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Police Brutality & Counter-Insurgency in Salinas

by FireWorks
Several hundred people gathered at Closter Park on Sunday to protest police violence and recent killings on behalf of the Salinas Police Department, though many may have been surprised to find out that the topic was being downplayed by the organizers. Instead, this March Against Police Brutality was now to be a March for Respect, Dignity and Justice- though how to attain these things was not mentioned.
Several hundred people gathered at Closter Park on Sunday to protest police violence and recent killings on behalf of the Salinas Police Department, though many may have been surprised to find out that the topic was being downplayed by the organizers. Instead, this March Against Police Brutality was now to be a March for Respect, Dignity and Justice- though how to attain these things was not mentioned.

Pre-made signs awaited marchers with approved slogans such as “Respect, Dignity, Justice” in English and Spanish, and “Queremos Justicia” (We Want Justice.) In between speakers during the rally, one of the organizers in a yellow security vest told the crowd that people with signs deemed “negative” or “inappropriate” were going to be asked to put their sign away or leave. Almost simultaneously, another yellow-vested organizer approached someone who had spray painted FTP on their sign and told them to put it away. An argument broke out when he refused, with many people in the crowd telling the organizers to respect people’s freedom of speech. Despite calling for backup, the group of yellow-vests that had assembled could not convince anyone to remove their signs- in fact they had inspired others in the crowd to write “FTP” or “ACAB” on their own signs.

During the march, the organizers spent their time restricting the march to a single lane, as to allow traffic to pass. Many people were upset by this and tried to explain the purpose of civil disobedience. The default response from the yellow-vests was that whoever questioned them was not a Salinas resident or part of their community, which sounded like a broken record, and fell flat when the people disobeying their orders were actually locals themselves.

In stark contrast to almost any other protest against police brutality you can imagine, there were no police in sight. In this 3-plus mile march, not a single officer was spotted. Some optimistic marchers, as assured by the organizers, thought that because the march did not get unruly the police did not need to make an appearance. More likely, the police were relaxing knowing that their job was being done for them with the unpaid, and perhaps unknowing, help of those dressed in yellow.

Just over five years ago, the Salinas Police Department began coordinating with the nearby Naval Postgraduate School to implement the tactics of counter-insurgency. The strategy was developed in Iraq by David Petraeus, US Military General as well as former Director of the CIA, and now has been adapted to fight gangs in the United States. However, population control remains at the heart of counter-insurgency, and when SPD can use certain segments of the population to police their own actions, why create a potential confrontation by providing a visible target for people’s anger?

And with these military tactics, comes the military technology- Salinas PD was given access to the same software to track crimes and potential criminals that the U.S. military uses in the middle east. Primarily, it involves analyzing social media to target and disrupt supposedly violent activity. Beyond it’s partnership with NPS, Salinas had simultaneously looked into increasing surveillance camera presence, implementing facial-recognition software, and establishing a local fusion center. And to make way for these new tools- Monterey was given the go-ahead last year to expand the county jail in the coming years.

Tension was palpable on the streets of Salinas on Sunday, as the march made it’s way through the neighborhood, many looked on, and not one needed an explanation. Despite the best efforts at undermining the people’s rage by those donning yellow, it will take much more than that to curb completely. Most graffiti following Wednesday’s riot had been erased, but a few tags of “Call the cops and get shot” and “Break the law and die – SPD” were still lingering around Chinatown, one of the poorest neighborhoods in the city. The blood on SPD’s hands will not be forgotten any time soon.
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By Karl Vick
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, November 15, 2009

SALINAS, CALIF. -- Famed to readers as the birthplace of John Steinbeck and in supermarket produce circles as the "Salad Bowl of the World," the city of Salinas carries darker renown in the netherworld of California's prisons. Instant respect is accorded any inmate tattooed with the words "Salad Bowl" or "Salis" -- gang shorthand for a city now defined most of all by ferocious eruptions of violence.

In the space of 11 days this year, seven people were murdered in Salinas. Each killing, like the record 25 homicides the previous year, spilled from the gang warfare that this summer pushed the homicide rate in the city of 140,000 to three times that of Los Angeles. Residents retreated indoors at night, and Mayor Dennis Donohue affirmed his decision to seek help from an unlikely source: the U.S. military.
by Mario
I think ''Fireworks'' (which was a off shoot of Occupy Oakland ) and the guy who called for ''Fireworks'' to organize their own demo both had some valid points. It does sound like the Salinas rally was too tightly controlled. Not just to ''make the event feel safe for families and undocumented workers'' (a need that SOME street action oriented activists are sometimes not as sensitive about as they should be ) but political control. It sounds like the attempted censorship of signs was probably more to make the rally ''safe'' for Democratic party officials (who want to be seen protesting the murder but not identified with the more serious expressions of outrage .) than looking out for kids and the undocumented.
But when it comes down to it the on the ground decisions do have to be made by those who live and/work in the Salinas area. SF Bay area supporters have and should be there in force but it really is up to the locals to challenge the
tight grip that was shown on 5/25.
One more question . Who exactly are the main organizers ? They attack (ex ) OO folks for alleg.''parachuting '' in but were these guys involved from the start or did they only become involved when things seemed to become ''out of control '' ? Like some Oakland City council members and Alameda Labor council leaders when the outrage at the murder of Oscar Grant exceeded the bounds of ''respective progressive politics''
by Mario
A correction. I meant to write ''RESPECTABLE progressive politics''not Respective
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