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Illegal Mass Arrests in SF
While working as an independent journalist, I was arrrested with hundreds of others in illegal mass arrests on Friday, March 21in SF
Reporter's Notebook:
ILLEGAL MASS ARRESTS IN SAN FRANCISCO
By Michael Steinberg
-from the SF Chronicle, 3-24: AP, Havana Cuba's crackdown on government critics ended over the weekend following arrests of scores of independent journalists and pro-democracy activists.
San Francisco, March 21-This Friday evening, while acting in my capacity as an independent journalist, I was among hundreds snagged in an illegal mass arrrest carried out by the SFPD on the first block of Hayes Street just off Market. I became one of the SF 2400, those arrested here protesting the U.S. attack on Iraq.
An overflow anti-war crowd left the plaza at Market and Powell heading north shortly after 5:30 p.m., accompanied by a strong motocyle and foot police presence. An SFPD sound truck advised the marchers, who were on the sidewalk, that if they stepped off it they would be subject to arrest.
I followed the procession in the street on a bicycle. At the intersection with Hayes and Larkin across from Ninth Street, the front of the march swerved right, across Larkin onto Hayes. I continued to follow in the street on the bike.
Suddenly people began running back towards Market. I looked around and saw both ends of the block sealed off by lines of cops.
Seeing the trap, people got on the sidewalks. Police immediately ran in and formed lines to further trap people in on the sidewalks.
At this point the police began allowing media people who'd been snared in their net to leave. I approached an officer and informed him that I was an independent journalist covering the march, and asked to be released. But the officer refused my request because I did not have an SFPD-issued press pass.
I asked numerous officers why I was being detained. None answered me. Shortly thereafter cops began pulling people off the sidewalks, walking them over to the middle of Hayes, cuffing them behind their backs, and sitting them in the street.
I saw my time would be soon and asked a cop if I could lock my bike to a nearby parking meter. He said ok.
Soon another officer approached me and took me into the street. I asked him why I was being detained. Again I got no answer.
As I sat in the street after being handcuffed I asked another cop who was the officer in charge. I was told it was Commander Bruce. I asked to talk with him because I was a journalist doing my job and should be released. This request, and subsequent ones, were denied.
I later learned that this top cop is Deputy Chief Rich Bruce, head of special operations and security for the SFPD.
By this time it was dusk. Hundreds of predominantly young adults sat cuffed on the increasingly cold street. One group of women led the forced sit-in through chants and songs from Sesame Street.
Officers began getting people up on their feet. The cops then took them to the side of the street where their pictures were taken. Then they were disappeared into paddy wagons that drove off into the gathering darkness.
When my time came for this I asked the officer escorting me why I was being detained. He answered, "You're not being detained, you're being arrested." I asked why. He said I'd find out after they took my picture. But after I'd been flashed no one told me why I was being arrested. So I asked the cop taking me to the paddy wagon. He looked at a card my picture had been attached to and said, "Illegal assembly." I told him I hadn't heard any police announcement declaring an illegal assembly, nor an order to disperse. He claimed there'd been one.
After this I asked lots of arresstees if they'd heard any such announcement. All of them said they hadn't.
Subsequently all arrestees were taken to Pier 27. Before I was put in a paddy wagon officers seized my pens after I again asserted that I was a journalist and asked to talk with Commander Bruce.
At the pier I was put in a holding pen formed by metal police barricades with a growing crowd.Everyone still had cuffs on.
After a while an officer came over holding the card with my picture on it and took me out of the pen. He cut off my cuffs and took me over to a table where another officer took my information. I was asked if I wanted to be cited or released or booked and jailed. I chose the former, as did virtually everyone dragged in. By this time I'd given up on trying to talk with Bruce.
Next we were put in another pen to wait for our names to be called. An officer calling out names also informed us that if we were caught doing civil disobedience in the next 24 hours we'd be thrown in jail. "So don't go to the rally tomorrow," she warned. Penned people shouted that Saturday's gathering had a permit.
I waited around about five hours to be released. During that time I saw paddy wagons, sheriff's buses and MUNI double buses bring in hundreds more handcuffed people. I talked to some of them after they were put in our pen. Some said they'd been rounded up on Franklin Street, others on McAllister.
At around 1 a.m. a cop called my name. He took me over to another table where I had to sign a Notice To Appear in order to be released. I did so and walked out into the chill night.
Under a streetlight I saw that I'd been charged with two misdeameanors. No one at the pier had told me what my charges were. On a space specified for "Misc Information," "Mass Arrest: Code JEA" was written in.
The next day we were on a streets for a massive Saturday march that went on into the wee hours.
There was criminal behavior at the Hayes Street mass busts, but the charges should be leveled at the SFPD for blatantly false arrests.
ILLEGAL MASS ARRESTS IN SAN FRANCISCO
By Michael Steinberg
-from the SF Chronicle, 3-24: AP, Havana Cuba's crackdown on government critics ended over the weekend following arrests of scores of independent journalists and pro-democracy activists.
