More
from May Day in the USA as it happens
Occupy
New Dawn? OWS re-emerges in US
In
America, anti-corporate Occupy protesters are re-emerging in New York
and other cities, in a bid to surge back into the headlines. RT's
Marina Portnaya is across developments in the Big Apple.
NYPD
Raids Activists’ Homes Before May Day Protests
A
day before Occupy Wall Street hopes to shut down New York and cities
across the country in massive May Day protests, the NYPD visited at
least three activist homes in New York and interrogated residents
about plans for tomorrow's protest.
1
May, 2012
Today
"there was definitely an upswing in law enforcement activity
that seemed to fit the pattern of targeting what police might view as
political residences," said Gideon Oliver, the president of the
New York Chapter of the National Lawyers Guild, which offers legal to
support to Occupy Wall Street. "They were asking what are your
May Day plans, do you know who the leaders are—these are classic
political surveillance questions."
Oliver
said the National Lawyer's Guild is aware of at least five instances
of NYPD paying activists visits, including one where the FBI was
involved in questioning. (He wouldn't elaborate.) We spoke to three
of these activists.
In
the first case: activist Zachary Dempster said that six NYPD officers
broke down the door of his Bushwick, Brooklyn apartment at around
6:15am this morning. Dempster said they were armed with a warrant for
the arrest of his roommate, musician Joe Crow Ryan, for a
six-year-old open container violation. But Dempster believes this was
an excuse to check in on him, as he'd been arrested in February at an
Occupy Wall Street Party that was broken up by cops, and charged with
assaulting a police office and inciting a riot.
After
running his ID, a detective questioned Dempster in his bedroom for
about five minutes about tomorrow's May Day protest, he said.
"They
asked what I was doing tomorrow, and if I knew of any activities, any
events—that was how the conversation started," Dempster said.
Dempster said he's not planning doing much, as his case from February
is still open. Dempster's roommate was also asked about him and May
Day.
About
an hour later, an activist friend of Dempster's who runs in anarchist
circles said his apartment in Bed-Stuy, Brooklyn, where he lives with
a half-dozen other activists and Occupy Wall Street organizers was
visited by six NYPD cops—possibly the same ones. The activist said
police used arrest warrants for two men who no longer lived there as
pretext for the raid. The officers ran the IDs of everyone who was in
the apartment, then booked our source when they discovered he had an
outstanding open container violation. Police never asked about Occupy
Wall Street or May Day, but our source said the message was clear:
We're watching you.
"We
obviously don't think it's an accident that it happened the day
before May Day, where people in the house are organizers," he
said.
This
afternoon, NYPD also visited the home of Greek anarchist artist
Georgia Sagri, who has been part of Occupy Wall Street from the
beginning and led the occupation of a SoHo art gallery last October.
Turns out she was giving a press conference about May Day at Zuccotti
Park at the time. Police waited for about an hour outside her home,
then left.
"My
roommate gave me a call and told me the NYPD was looking for me,"
Sagri said. "Since that time, I didn't go home. So I'm basically
on the street. My May Day has already started which is fine, I don't
mind." She said she has no idea why NYPD visited her.
This
isn't the first time NYPD has been criticized for aggressive
surveillance of protesters: The NYPD infiltrated activist groups
around the country before 2004's New York Ciy Republican National
Convention. And The New York Times has ably detailed the extent to
which NYPD has harassed and spied on Occupy Wall Street protesters.
"The
intention behind this I'm sure is to try to create fear and silence
dissent," said Marina Sitrin, a lawyer and member of Occupy Wall
Street's legal working group, "and to keep people from coming
out into the streets."
Clashes
in Oakland: Police use tear gas and batons against protesters
Oakland
police used tear gas against protesters marching on the streets of
the city on May 1.
RT,
1
May, 2012
According
to witnesses police arrested at least two protesters and used tasers
against them. Police ordered protesters out of the street after
firing the tear gas and flash-bang grenades.
San
Francisco Gate quotes a police spokeswoman Johanna Watson saying,
"When our patrol wagon came to make arrests, they were
surrounded." According to her, officers fired the tear gas and
flash-bang grenades "to gain the attention of the crowd and stop
them, which was effective. The officers were able to take the
arrestees and to leave the area."
However
the arrests didn't stop protesters. They continued marching through
the streets of Oakland chanting anti-capitalism slogans. Among them
was Iraq war veteran Scott Olsen, who gained international attention
when he was shot with a beanbag by an Oakland police officer at a
protest last year. This time the former Marine, who suffered a brain
injury in the Oct. 25 protest, wore a black helmet to protect his
head.
