Tag police

Atlanta, Oakland protesters face off with police

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Police moved into a downtown Atlanta park and arrested around 50 Occupy Wall Street protesters who had been encamped there for about two weeks Wednesday, while across the country in Oakland, Calif., officers in riot gear stood watch after clashes there with demonstrators overnight.

Oakland demonstrators vowed on Wednesday to return to their protest site just hours after police cleared hundreds of people from the streets with tear gas and bean bag rounds. The city had erected a chain-link fence around the plaza in the morning, and workers were mowing the grass and sweeping up remnants of the encampment that was dismantled the day before. After the encampment was cleared Tuesday, protesters began marching toward City Hall in an attempt to re-establish a presence in the area of the disbanded camp.

Officers also fired beanbag rounds, clearing out the encampment of protesters in less than an hour.

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The site was among numerous camps that have sprung up around the country as protesters rally against what they see as corporate greed and a wide range of other economic issues. The protests have attracted a wide range of people, including college students looking for work and the homeless.

Video: Police fire tear gas on Oakland protesters (on this page)

Meanwhile, police on Wednesday closed the downtown Atlanta park, where police arrested dozens. Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed said in a statement that the arrests were made after protesters at Woodruff Park moved from peacefully demonstrating to “increasingly aggressive actions” in recent days.

Reed said one man had walked through the park with an assault rifle, and demonstrators had inserted wire hangers into electrical sockets to create additional power sources. Authorities did not say how long the park would remain closed.

Many gathered in the center of the park, locking arms, and sang “We Shall Overcome,” until police led them out, one-by-one to waiting buses. Some were dragged out while others left on foot, handcuffed with plastic ties.

Story: Income of top 1 percent far outgrew others: report

Police included SWAT teams in riot gear, dozens of officers on motorcycles and several on horseback. By about 1:30 a.m. Wednesday the park was mostly cleared of protesters. Organizers had urged protesters to return in the morning, but by 8:30 a.m. it was still largely empty, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported on its website.

The Occupy protests over economic inequality have spread from a single camp in New York City to cities across the United States and beyond since mid-September, overlapping with similar, earlier protests in Europe. An attempt earlier this month to clean the New York site, which protesters there feared was a tactic to shut them down, ended with authorities backing off.

Georgia State Sen. Vincent Fort was among those arrested and had come to the park in support of the protesters in recent days. He said the police presence was “overkill.”

“He’s using all these resources … This is the most peaceful place in Georgia,” Fort said, referring to Atlanta Mayor Kasim Reed. “At the urging of the business community, he’s moving people out. Shame on him.”

Reed said that the protests cost the city about $300,000, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reported.?

Some protesters could be overheard saying they would return to the park at 6 a.m. Wednesday, when it would be legal for them to be there. TV images showed the number of police far outnumbering the protesters.

Scuffles with police
Oakland demonstrators vowed to return as well.

Feeding the movement: How Occupy protesters are eating

The number of protesters diminished with each round of gas, and by early Wednesday there were just a few dozen at the site of the clashes.

The last skirmish there Tuesday night came around 11:15 PT in front of City Hall, where a haze of chemical smoke still hung in the air. Earlier in the evening, the crowd had numbered around 1,000, according to SFGate.com. BART closed Oakland’s 12th Street station because of tear gas deployment, KNTV reported.

Police established a presence in a plaza where a pre-dawn raid Tuesday dismantled an encampment of Occupy Wall Street protesters that had dominated the area for more than two weeks.

Authorities removed about 170 demonstrators who had been staying in the area overnight after repeatedly being warned that such a camp was illegal and they faced arrest by remaining. City officials said 97 people were arrested in the morning raid.

The first evening scuffle broke out after several hundred people made their way back to City Hall in an attempt to re-establish a presence in the area of the disbanded camp.

The protesters had gathered at a downtown library, marched toward City Hall and ultimately were met by police officers in riot gear. Several small skirmishes broke out and officers cleared the area by firing tear gas.

Video: Police in riot gear clear Occupy Oakland

The scene has repeated itself several times since. But each time officers move to disperse the crowd, protesters quickly gather again in assemblies that authorities have declared illegal. Tensions rise as protesters edge closer to police line and climax when someone throws a bottle or rock and authorities response with volleys of gas.

Police have denied reports that they used flash bang canisters to help break up the crowds, saying the loud noises came from large firecrackers thrown at police by protesters.

Protesters defiant
Helicopters scanned the area late Tuesday and scores of officers wearing helmets and carrying clubs patrolled the streets. Fire crews responded to small blazes in trash containers.

Protesters moved about uneasily even as one used a bull horn to express his resolve.

“This movement is more than just the people versus the police,” Mario Fernandez said. “It’s about the people trying to have their rights to basic services.”

He added, “This crowd isn’t going anywhere anytime soon.”

Acting Police Chief Howard Jordan told reporters at a late night news conference that authorities had no other choice, saying the protesters were throwing rocks and bottles at officers.

