Corporate cash-hoarding continues
Even as the economy improves, corporate America continues to pile up record amounts of unused cash, Bloomberg reports. Read more at Counterparties
Read
- Planetary alignment peaks with celestial show this weekend
- UK fighters escort Pakistan plane to airport, two arrests
- Arizona jury foreman says believed Jodi Arias was abused
- Judge rules against 'America's toughest sheriff' in racial profiling lawsuit
- Stockholm calmer but violence spreads outside Swedish capital
|
Reuters Photojournalism
Our day's top images, in-depth photo essays and offbeat slices of life. See the best of Reuters photography. See more | Photo caption
Sponsored Links
Oakland police change crowd control policies after Occupy
(Reuters) - Oakland's Police Department will significantly change how it trains officers to control large crowds following criticism over its practices during anti-Wall Street protests last year that sometimes erupted into violence, the department said on Monday.
"It is our duty to protect public safety and at the same time balance the free speech rights of individual protesters with the rights of non-protesting residents," Police Chief Howard Jordan said in a statement.
"In the few individual cases of alleged and known police misconduct, I have acted quickly to investigate and hold officers accountable," he said.
Oakland's police practices came under intense scrutiny last year when a former Marine and Iraq war veteran, Scott Olsen, was critically injured during a demonstration in October. Protesters said he was hit in the head by a tear gas canister but authorities have never said exactly how he was hurt.
Olsen's case reinvigorated the Occupy movement against economic inequality, and the confrontations with police in subsequent protests turned Oakland into a focal point for the movement as demonstrators rallied against what they described as police brutality.
An outside investigator hired by the City of Oakland has been looking into how the department handled the Occupy movement since December, police said, in addition to a separate review by a federal monitor.
Police will also assign more manpower to investigations into complaints about excessive use of force, which spiked during the duration of the Occupy Oakland movement.
In a given year, the department receives a total of roughly 1,000 use of force complaints, according to City of Oakland spokeswoman Karen Boyd. That number jumped, with around 1,000 such complaints related just to the Occupy movement alone, she said.
"When it's clear that we can do things better, we're going to do things better," Boyd said.
The department last revised its crowd control policies 10 years ago, according to Boyd, who added that Jordan became police chief within a week of the first Occupy tents appearing in the park in front of Oakland City Hall.
The Occupy movement, which set up camp in New York on September 17 and sparked a wave of protests across the United States, appeared to lose momentum late last year as police cleared protest camps in several cities.
But in January, Occupy protests in Oakland again led to confrontations, with police firing tear gas into a chaotic crowd of protesters who were attempting to barge into a convention center. That demonstration resulted in 408 arrests, police said.
In coordination with Oakland Mayor Jean Quan, Police Chief Jordan formed a community advisory working group to look at the department's past crowd-control behavior, and pledged to train every officer in media relations and First Amendment law by the end of April.
""We are building a new police department with stronger ties to the community," Quan said in a statement. "Our interactions with demonstrators and the community have already changed. This commitment to accountability is critical to build the trust necessary for real community policing."
(Editing by Cynthia Johnston and Eric Walsh)
- Tweet this
- Link this
- Share this
- Digg this
- Reprints
The real oath Jordan & his criminal accomplices solemnly swore is not about this false & lying about “balance” & “non-protesting”. This is not what these lying civil servants swore to, but a false ruse to deny 1st amendment rights of those actually exercising their absolute rights. This is a thinly veiled repression of the people to induce the corrupt judiciary to go alone with state tyranny.
Former Marine and Iraq war veteran, Scott Olsen, was critically injured during a demonstration in October, where are the actual indictments and convictions of the paramilitary perpetrators who intentionally maimed SCott OLsen and his rescuers? These paramilitary forces did intentionally injure and did attempt to thwart the efforts other rights exercising U.S. citizens from removing Olsen from further injury.
Paramilitary forces contrary to their lying claim and avowed duty refused to serve Olsen, injured, by allaying further injury and removal of injured Olsen to safety and undisputedly did the opposite.
Paramilitary (Nazi) tactics is pure brutality and won’t stop on its own accord. What is actually happening is the protection of OPD’s Nazi tactics and no one seems to be noticing what it actually is
These so-called 3rd parties are mere window dressing to make the ruling elite feel good about themselves and under the smoke screen increase paramilitary oppression not unlike Nazi Germany.
“more manpower to investigations into complaints”, the fox guarding the henhouse. Doing things better is code words for more seemingly legal repression to actually limit, chill and eliminate exercise of fundamental rights. This use of the legal weapon also worked well for A. Hitler. His state tyranny was completely legal as it is being followed and perpetrated in all of the U.S., not only in OAK.
“revised its crowd control policies” is code for prevention and denial of constitutionally protected rights. Make no mistake, this paramilitary repression is a well coordinated federally funded and supported to protect the shadow ruling elite from being brought under control of the people.
“stronger ties to the community,” that is code for the community against individual rights and for the shadow ruling elite as the “community”. The people have absolutely no control over their civil servants and much less over the paramilitary belonging to the shadow ruling elite.
What Quan actually meant, “This commitment to accountability is critical to build the trust necessary for real community policing” is use policing against the people and exempt the rule of law from being equally applied to the rulers and their paramilitary forces.
Thx Ms Johnston and Walsh.




Follow Reuters