San Francisco, March 21-This Friday evening, while acting in my capacity as an independent journalist, I was among hundreds snagged in an illegal mass arrrest carried out by the SFPD on the first block of Hayes Street just off Market. I became one of the SF 2400, those arrested here protesting the U.S. attack on Iraq.
An overflow anti-war crowd left the plaza at Market and Powell heading north shortly after 5:30 p.m., accompanied by a strong motocyle and foot police presence. An SFPD sound truck advised the marchers, who were on the sidewalk, that if they stepped off it they would be subject to arrest.
I followed the procession in the street on a bicycle. At the intersection with Hayes and Larkin across from Ninth Street, the front of the march swerved right, across Larkin onto Hayes. I continued to follow in the street on the bike.
Suddenly people began running back towards Market. I looked around and saw both ends of the block sealed off by lines of cops.
Seeing the trap, people got on the sidewalks. Police immediately ran in and formed lines to further trap people in on the sidewalks.
At this point the police began allowing media people who'd been snared in their net to leave. I approached an officer and informed him that I was an independent journalist covering the march, and asked to be released. But the officer refused my request because I did not have an SFPD-issued press pass.
I asked numerous officers why I was being detained. None answered me. Shortly thereafter cops began pulling people off the sidewalks, walking them over to the middle of Hayes, cuffing them behind their backs, and sitting them in the street.
I saw my time would be soon and asked a cop if I could lock my bike to a nearby parking meter. He said ok.
Soon another officer approached me and took me into the street. I asked him why I was being detained. Again I got no answer.
As I sat in the street after being handcuffed I asked another cop who was the officer in charge. I was told it was Commander Bruce. I asked to talk with him because I was a journalist doing my job and should be released. This request, and subsequent ones, were denied.
I later learned that this top cop is Deputy Chief Rich Bruce, head of special operations and security for the SFPD.
By this time it was dusk. Hundreds of predominantly young adults sat cuffed on the increasingly cold street. One group of women led the forced sit-in through chants and songs from Sesame Street.
Officers began getting people up on their feet. The cops then took them to the side of the street where their pictures were taken. Then they were disappeared into paddy wagons that drove off into the gathering darkness.
When my time came for this I asked the officer escorting me why I was being detained. He answered, "You're not being detained, you're being arrested." I asked why. He said I'd find out after they took my picture. But after I'd been flashed no one told me why I was being arrested. So I asked the cop taking me to the paddy wagon. He looked at a card my picture had been attached to and said, "Illegal assembly." I told him I hadn't heard any police announcement declaring an illegal assembly, nor an order to disperse. He claimed there'd been one.
After this I asked lots of arresstees if they'd heard any such announcement. All of them said they hadn't.
Subsequently all arrestees were taken to Pier 27. Before I was put in a paddy wagon officers seized my pens after I again asserted that I was a journalist and asked to talk with Commander Bruce.
At the pier I was put in a holding pen formed by metal police barricades with a growing crowd.Everyone still had cuffs on.
After a while an officer came over holding the card with my picture on it and took me out of the pen. He cut off my cuffs and took me over to a table where another officer took my information. I was asked if I wanted to be cited or released or booked and jailed. I chose the former, as did virtually everyone dragged in. By this time I'd given up on trying to talk with Bruce.
Next we were put in another pen to wait for our names to be called. An officer calling out names also informed us that if we were caught doing civil disobedience in the next 24 hours we'd be thrown in jail. "So don't go to the rally tomorrow," she warned. Penned people shouted that Saturday's gathering had a permit.
I waited around about five hours to be released. During that time I saw paddy wagons, sheriff's buses and MUNI double buses bring in hundreds more handcuffed people. I talked to some of them after they were put in our pen. Some said they'd been rounded up on Franklin Street, others on McAllister.
At around 1 a.m. a cop called my name. He took me over to another table where I had to sign a Notice To Appear in order to be released. I did so and walked out into the chill night.
Under a streetlight I saw that I'd been charged with two misdeameanors. No one at the pier had told me what my charges were. On a space specified for "Misc Information," "Mass Arrest: Code JEA" was written in.
The next day we were on a streets for a massive Saturday march that went on into the wee hours.
There was criminal behavior at the Hayes Street mass busts, but the charges should be leveled at the SFPD for blatantly false arrests.
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That's a very good and accurate account. I can't find that in the online Chronicle. Was it really in the March 24th issue?
Hi, I've heard lots of talk from friends about an incident in SF last week involving a protestor and his son. According to friends, the father was beaten while his son was dragged away. Does anyone have footage/photos of this? Many bizarre father/son situations in this war - besides the obvious ones, there is the father of the soldier who died in the Black hawk crash. Friends of mine in europe report that the footage of him putting his son's photo to the screen and accusing Bush of his death is widely shown in France/Germany. I've only read CNN's spin on the event - the only footage available on their article is a photo of his younger brother saluting. Good luck everyone
see, the thing is, the SFPD or any police, are enforcers of the law, and if youre gonna enforce your law on us you better fuckin do it lawfully.
