scott
Olsen in the hospital with a fractured skull was fired by the Alameda County
Sheriffs Department acting under the OPD and, of course, with, as you pointed
out, with Federal oversight.
“And
these particular processes of enacting this ‘mutual aid’ and the acquisition of
these tools of repression, we know for a fact that these things were purchased
during the past, like since January of 2009, so that the police could prepare,
and the Feds and Homeland Security and the many, we had 33, some 33 or more
agencies just for the [Johannes Mehserle] verdict on July 8th, 2010
and the operation sentencing on November 5th [2010]. And we’ve gotten Public Records Act requests
and documentation. They have Power Points where they showed all of the stuff that they bought, including…many of the tear gas canisters and…many of the M84 concussion grenades.”
So,
the militarisation of local police has, indeed, been underway in post-9/11 U.S., ostensibly under the pretext of the ‘War on Terror.’ But it’s becoming increasingly evident the
sole purpose is repression of dissent, as done in Oakland under Quan.
And although OO has denied any correlation between the tragic murder of
Kayode Ola Foster in Downtown Oakland last Thursday, Mayor Quan has alleged the
peaceful encampment was to blame. Oakland has seen at least 70 murders
this year and 94 in 2010.
After authorising unsuccessful brutal police crackdowns to crush OO, Mayor
Quan also exploited the tragic murder of Foster as a pretext for moving to
dismantle the encampment. One of Quan’s legal advisers, Dan Siegel, resigned in protest over the clearing of the OO
encampment. Quan’s Deputy Mayor also resigned in protest a few hours later. Whilst some protesters moved to Oakland’s Snow Park a few
blocks away, at least one has begun a tree sit-in at Oscar Grant Plaza and
vowed to remain there indefinitely.
OO called a protest action convergence at the Oakland Library this afternoon
at 4:30pm. At presstime, OO reported:
“The occupiers began marching shortly before 5 pm with about 1000
marchers. The march reached the plaza at 14th and Broadway with over 2000
people and immediately convened a General Assembly. At first occupiers
used the human mic, repeating each phrase in waves across the crowd but within
the hour amplification was in place and as of 6:30 pm an assembly is
underway.”
Written by Felipe Messina
***
SF APPEAL— An early-morning police raid to break up the Occupy Oakland
encampment has left Frank Ogawa Plaza devoid of protesters today–except for
one lone holdout who is perched in a tree.
Zachary Running Wolf is sitting atop a small wooden platform, tied to the
tree, and is being largely ignored by police for the time being.
Police Chief Howard Jordan said at a morning news conference that police are
leaving him be as they look into what his legal rights are to be there.
This morning, he could be heard shouting from the tree, “This is native
land. I’m not coming down.”
Running Wolf is a familiar name in the East Bay, where he has run for City
Council in Berkeley and was involved in the lengthy tree-sit at the University
of California at Berkeley several years ago to protest the removal of a grove
of trees to make way for a new sports training center.
A protester on the ground nearby who identified himself as
“Fireball” said Running Wolf represents the encampment’s “best
defense” right now.
“The cops can’t get into the trees,” he said.
Fireball said Running Wolf has enough food and water to last several days.
Meanwhile, cleanup crews were quickly clearing the remnants of the
encampment from the plaza. The last tents had been taken down as of 11 a.m.
Oakland police Sgt. Christopher Bolton said those doing the cleanup are
trying to salvage anything that appears to be worth more than $100, and are
throwing out other objects.
City Administrator Deanna Santana said this morning that the city hopes to
have the plaza reopened for public use – camping excluded – by 6 p.m.
Thirty-two people were arrested when police raided the encampment early this
morning, most for illegal lodging, Bolton said.
Read more about Tree Sitter Remains In Frank Ogawa Plaza
After #OccupyOakland Raid.
© 2011 Appeal Media, LLC
Photo by Abby Martin
Last updated 11/15/11 0755 PDT