“We had to deploy gas to stop the crowd,” he said, according to a KCBS report.

City officials say that two officers were injured. At least five protesters were arrested and several others injured in the evening clashes.

In Oakland, tensions between the city and protesters have been escalating since last week as officials complained about what they described as deteriorating safety, sanitation and health issues at the site of the dismantled camp.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

Police: 22 teens involved in sexting ring

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MILTON, Vt.牀 Police say nearly two dozen Vermont teenagers were involved in a sexting ring in which students accessed indecent photos and videos of female classmates from a special email account.

Milton police said Thursday that five boys admitted viewing 30 to 40 images and three videos, many of which were sent by cellphone. The Milton Independent first reported the story.

Police say two of the five boys used school-issued computers to access and distribute them.

Detective Cpl. Paul Locke says girls took photos of themselves and sent them to the boys, who forwarded them to the email account. He says 17 girls aged 14 to 17 were in the photos, many of which qualify as child porn.

The students will not face charges but must attend mandatory sessions with a community board.

Copyright 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

The horror of beating witness to the police catch video

SANTA ANA, California – Six police officers were placed on leave after video surveillance have arisen witnesses expressing horror moments after seeing a man homeless, beaten to death, allegedly by agents.

Kelly Thomas, 37, died five days after an altercation with officers Fullerton, California, the Fullerton Transportation Center.

His father, Ron Thomas, made an emotional appearance at the Fullerton City Council meeting Tuesday night with more than 200 members of the community who demanded answers, NBC Los Angeles reported.

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When speaking to the Town Hall, Thomas refers to audio of the alleged altercation that was posted online on You Tube, NBC, Los Angeles, said.

“Listen to my son begging these officers,” Please, please please God, I’m sorry, I’m sorry, “”, said Thomas. “And then the last words of life —”Papa, papa.”" I want to that hear you that for the rest of your life, as I do. ?

Thomas said that his son had been a normal teenager who aspires to be a wildland firefighter until he begins to exhibit symptoms of schizophrenia early twenties.

The police officers involved in the altercation were placed on administrative leave with pay Tuesday and given duty of Office in a decision after the new surface, NBC Los Angeles reported surfaced video surveillance. New video shows the witnesses recounting a bus driver that officers had used an electric pistol and beating the man.

In the video taken on an Orange County Transportation Authority bus, passengers say officers shelling face Kelly Thomas’ and like him, he cried for his father.

The video, first made public Monday, was obtained through a request for public records by friends blog for future of the Fullerton.

Agents to Thomas, who was suffering from schizophrenia, July 5 while it investigates reports of a man Rob cars near the Fullerton Transportation Center.

An emotional outcry
The members of the public anger expressed their frustration on the death of Thomas’ three hour-plus meeting and demanded responses from city officials.

As the meeting began, city attorney Richard Jones, said that the municipal Council and not the Chief of police will make the final decision on any more disciplinary action taken against the police officers involved, the Orange County Register reported.

The meeting was only standing, more than 70 Council, while another 50 people who could not enter the meeting watched the proceedings of a TV in the lobby of City Hall. Some of the speakers called the resignation of the Chief of Police Fullerton Michael Sellers, in accordance with the registry.

On the video surveillance of the bus, passengers boarding a bus that arrived minutes after the confrontation tell the driver what they see.

A woman who seems upset tells the driver: “cops are kicking this poor guy over there.” … It is almost to Midway dead. ?

A witness of male, said the man, later identified as Thomas, was sitting on a bench, when he was approached by two officers and linked the. The man said police used a weapon to Thomas six times.

Incident under investigation
Police have said Thomas escaped as officers tried to search his backpack, triggering an altercation which eventually six officers whose names have not been released. An officer was initially placed on administrative leave with pay. Sellers decided to do the same for the other five officers Tuesday, Sergeant Andrew Goodrich, a department spokeswoman, told the Associated Press.

He said that he did not know what prompted the decision of the head.

Thomas suffered serious head and neck injuries and was removed from life support on 10 July. On Wednesday, a small group of demonstrators marched outside the police station with posters showing Thomas’ bloodied and swollen face after the altercation.

Goodrich said the investigation was handed to the Office of the Orange County district attorney and the officers will remain on leave pending the outcome of the investigation.

“This is what we called moment that happened on 5 July,” said Goodrich. “We expect the investigation to complete as much as someone else is.”

Goodrich has refused to comment on the videotape and refused to say whether the city had its own tape of monitoring showing the incident.

Investigating district attorney interviewed more than 80 witnesses and await the results of Toxicology tests before deciding to file criminal charges, said Susan Schroeder, Chief of staff of the Agency.

“It is very important that there is a trial, that witnesses may testify of what they see as a witness, not what they see on television or in the media,” said Schroeder, in an interview with the Los Angeles Times.

An autopsy conducted last month was conclusive on the cause of death. Further tests are ongoing.

The FBI launched an investigation to know if officers violated rights civilians Thomas’, said Laura Eimiller, spokesman for the FBI.

The Associated Press contributed to this report

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