newswire article reporting united states actions & protests | political theory dnc rnc protests 2008 DNC protests in Denver - mass arrests monday night author: compiler Spoke with a friend in Denver on Sunday afternoon who said that people had been peppersprayed and that things were getting a little more intense. I searched and searched mainstream media and alternative media that day to find news of this... never found a goddamned thing anywhwere.



But there is now some coverage of Monday's events at comeuptodenver.org - click on the button that says "new" next to "NEWS" at the top of the site.



Here is their latest press release from the Colorado Legal Eagles website... including a somewhat interesting bias against anarchist protesters' right to free assembly and speech here... implying and discussing philosophical differences of opinion of whether property damage is "violence", but never actually stating what damage was/has been caused in Denver by so-called anarchist factions... if any. So if no damage was caused, I must wonder why this philosophical issue was even mentioned... It seems as if the writer wants to see anarchists attacked at the expense of all the "innocents"...



But nonetheless at least there's coverage of what's happening on the ground in this press release.



Also Colorado Indymedia is providing coverage - this press release was reposted to that site as well, at: http://www.colorado.indymedia.org/ - so if anyone wants to comment on this press release, that might be a good place to do so, where it will get more attention.



For contrast, and for access to more info, there's a mainstream news release also posted at the end. Citizens Question Police Strong-Arm Tactics



Press Release from Colorado Legal Eagles

August 25, 2008



Contact:Colorado Legal Eagles

info@coloradolegaleagles.org

http://www.coloradolegaleagles.org



[Denver, CO] - The quiet start to a week of protests against the Democrats at the DNC in Denver was shattered when the Denver Police over-reacted to a small group of young anarchists and opened fire with pepper bullets and pepper spray into the crowd indiscriminately. Until the incident tonight, the major media story about the DNC protests was how few protesters actually showed up and how easy it would be for the Denver Police to keep track of them.



The pepper bullet incident happened on Monday around 7pm when a small group of young anarchists covered their faces with bandanas, linked arms and began to march down Colfax Avenue without a permit. The Denver Police formed a riot line, but the anarchists refused to stop, walking directly into police.



Without warning, the police responded with pepper bullets and pepper spray, rushing into the curiosity seekers who had been following the small group of anarchists and then sweeping up several hundred peaceful people who were enjoying the Festival of Democracy in Civic Center Park across the street.



Dozens of law enforcement then swept through parts of Civic Center Park, firing their pepper bullets and spray indiscriminately. The police herded anarchists, peaceful protesters, journalists and documentary filmmakers across the park into a parking garage on 15th Street near Court Place where they were surrounded by police and held for several hours. Other people were surrounded in Civic Center Park and tightly packed for up to 90 minutes. Many were then released, but reports are about 100 were arrested.



Many innocent bystanders were injured, including an 80-year-old man and several tourists.



For weeks, a group of mostly young anarchists from a group called Unconventional Action had been planning events to "reclaim the streets" through militant means. The police may have been alerted to Monday's action by the group's posters, which have been promoting an event called "Everything for Everyone: Improve Your Material Conditions this Summer", an apparent looting action that had been planned for Monday at 6pm starting in Civic Center Park.

http://www.unconventionalaction.org/downloads/anti-capital2_11x17.pdf

http://www.unconventionalaction.org/downloads/lootin_bw.pdf



Ron Kovic, a disabled Vietnam veteran and author of the memoir Born on the Fourth of July, who is in Denver to support the peaceful protesters, was concerned by the violence. "We must remain nonviolent. We must have the high moral ground," he said.



The anarchists are a very small minority of the protesters at the DNC, but they always succeed in causing trouble and giving the peaceful demonstrators a bad name. Peaceful groups organizing DNC protests want to make it clear to the media and the public that they do not condone the violent actions of these young people. Clearly, the anarchists were looking for trouble with the police.



However, the police clearly overreacted, as they outnumbered the anarchists by at least 20 to 1 and were much better armed. There was no need to open fire into a crowd without warning and indiscriminately, injuring innocent people. The police should have given the crowd more warning before it opened fire and given a chance for innocent bystanders to leave the area. This is similar to an incident in Wyoming in July where peace activists and their children at the annual Rainbow Gathering were indiscriminately terrorized by federal law enforcement officers with pepper bullets and pepper spray without warning.



See: DNC Police Riot Preview? Activists Declare Zero Tolerance for Poorly-trained and Rogue Federal Agents

http://www.coloradolegaleagles.org/dnc08/dnc.pr3.html



Until this police over-reaction, for the traditional media, the biggest story of the counter-convention has been the lack of protesters attending. Estimates of 25,000 to 50,000 protesters descending on Denver for the DNC were way off target. At an antiwar march on Sunday, one of only a handful of large marches during the week, less than 1,000 attended. At a rally today at the Federal Courthouse, there were only about 200 people. All these gatherings had been peaceful with zero arrests.



With crowds this small, a handful of young unarmed anarchists should be no match for the heavily-armed Denver Police Department. Why was there a need to open fire into a crowd without warning? Why couldn't they have dealt with this small group of anarchists without injuring innocent bystanders?