Sounds as if the SFPD used mass arrest tactics similar to the one you were caught in all over town last week. I was at the Market/Montgomery intersection 11:30 am on Thursday when our group was abruptly surrounded by the police, with no declaration of unlawful assembly or order to disperse. When we tried to leave we were told "you're under arrest" or met with silence. My companion, whose wrist was broken when she was shoved down by an officer, was denied medical attention or an opportunity to leave, despite her requests, and was cuffed with the rest of us.
Hopefully with sufficient documentation and testimony, the charges won't stand against those who were wrongfully arrested in this manner.
Hopefully with sufficient documentation and testimony, the charges won't stand against those who were wrongfully arrested in this manner.
and forced to adopt civilized protocol which allows protests to carry on!
Also-- and perhaps more interestringly-- the cops impressive ability to block traffic and shut-down streets should be used as a protest tool: Protesters should try to turn the cop's strong-arm tactics against them.
'The enemy's greatest strength is their greatest weakness', said Lao Tzu or whoever it was who wrote the Art of War.
Also-- and perhaps more interestringly-- the cops impressive ability to block traffic and shut-down streets should be used as a protest tool: Protesters should try to turn the cop's strong-arm tactics against them.
'The enemy's greatest strength is their greatest weakness', said Lao Tzu or whoever it was who wrote the Art of War.
In order to go anywhere - get home or to work - one has to step off several sidewalks. In fact, one has to step of one sidewalk per block.
What is being complained about is the detention, citation and illegal treatment of US citizens exercising their constitutional right to vocally disagree with their government and to gather in public. This right is being denied and they are being abused for trying to hold on to it. That is illegal and directly counter to the Constitution.
If more coverage and outrage is not spread about this issue, this country will continue to become an oppressive, police state with further rights revoked from the citizenry.
I don't really understand you conservative, reactionaries defending the police. They don't seem to be the ones in need of representation or protection in this case. You're certainly entitled to express your current opinion, but you might think about it furrther. Opinions can change that's what creates progress.
I don't think you're seeing the full scope of what's happening here; and we'll leave the cluster bombs that the government has decided to drop on the most populated areas of civilian Iraq out of the argument.
What is being complained about is the detention, citation and illegal treatment of US citizens exercising their constitutional right to vocally disagree with their government and to gather in public. This right is being denied and they are being abused for trying to hold on to it. That is illegal and directly counter to the Constitution.
If more coverage and outrage is not spread about this issue, this country will continue to become an oppressive, police state with further rights revoked from the citizenry.
I don't really understand you conservative, reactionaries defending the police. They don't seem to be the ones in need of representation or protection in this case. You're certainly entitled to express your current opinion, but you might think about it furrther. Opinions can change that's what creates progress.
I don't think you're seeing the full scope of what's happening here; and we'll leave the cluster bombs that the government has decided to drop on the most populated areas of civilian Iraq out of the argument.
In order to go anywhere - get home or to work - one has to step off several sidewalks. In fact, one has to step of one sidewalk per block.
What is being complained about is the detention, citation and illegal treatment of US citizens exercising their constitutional right to vocally disagree with their government and to gather in public. This right is being denied and they are being abused for trying to hold on to it. That is illegal and directly counter to the Constitution.
If more coverage and outrage is not spread about this issue, this country will continue to become an oppressive, police state with further rights revoked from the citizenry.
I don't really understand you conservative, reactionaries defending the police. They don't seem to be the ones in need of representation or protection in this case. You're certainly entitled to express your current opinion, but you might think about it furrther. Opinions can change that's what creates progress.
I don't think you're seeing the full scope of what's happening here; and we'll leave the cluster bombs that the government has decided to drop on the most populated areas of civilian Iraq out of the argument.
What is being complained about is the detention, citation and illegal treatment of US citizens exercising their constitutional right to vocally disagree with their government and to gather in public. This right is being denied and they are being abused for trying to hold on to it. That is illegal and directly counter to the Constitution.
If more coverage and outrage is not spread about this issue, this country will continue to become an oppressive, police state with further rights revoked from the citizenry.
I don't really understand you conservative, reactionaries defending the police. They don't seem to be the ones in need of representation or protection in this case. You're certainly entitled to express your current opinion, but you might think about it furrther. Opinions can change that's what creates progress.
I don't think you're seeing the full scope of what's happening here; and we'll leave the cluster bombs that the government has decided to drop on the most populated areas of civilian Iraq out of the argument.
I too was illegally arrested Friday evening with a large group trapped on Franklin between Fulton and McAllister. I never witnessed any antiwar protester breaking any laws. We were all peaceful throughout the entire march and entrapment. We were never read our rights. We were never told by any police officer why we were first being detained, then handcuffed, then put into paddy wagons, then holding pens at the SF county jail, then put into holding cells inside SF county jail. But we remained peaceful and our spirits were noble for the sacrafice we made for our beliefs is never too great. The group I was with didn't start getting released until after 1 a.m. I wasn't released until after 2 a.m. I had to wait until BART started operation Saturday morning to get home in the east bay so I stayed up all night at the Carl's Jr. near the Powell Street BART station.
In response to the person who asked if the article appeared in the Chronicle in the 24th, only the quote at the beginning from Havanna is--I pulled it out because of all the irony it exuded relating to our situation. Michael Steinberg
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