"I
am not 100 percent and I still have some problems, hopefully that
will go away with time," he said in an interview to San
Francisco Gate. "It is a shame that (the police) are reacting
this way. I shouldn't have to wear a helmet to go out to this, but I
do.".
The
official version of May Day events
Occupy
takes May Day protests to U.S. streets
Movement
inspires rallies in numerous cities
1
May, 2012
Occupy
Wall Street protesters gathered outside banks, meditated in public
parks and staged anti-corporate song-and-dance routines on Tuesday in
a May Day bid around the United States to revive a movement that
triggered nationwide protests last year against economic injustice.
Hundreds
of protesters in Oakland, California, clashed with baton-carrying
police who fired flash-bang grenades and used a loudspeaker to order
demonstrators to disperse from an intersection, in just one of
numerous demonstrations that unfolded in U.S. cities.
Police
arrested small numbers of protesters in minor clashes around New
York, chasing hundreds of marchers along Broadway.
Although
labor unions rejected pleas from leaders of the Occupy movement for a
general strike, and demonstrators backed off a pledge to occupy San
Francisco's Golden Gate Bridge, activists hailed the day's events as
a step forward in the movement that had grown inactive and cash poor
since capturing world attention last fall.
"We've
been building important alliances and radicalized people in what
they're willing to endorse. I mean, we never even used to celebrate
May Day. Now look at this," said David Graeber, an
anthropologist and author active in the movement.
May
Day, also known as International Workers' Day, has long been a day on
which the labor movement holds street demonstrations and marches, but
less so in the United States than elsewhere around the world.
Many
demonstrators wore black bandanas symbolic of an anarchist faction
within the largely peaceful Occupy movement, leading to some of the
confrontations with police.
About
400 New York City protesters - most of them clad in black, with black
bandanas covering their faces - ran onto Broadway as police chased
them on scooters. At least five were arrested.
Occupy
Cleveland canceled its events "out of respect for the city"
after U.S. authorities announced the arrest of five self-described
anarchists in the Cleveland area on suspicion of plotting to blow up
a four-lane highway bridge over a national park.
Occupy
Cleveland said in a statement the men arrested were associated with
their movement but that "they were in no way representing or
acting on behalf of Occupy Cleveland" and that the group was
committed to non-violent protest.
In
Seattle, some 50 black-clad protesters marched through downtown,
carrying black flags on sticks, which they used to shatter the
windows of several stores including a Nike Town outlet and an HSBC
bank before police moved them out of the area.
Inspired
by the pro-democracy Arab Spring, the Wall Street protesters last
year targeted U.S. financial policies they blamed for the yawning
income gap between rich and poor - between what they called the 1
percent and the 99 percent.
TRAFFIC
SNARLED
In
San Francisco, a protest by unionized ferry workers worsened the
morning rush-hour for Bay Area commuters. Anticipating a one-day
walkout by workers, transportation officials suspended ferry service
between San Francisco and Marin County to the north, forcing some
3,000 commuters to head into town over the Golden Gate Bridge instead
and slowing traffic over the famed span.
"I'm
a single person barely making ends meet myself. If I had kids it
would be 10 times worse. It's hard enough, isn't it?" said
picketing ferry deckhand Leslie Propheter, 52, from the nearby town
of Novato.
Across
the bay in Oakland, demonstrators painted graffiti on buildings and
signs in the center of town with one protester throwing a hammer at
the window of a Chase bank branch. The window did not break.
At
least 500 gathered near Frank Ogawa Plaza, the heart of the Occupy
movement there last fall, marching up and down various streets,
closing those roads to traffic as they went, while police kept a
low-profile presence nearby. One group entered a Bank of the West
branch to stage a protest inside.
Occupy
Chicago protesters being shadowed by police gathered outside Bank of
America branches, raising a large "Chicago Spring" banner
and chanting "Banks got bailed out, we got sold out."
Police
blocked a State Street bank entrance, and banks along Chicago's
financial spine of LaSalle Street prepared for protesters by posting
extra guards and closing some entrances.
About
200 protesters in Portland, Oregon, were "moving" a woman
back into her foreclosed house, chanting "welcome home"
when she managed to get in through a side door.
Portland
Mayor Sam Adams thanked student demonstrators who marched through
town and gathered at City Hall, saying, "keep up the great work"
and inviting them to use city hall restrooms.
"The
Wall Street fat cats are unfairly gaming the system in a way that
makes the common man upset," said Bradley Shields, 56, a
freelance travel photographer from Honolulu who was visiting New
York.
New
York police reported 10 instances of harmless white powder being
mailed to financial institutions and others, along with a note
saying, "Happy May Day ... This is a reminder you are not in
control."
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