Instead of enjoying the small number of protesters, the Denver Police Department has decided to intimidate and terrorize all the DNC demonstrators. At the Festival of Democracy in Civic Center Park on Monday, attended by only a few hundred people, the police presence was massive. A report from one peace activist running an information table at the Festival said the police presence was "outrageous" and intentionally intimidating. He said roves of armed SWAT teams constantly patrolled Civic Center Park throughout the day, and stood by his table and videotaped him at length and at close range. There have also been police on bikes, on horseback and in vehicles. The activist said the police were "very intimidating, like they were trying to scare us all away."



Another report on colorado.indymedia.org states that 5 members of the Solidarity Radical Library and Revolutionary Center from Lawrence, Kansas were arrested Monday in Denver without any reason.



The Denver Police have ruined what had been overwhelmingly peaceful protests by over-reacting to a handful of young unarmed trouble-makers and injuring innocent bystanders. The Colorado Legal Eagles implore the police to show more restraint and use more communication to control the crowds to prevent injuring innocent bystanders and civilians.



The Colorado Legal Eagles also urge these anarchist groups to cease their intent to destroy property, defy police and use violent tactics. These anarchists believe that property damage is not violent. But behind every piece of property is a property owner willing to defend it, even more so in the Wild West perhaps than in other places. Violence against the property is violence against the owner. The anarchist's tactics Monday resulted in nothing but innocent people being injured and an opportunity for a week of peaceful protests destroyed. The police had to act to keep the peace, even though it has been a tense peace at best with their massive presence on the streets and intimidating tactics. The anarchists chose to defy that tenuous peace, and nothing has been gained.



Activists are calling for protests outside of the Denver Police Department Building at 1331 Cherokee Street on Tuesday morning if all the protesters have not been released yet. Bring drums and noisemakers.



Please call these officials and tell them you are ashamed that they could not handle a few young anarchists without hurting and terrorizing innocent people and peaceful protesters.



Chief of Police Gerald Whitman

(720) 913-6527



Denver Mayor John Hickenlooper

Phone: 720-865-9000 (Denver 311)

Ask for the Mayor's Office

E-mail: MileHighMayor@ci.denver.co.us

Website: www.denvergov.org/mayor



Colorado Governor Bill Ritter

Phone: (303) 866-2471

Fax: (303) 866-2003

Online feedback form

http://www.colorado.gov/apps/oit/governor/citizen/assistanceUtility/welcome.jsf



More background on this story:



http://la.indymedia.org/news/2008/08/219905.php



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

Also posted by Colorado Legal Eagles:





The Denver Post is showing a live stream of protesters surrounded by police

just north of Civic Center Park on 15th Street. It looks like the

protesters are being held in the underground garage of a city building.

http://www.denverpost.com/livecam



The below article said protesters have been surrounded on the 16th Street

Mall.



http://www.denverpost.com/politicswestnews/ci_10301186

Article Last Updated: 08/25/2008 08:21:03 PM MDT



Denver police surround protesters on 15th Street near Civic Center Park.

Jason Halley/ Special to The Denver Post (THE DENVER POST | Jason Halley)

Riot police have forced a couple of hundred protesters out of Civic Center

and then blocked them before they could reach the 16th Street Mall.



Police had the protesters surrounded between Court Street and Cleveland

along 15th Street and moved up reinforcements, including at least two

armored vehicles. They have made at least one arrest.



The standoff was continuing at 8 p.m.



Protesters and police had lined up across from one another in front of City

and County Building about 7 p.m., the police wearing their full riot gear

and holding batons, chanting "move back, move back."



Police used pepper spray before the mass of marchers moved back across the

park and were cut off by police behind the Sheraton Hotel.



Several downtown hotels were reported to be on lockdown.



Curiousity seekers stood outside the police cordon, outnumbering the

marchers.



Asked whether they would allow the protesters to disperse, Detective John

White, Denver Police spokesman, said that police were "trying to identify"

the protesters.



Protestors told reporters they were a mix of Tent State participants and

those identifying themselves as anti-capitalist, anti-fascist, anti-war

individuals.



The group split, with officers surrounding and detaining the group on 15th

Street, while others were pushed back by police toward Civic Center. Once

the police organized their lines, the distance widened.



Sam Harper, 36, of Eufaula, Okla., said he was here to protest the war, but

he wasn't prepared to be injured.



"When I saw the tear gas, I split. I don't need to get beat down," Harper

said.



The detained grouped chanted in unison: "Who screams. We scream."



Some in the crowd outside the police lines, which included onlookers and

media, chanted: "Cops here. Bombs there. U.S. out of everywhere."



"Speech is free. Let them be."



"Show me what the First Amendment looks like."



"Let them go."



"Watch out! They're gearing up,""some in the crowd shouted, as officers

donned gas masks and other protective equipment.



A girl warned anyone with contact lenses to get out of the area.



"The spray will fuse your contact lenses to your eyeballs," she said.



A protester named Timmy said he had slipped out of his all-black outfit and

slipped outside the police cordon.



"We want freedom from oppression," he said. "We want direct democracy where

communities are allowed to make decisions based on our own abilities. It

takes bottom-up organizing to make change; it doesn't take a leader. We

want cooperations, not capitalism."



Meanwhile, in Skyline Park near 18th and Arapahoe, about a dozen people sat

surrounded by police, apparently in custody. contribute to this article

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