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Occupy Oakland Raided For Second Time By Hundreds Of Police (PHOTOS, VIDEOS)

TERRY COLLINS   11/14/11 11:17 PM ET   AP

OAKLAND, Calif. — Police clad in riot gear and armed with tear gas cleared out Oakland's anti-Wall Street encampment early Monday, the latest law enforcement crackdown amid complaints around the country of health and safety hazards at protest camps.

The raid at the Occupy Oakland camp, one of the largest and most active sites in the movement, came a day after police in Portland, Ore., arrested more than 50 people while shutting down its camp amid complaints of drug use and sanitation issues.

Police in Burlington, Vt., also evicted protesters after a man fatally shot himself last week inside a tent.

Police staged a previous raid on the Oakland encampment Oct. 25, but Mayor Jean Quan allowed protesters to re-establish their tent city. On Monday, however, Quan said officials could no longer ignore the problems the camp posed.

"We came to this point because Occupy Oakland, I think, began to take a different path than the original movement," Quan said. "The encampment became a place where we had repeated violence and last week a murder. We had to bring the camp to an end before more people got hurt."

Demands increased for Oakland protesters to pack up after a man was shot and killed Thursday near the encampment at the City Hall plaza.

Protesters claimed there was no connection between the shooting and the camp. But police identified the slain man as Kayode Ola Foster, 25, of Oakland, saying his family confirmed he had been staying at the plaza.

Witnesses also told police that one of two suspects in the shooting had also been a frequent resident at the plaza. The names of the suspects have not been released.

Monday's raid came as no surprise to protesters after the city issued its fourth order to abandon the camp. About 300 officers from the Oakland Police Department and seven other law enforcement agencies moved in around 5:30 a.m., arresting 33 people and tearing down about 150 tents.

Another man was arrested later in the morning for trying to break through police barricades and spitting on officers.

Protesters vowed to regroup and return.

"I don't see how they're going to disperse us," said Ohad Meyer, 30, of Oakland. "There are thousands of people who are going to come back."

Officials declared the operation a success, saying all arrests were peaceful and there were no reported injuries to protesters or officers. Police said those taken into custody likely will face charges of unlawful assembly and lodging.

"This had been a very difficult situation," Quan said. "I'd tried to do what was right for the city and keep the most people safe at every step."

Not everyone in Quan's camp agreed with the show of force.

Dan Siegel, one of the mayor's top legal advisers, resigned over Monday's raid, saying officials should have done more to work with protesters before sending in police. Siegel, a longtime friend of Quan who worked as an unpaid adviser, has been a vocal critic of Oakland police and their handling of the Oct. 25 raid.

Video footage of a protest after the Oct. 25 raid showed officers using flash-bang grenades and firing beanbag rounds into the crowd, injuring a number of people and prompting cries of police brutality.

Marine Corps veteran Scott Olsen was left in critical condition after suffering a head injury during that protest. His case became a rallying cry for the Occupy Wall Street movement around the nation.

Olsen, 24, issued his first statement Sunday since leaving a hospital.

"You'll be hearing more from me in the near future and soon enough we'll see you in our streets!" he posted on his Google+ account with a photograph of himself with a neck brace and apparent bruising around his left eye.

Protesters in Portland had been ordered to leave their encampment by midnight Saturday. However, in the hours leading to the deadline, thousands of protesters flooded two blocks of parkland where an Occupy encampment first appeared Oct. 6.

Riot police moved into the Portland camp shortly after noon Sunday, using a loudspeaker to warn that anyone who resisted risked arrest and "may also be subject to chemical agents and impact weapons." Demonstrators chanted "we are a peaceful protest."

Officers used batons to shove a cluster of protesters out of the camp and dragged out those who resisted, including some who were holed up in a makeshift fort made of plywood, pallets, shopping carts and other debris.

A total of 51 protesters were arrested during the Sunday afternoon action.

One man was taken away on a stretcher. He was alert and talking to paramedics and raised a peace sign to fellow protesters, who responded with cheers.

Portland Mayor Sam Adams defended his order to clear the parkland, saying it is his job to enforce the law and keep the peace. Police finished cleaning up the area Monday, and officials reported no major disturbances.

In Vermont, protesters agreed to remove their tents from a Burlington park Sunday in a resolution Police Chief Michael Schirling described as "amicable."

Police and city officials initially agreed to let the protesters stay in the park after a 24-hour protest began but changed their minds after Joshua Pfenning shot himself. Authorities said the tents had to be removed because police could not see what was going on inside.

Officials in Oakland, Burlington and other cities said protesters would be allowed to gather again at the site of their former camps as long as they didn't spend the night.

