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Anti-WarPressure City of Berkeley to Settle Four Civil Rights Cases
The City of Berkeley is continuing to drag out costly litigation despite overwhelming evidence of police misconduct against the free speech and human rights of demonstrators. Please call or write urging the City to settle these cases rather than waste public resources to further disrupt the lives of the activists. ![]() court-riders.jpg (Pictured above: Attorney Larry Hildes and his assistant Karen Wilde, with
five of the Critical Mass defendants at one of their many court dates. These activists are now suing the Berkeley Police Department). PLEASE PRESSURE THE CITY OF BERKELEY TO SETTLE FOUR "CRITICAL MASS" CASES IMMEDIATELY The decade-long campaign by the Berkeley Police and other elements in the City of Berkeley to interfere with bicycle demonstrations culminated in a cluster of flash points during the years 2000-2001. For the first time ever, activists elected to sue for these harmful attacks on free speech. Although these four cases show clear wrongdoing by the Police Department, which was corroborated repeatedly by the citizen-appointed Berkeley Police Review Commission (PRC), the City Attorney's office is staunchly resisting efforts to settle the cases and is proceeding with costly and time consuming actions which will further harm the activists' lives and increase the costs of the suits greatly for both the City and the victims. These police abuses have already had some of their desired impact: a chilling effect on nonviolent free speech activity in the City of Berkeley. A number of activists have ceased to be involved for fear of further harm. Please help end this ongoing repression. While these four cases are strong, a great deal of time and energy is required to take them to trial, and once in court, there is never a guarantee of justice being served. As the oil war in Iraq looms, can we afford to have activists tied down with blatant abuses which happened two years ago? We need everyone who cares about free speech in Berkeley to call, write, and pressure the Mayor and City Council immediately to urge them to stop the City's denying of the clear wrongdoing of the Berkeley Police Department and to make amends by settling these four cases. More details about the cases are below. Please contact: Mayor Tom Bates and City Council 2180 Milvia Street, Berkeley, CA 94704 TEL: (510) 981-7100, FAX: (510) 981-7199, TDD: (510) 981-6903 Office Hours: Mon-Fri 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Email: mayor [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us <mailto:mayor [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us> You can email them all at once by cutting and pasting this line: mayor [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us,wozniak [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us, breland [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us, hogan [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us, maio [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us, mhawley [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us, olds [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us, shirek [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us, spring [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us, worthington [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us Or call them: Linda Maio - Phone: (510) 981-7110 Margaret Breland - Phone: (510) 981-7120 Maudelle Shirek - Phone: (510) 981-7130 Dona Spring - Phone: (510) 981-7140 Miriam Hawley - phone: (510) 981-7150 Betty Olds - Phone: (510) 981-7160 Kriss Worthington - Phone: (510) 981-7170 Gordon Wozniak - Phone: (510) 981-7180 Mayor Tom Bates - Phone: (510) 981-7100 See below for their complete contact information including addresses, fax and TDD numbers, taken from the City's website: http://www.ci.berkeley.ca.us/Elected/default.htm ========================= MORE ABOUT THE FOUR CASES ========================= You may have heard of one or more of these four cases: 1) February 9, 2001: A demonstration in solidarity with the indigenous peoples of Ecuador resisting the theft and destruction of their lands and the inevitable ethnocide of their cultures by Big Oil. Berkeley Police (BPD) confronted the small group of demonstrators with overwhelming numbers, forcibly confiscated their sound equipment, bicycles with trailers, and "the couch", as well as a long banner reading "Indigenous Freedom" and the personal courier bag of bicycle organizer Jason Meggs which contained his money, passport, tools, other affects, and 27 keys. Police unleashed violence upon those who remained at the scene verbally protesting both the confiscation of property and the disruption of the demonstration. The PRC found unanimously that many instances of excessive force were committed by the BPD who struck demonstrators with batons, dragged one demonstrator, and violently executed false arrests. Much of the confiscated property was either damaged or never returned, including the personal effects in the courier bag. The couch was destroyed on the spot by police and Public Works, over the distressed and shouted objections of its caretaker, Jason Meggs. Meggs, a well-known organizer of bicycle demonstrations, was repeatedly struck with batons and suffered permanent injury requiring ongoing treatment. Police were caught at the PRC in telling numerous untruths about their actions, which the facts and especially the video evidence directly contradicted. 