Police Turn Oakland Into War Zone

Allison Kilkenny

(Updated 4:24 p.m. ET)

Incredible footage emerged from downtown Oakland last night - not of basic law enforcement efforts to maintain public health and safety” as the police have been claiming - but of a war zone in which police shot tear gas, bean bags, wooden dowels, flash grenades, and rubber bullets at protesters.

Rather than using the weaponry once in a final effort to subdue the crowd, officers reportedly used them over and over again in what @OccupyOakland describes as a relentless” assault on the thousands of activists gathered near City Hall.

The city remains committed to respecting free speech as well as maintaining the city’s responsibility to protect public health and safety,” Oakland police said in a statement Tuesday. 

The safety” concerns are the usual complaints levelled at the Occupy movements: sanitation issues, improper food storage, graffiti, litter, and vandalism, although OPD added accusations of fighting, assaults, and threatening/​intimidating behavior.” Yes, you read that correctly. OPD is accusing the protesters of using threatening/​intimidating behavior.”

The police claim they were ever-so-distressed that they couldn’t get medical responders through to attend to the wounded protesters, and they ultimately expressed this concern by shooting the remaining activists with tear gas and rubber bullets. Reportedly, activists retaliated by throwing paint” on police officers.

Oakland Interim Police Chief Howard Jordan said that a total of 102 arrests have been made so far, but as of last night that number was still increasing. Eighty-five of those arrests were made early Tuesday when officers raided the Occupy Oakland encampment at Oscar Grant plaza along with an annex in Snow Park near Lake Merritt.

During the assault, police dressed in full riot gear as if preparing to battle a zombie horde or terrorist cell (photo by @garonsen).

Footage of the flash grenades and tear gas being used against protesters:

A steadier version of more or less the same thing:

Terrifying footage that allegedly shows a veteran who suffered a head wound from a rubber bullet. The cameraman can be heard screaming, medic!” as he desperately tries to get the man to say his name.

Photo of a protester allegedly shot by a rubber bullet (@OccupyOakland)

Protesters speaking with some OPD after the very first raid in which eighty-five individuals were arrested. Here, a police officer expresses he was just following orders.

And I could go on. This kind of stuff keeps rolling in every five minutes on Youtube. As always, it’s important to remember that regardless of police accusations, the charges against protesters listed above (sanitation issues, graffiti, etc.) are relatively minor offenses given the nature of this police retaliation in which OPD turned downtown Oakland into a war zone.

These are the consequences of citizens exercising their First Amendment rights. It’s no wonder the culture of activism remained dormant in America for so many decades.

Update: It seems the gentleman in the video I posted above is indeed a veteran. Scott Olsen, 24, is in the hospital with a fractured skull and brain swelling after allegedly being hit by a police projectile in Oakland. 

Olsen served two tours of Iraq (2006 and 2007) in 3rd Battalion, 4th Marines before leaving the military in 2010. He is now a member of Veterans for Peace and Iraq Veterans Against the War. 

More photos of Olsen taken after he was reportedly hit by a tear gas canister:

And here is video of Olsen laying prone on the ground when a group of around ten protesters rush over in an apparent attempt to help him before police fire an explosive device, most likely a flash grenade, into their midst. OPD has denied using flash bang grenades.

Allison Kilkenny is an In These Times Staff Writer and the co-host of the critically acclaimed radio show Citizen Radio. Her blog for In These Times, Uprising, focuses on efforts around the world to address the global economic crisis.
The text is from the poem “QUADRENNIAL” by Golden, reprinted with permission. It was first published in the Poetry Project. Inside front cover photo by Golden.
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