Oakland Police Chief Howard Jordan said a strong police presence would remain at the plaza around the clock to make sure protesters didn't roll out tents and sleeping bags again.

The city said Monday that it's spent an estimated $2.4 million on efforts to contain the protest movement in the last month.

Late Monday afternoon, a few hundred people regrouped at the city's main library and marched to the cleared and cleaned plaza. The police chief said they would be allowed to assemble as long as they remained peaceful and did not try to re-establish the encampment.

Shon Kae, who's on the Occupy Oakland media committee, said it was still unclear what demonstrators' next move would be.

"There is no secret plan," Kae said. "We all have to just keep on with the struggle."

___

Associated Press writers Terrence Petty and Jonathan J. Cooper in Portland, Ore., contributed to this report.

Take a look at images and video from this morning's raid and the Occupy Oakland camp below:


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OAKLAND, Calif. — Police clad in riot gear and armed with tear gas cleared out Oakland's anti-Wall Street encampment early Monday, the latest law enforcement crackdown amid complaints around the...
OAKLAND, Calif. — Police clad in riot gear and armed with tear gas cleared out Oakland's anti-Wall Street encampment early Monday, the latest law enforcement crackdown amid complaints around the...
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12:32 PM on 11/22/2011
In the United States, the Bill of Rights is the term for the first ten amendments to the United States Constituti­on. These amendments explicitly limit the Federal government­'s powers, protecting the rights of the people by preventing Congress from abridging freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of assembly, freedom of religious worship, and the right to bear arms, preventing unreasonab­le search and seizure, cruel and unusual punishment­, and self-incri­mination, and guaranteei­ng due process of law and a speedy public trial with an impartial jury. In addition, the Bill of Rights states that "the enumeratio­n in the Constituti­on, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people," and reserves all powers not specifical­ly granted to the Federal government to the citizenry or States. These amendments came into effect on December 15, 1791, when ratified by three-four­ths of the States.

ANY QUESTIONS ? - Your welcome.
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11:59 AM on 11/18/2011
http://statspotting.com/2011/11/ows-statistics-85-percent-of-occupy-wall-street-protesters-have-jobs/
“The vast majority of demonstrators are actually employed, and the proportion of protesters unemployed (15%) is within single digits of the national unemployment rate (9.1%).

Professor Hector R. Cordero-Guzman and business analyst Harrison Schultz from the Baruch College School of Public Affair puts the unemployment rate of the Occupy protesters at 13.1%. In other words, approximately 85% employment rate.”

Statistics Source: Ritholtz
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11:51 PM on 11/15/2011
The NYPD and the Wall St fatcats with their 99% Republican supporters are sympathetic kind souls.
They were worried the protesters will be endangered with poor tent living conditions not to mentioned
the winter cold. That is why OWS protesters should leave the park and also leave the fatcats to get back to biz.

Simple win-win solution... All protesters should drive their trucks and cars and parked them on all major roads around the premises. Make your protests and sleep in the vehicles . 30,000 vehicles happened to breakdown stimultaneously is possible because poor folks don't mantain the cars well and the cold weather freeze-up they engines. Hope the cops will assist and tow them to a safe location. Its difficult, but NYPD is a efficient body. Dirty game can be played by
the 99% too. We are poor but not stupid.
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rini1946
11:50 PM on 11/15/2011
Well to say it one more time and maybe you people will listen. If you want go get wall steet to change do not buy thier products. Are you tired of seeing people out of work than quit buying imports!!!!! You tired of the middle class getting the screws by the goverment go vote!!!!! And when you vote do not listen to oprah, dr phil. etc. Listen to the politican and look at thier record. DO not go in the polling booth voting a strait ticket. and if you do not know the people on the ballot skip that part Remember no one knows how you voted no one will saythat you voted for john smith they do not know is you voted nothing else.
07:35 PM on 11/15/2011
So inspired by the peaceful, meditation protestors who were arrested. I wrote about it on my blog at http://www.revolutionofconsciousness.com/. I would love hear your feeback on it.
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SimianNation
Progressive NOT Regressive
08:43 AM on 11/15/2011
The face of the New America!
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European1919
I am the PigmⒶn
01:38 AM on 11/15/2011
Aaah ... the nation that is the self-proclaimed inventor, bringer and defender of freedom and democracy.
What is good for the Arab spring is no good for the American autumn.
The USA are quickly catapulting themselves down the ranks to below banana republic status. Soon no one will take them and their posturing seriously anymore. They will be laughed out of any international meeting.
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07:02 AM on 11/15/2011
2x
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
NY Guy
President Romney - get used to it.
07:55 AM on 11/15/2011
Obama has done that already.
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SimianNation
Progressive NOT Regressive
08:49 AM on 11/15/2011
Typical Boston fan!
01:31 AM on 11/15/2011
Hmm... No mention that Oakland's Deputy Mayor Sharon Cornu also resigned.
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MamacitaOfLove
Micro-bio curious
01:19 AM on 11/15/2011
NYC getting raided right now. LRAD on a pick up truck.
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01:06 AM on 11/15/2011
mayors of cities don't control the city.