2) August 10 and July 13, 2001: The police presence at the monthly Critical Mass bicycle demonstration in Berkeley became dramatically more aggressive, culminating in horrifying violence. In July, large numbers of police in cars, motorcycles and bicycles interfered with the ride. An unmarked police SUV filmed riders, and the police personnel within the vehicle refused to identify themselves. A number of harassment citations were issued to selected individuals in a discriminatory manner: one to a latina woman traveling with the group, and one to a young man who followed the surveilance vehicle away from the ride in an effort to identify its occupants. Next month, in August, this police mistreatment only intensified. One motorcycle officer was especially problematic, repeatedly speeding through the crowd and endangering them, then cutting into the crowd and stopping suddenly to cause bicyclists to stop or swerve. Police again targeted specific individuals, issuing one false citation early on, and then deliberately targeting a young latino man while ignoring others around him. Police charged through the group, tackling the man and arresting him. One observer was slammed into a restaurant window. Police unnecessarily caused chaos and confusion, blaring sirens and pulling, shoving and pushing observers in order to flee the peaceful crowd with the arrestee. One organizer was injured by police, receiving a gash on his knee which left a permanent scar. One bicycle trailer carrying a Public Announcement (PA) sound system was damaged by police when they tore cables from it and attempted to overturn it. Participants were traumatized and many of them became scared to return to Critical Mass, and many have not. Later that evening, after demonstrators went to the "Public Safety" building to protest the racist false arrest, a friend of the arrestee was arrested in the center of Martin Luther King, Jr. Way. He had done nothing to warrant a citation. 3) April 13, 2001: Sgt. Hester of the BPD mounted a hidden camera on his handlebars for the purpose of following Critical Mass organizers and recording their behavior. Jason Meggs and Ryan Salsbury, organizers who bring the PA system to facilitate free speech, were the only two so targeted. The were not informed at any time that their behavior was going to be monitored and penalized. They were not asked to change their behavior. They acted similarly to the rest of the hundred or so demonstrators. Yet weeks later, Meggs and Salsbury received a number of citations in the mail totaling thousands of dollars, including one misdemeanor each. They were forced to hire an attorney. The PRC agreed that this was blatant selective enforcement. This type of activity is also explicitly illegal. Finally, it is a clear attack on the ability of the organizers to participate in the expression of their free speech rights. Imagine if police followed an organizer of a march throughout the streets and then sent her or him jaywalking tickets in the mail for each intersection the march crossed. That is essentially what happened here, because Critical Mass is a march on wheels. 4) September 26, 2000: Berkeley Police directed Public Works to the site of a bicycle with trailers involved in a "car-free month" demonstration. The trailers held banners with the slogans, "Celebrate [Car-Free] Living" and "Appreciate Bicycles". While University of California Police guarded them, a large group of Public Works employees took a cutting torch to the bicycle, destroying its hand-made steel trailer hitch (rather than simply pulling the pin), cut through and destroyed the U-lock, and tore the hand-made banners to shreds rather than simply cutting their grommet leads. The workers bent and twisted over the banner poles rather than pulling them out, and destroyed the main support struts of one trailer in the process. Police said their excuse for attacking the trailers was because of the demonstration against globalization which was to occur later that evening (at which the trailers were to be used). Demonstrators have already poured a great deal of time and resources into exposing this abusive campaign. There is overwhelming evidence of police misconduct. The City is liable, it's just a question of how much more of the activists' and their public interest attorney's time and money will be required, and how much more taxpayer dollars will be required, before the cases settle or go to trial. It is obvious that delaying the resolution of these cases is a tactic to further squelch free speech and both human and civil rights in Berkeley. In light of the dark cloud of domestic oppression which is forming, you are urgently requested to put an end to this campaign -- conducted before the so-called Patriot Act! -- by using your voice while you still can. Other IMC stories and web sites which relate include: Feb 9: http://www.indybay.org/news/2002/06/132885 S26: http://bclu.org/stories/abuse_reports/abuse-20000926.html second account w/photos: http://guest.xinet.com/rts/past_actions/s26/photos/trailersattacked.html === Again, please call, write, and pressure: Mayor Tom Bates 2180 Milvia Street, Berkeley, CA 94704 TEL: (510) 981-7100, FAX: (510) 981-7199, TDD: (510) 981-6903 Office Hours: Mon-Fri 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., Email: mayor [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us <mailto:mayor [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us> Linda Maio City of Berkeley 2180 Milvia Street Berkeley, California 94704 Phone: (510) 981-7110 Email: maio [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us Margaret Breland City of Berkeley 2180 Milvia Street Berkeley, California 94704 Phone: (510) 981-7120 Email: breland [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us Maudelle Shirek City of Berkeley 2180 Milvia Street Berkeley, California 94704 Phone: (510) 981-7130 Email: shirek [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us Dona Spring City of Berkeley 2180 Milvia Street Berkeley, California 94704 Phone: (510) 981-7140 Email: spring [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us Miriam Hawley City of Berkeley 2180 Milvia Street, Fifth Floor Berkeley, CA 94704 phone: (510) 981-7150 fax: (510) 981-7155 e-mail mhawley [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us Betty Olds City of Berkeley 2180 Milvia Street Berkeley, California 94704 Phone: (510) 981-7160 Email: olds [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us Kriss Worthington City of Berkeley 2180 Milvia Street Berkeley, California 94704 Phone: (510) 981-7170 Email: worthington [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us Gordon Wozniak City of Berkeley 2180 Milvia Street Berkeley, California 94704 Phone: (510) 981-7180 Email: GWozniak [at] ci.berkeley.ca.us |
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