mayors come and go.

it's the paramilitary police that REALLY run the cities.

you can change the head of the police but the corrupt police culture inbedded in the system is the real power.

police in america have too many weapons
police in america have too many powers
police in america have too many rights
police in america have too much.

police = serve and protect 1%....not the 99%


they always use the false argument that if they are no police there would be alot of violence.

truth is the police are usually the ones COMMITING the crimes, violence, brutality.
04:05 PM on 11/15/2011
We DO live in a police state. We hold more people in our prisons than any other country. The "justice system" is a money maker comparable to any large corp. There are too many involved in the system that stand to lose if it were to be changed, police, lawyers, probation, judges, prisons, bail bondsmen, etc., etc. Keep rounding them up and processing them. The system needs the "criminals" (their view of the occupiers) that help feed the system. The bottom line is money and it must keep coming. Violent crimes are a small percentage of convictable crimes, the rest are the necessary fodder to feed the machine and the occupiers fit nicely into that group.
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rini1946
11:41 PM on 11/15/2011
I am not a policeman. But I am glad they are there. Do you know what the speed on the road would be if people knew they would not get a ticket. DO you know how many more crimes there would be with out them so get you head out of you butt and be glad they are there. But lets me say this as like in every profesion, group of people etc 5 % of them are there seeing if they can make the rest of them look bad. Heck look at football coache in penn state
12:41 AM on 11/15/2011
I wish President Obama would speak out more forcefully in favor of the Occupy Movement.
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01:08 AM on 11/15/2011
obama = in the pocket of 1%

wake up.
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SimianNation
Progressive NOT Regressive
08:50 AM on 11/15/2011
Spoken like a true sheople!
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Brant Kelsey
01:10 AM on 11/15/2011
Sadly Obama would be speaking against interests he seems hesitant to challenge: The very constituency of Wall Street has reaped in profits over the last three years never realized before in the History of the Planet: Now nearly three years into the Presidency no one has been brought to account by his administration: No indictments. No prison sentences of course. And it appears to be business as Usual. In the last year alone, lobbyist have spent 5.9 Billion dollars plying their trade in the Congress: There is simply no other explanation I can come up with: This could not be sustained without complicity of the Obama Administration, thus Obama..............
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10:58 PM on 11/14/2011
dan siegel on keith olbermann said what i suspected.

mayer quan was strong armed by the very vocal paramilitary police and businesses in oakland to stop the occupation.
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MamacitaOfLove
Micro-bio curious
12:24 AM on 11/15/2011
I'll be watching the repeat in the morning.

She shouldn't have listened; they'll cast her aside as soon as they're finished with her anyway.
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Brant Kelsey
01:01 AM on 11/15/2011
In other words she has been in a Quan-dry.........
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SimianNation
Progressive NOT Regressive
08:51 AM on 11/15/2011
He did not....

Hahhaha,,,best laugh of the morning award!
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10:31 PM on 11/14/2011
it's funny how the tools for 1% always want unlimited 2nd amendment rights but want limits on all other bill of rights, except when it's their turn to speak.
10:12 PM on 11/14/2011
Occupy is not a movement. Movements have a direction.
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10:28 PM on 11/14/2011
occupy is a revolution.
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wassilij
shamanlight
12:31 AM on 11/16/2011
occupy is an evolution.
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Brant Kelsey
11:23 PM on 11/14/2011
The Occupy movement is continuing to move forward: It may not be moving withing the context of your ability to apprehend it. But that would be your deficiency. Not that of the movements.
11:53 PM on 11/14/2011
Where is the Occupy movement going? They don't know. The Occupy crowd has failed to put out any goals or convey any effective message. That is there deficiency not mine. How long do you really believe a movement without any goals or leaders can really last?
09:39 PM on 11/14/2011
A man was murdered 200 feet from City Hall, and the mayor blames a group of protestors. That's rich.

Who alienated and disenfranchised those people? Who controls the police? Who turned off the lights in the plaza? Not Occupy Oakland.