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Mark Yudof 'Appalled' By Pepper Spray Incident, Vows Probe

Uc Davis

GARANCE BURKE   11/21/11 10:02 PM ET   AP

SAN FRANCISCO — Viral videos of riot police repeatedly pepper spraying a row of seated, non-violent Occupy Wall Street protesters at a California university have sparked outrage, an investigation and calls for the college chancellor's resignation.

The footage also set off a debate about how far law enforcement can and should go to disperse peaceful demonstrators.

Many students, lawmakers and even the university's chancellor have called the officers' actions a horrific example of unnecessary force. But some experts on police tactics say, depending on the circumstances, pepper spray can be more effective to de-escalate a tense situation than dragging off protesters or swinging at them with truncheons.

"Between verbalized commands and knock-down, drag-out fights, there's quite a bit of wiggle room," said David Klinger, a former Los Angeles Police Department officer and instructor at the University of Missouri-St. Louis who reviewed the pepper spray footage.

Soon after the incident on Friday at the University of California, Davis, video recordings spread across the Internet.

The footage of an officer casually spraying an orange cloud at protesters' heads while spectators screamed in horror joined other much-discussed pepper-spray incidents, such as the 84-year-old activist hit in the face in Seattle and a Portland, Ore., woman who recently was sprayed in the mouth.

Images of the officer seen dousing the students became the subject of a blog, which featured him spraying famous figures, from Gandhi to John F. Kennedy.

The university announced Monday that it has placed the police chief and two officers on administrative leave to restore trust and calm.

Still, nearly 2,000 students and residents gathered at the main quad to hear speeches and chant slogans against police and university officials. Students who were pepper-sprayed opened the rally, saying they felt unsafe on campus with the chancellor in power.

"We were just kids sitting down in a circle singing," said student David Buscho, 22, of San Rafael, Calif. "It felt like hot glass ... I was paralyzed with fear."

Pepper spray is an inflammatory agent that derives its active ingredient from chili peppers. When the spray is deployed, it causes nearly instant inflammation, resulting in dilation of the capillaries in the eyes, paralysis of the larynx and a burning sensation on the skin.

Buscho said students were yelling at police Friday that they were peacefully protesting. One of the helmeted officers began pointing a spray can at close range on the seated group, he said.

"I had my arms around my girlfriend. I just kissed her on the forehead and then he sprayed us," he said. "Immediately, we were blinded ... He just sprayed us again and again and we were completely powerless to do anything."

The protest was held in support of the Occupy Wall Street movement and in solidarity with protesters at the University of California, Berkeley who were struck by police with batons on Nov. 9.

The UC Davis footage shows two officers spraying students with the chemical agent as the crowd cries out, then a slight delay before police start hauling off some of those seated while other protesters cough violently and try to crawl away.

The spray the officers used ranked about halfway between the highest and lowest concentrations of the commercially available substance.

Nine UC Davis students hit by pepper spray were treated, two were taken to hospitals and later released, university officials said. Ten people were arrested.

Since the video began circulating Friday night, UC Davis Chancellor Linda Katehi said she has been inundated with calls from alumni, students and faculty to speed up an investigation. Students and faculty have called for her resignation.

"I'm here to apologize," she told the crowd. "I really feel horrible for what happened on Friday."

The spraying has reverberated far beyond the university, spawning a debate about the officers' use of force.

Decisions on using pepper spray range by department and depends largely on the community and the police chief, Klinger said.

Klinger said the officers could have turned to other methods, such as a so-called pain compliance hold, but that would bring its own set of complications. A protester could receive a broken arm, he said, or an officer could pull a muscle.

Charles J. Key, a former lieutenant with the Baltimore Police Department who wrote the department's use-of-force manual, said that officers were clearly within their rights to use it.

After reviewing the footage, Key said he observed at least two cases of protesters actively resisting police. In one, a woman pulls her arm back from an officer. In the second, a protester curls into a ball. Each of those actions could have warranted more force, including baton strikes and pressure-point techniques, he said.

"What I'm looking at is fairly standard police procedure," Key said.

The federal courts have ruled on such cases. At the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers courts in nine western states, the cases have centered on whether or not the protesters were involved in what is called "active resistance."

The court used the term in considering a case about another highly circulated video of a group of passive demonstrators being swabbed with pepper spray in 1997. The protesters had linked arms on the floor of a California congressman's office to protest the logging of old-growth redwood trees on California's North Coast.

Because demonstrators were using a metal sleeve to prevent the county sheriff's office from separating them, attorneys argued the protestors' "active resistance" left officers no other way to disperse them than dabbing their eyelids with Q-tips soaked in pepper spray, said Jim Wheaton, an attorney who assisted in the prosecution of the civil case.

The 9th Circuit ruled that the protesters weren't in "active resistance," and because they were sitting peacefully, the use of pepper spray was excessive.

"Pepper spray is designed to protect people from a violent attack, to stop somebody from doing something," said Wheaton, senior counsel for the Oakland-based First Amendment Project.

UC Davis police used "it as a torture device to force someone to do something, and that's exactly what the 9th Circuit said was unreasonable and excessive."

___

Associated Press writer Nigel Duara in Portland, Ore., as well as Judy Lin and video journalist Haven Daley in Davis, Calif., contributed to this report.

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dbrett480
12:29 AM on 11/30/2011
Most of these use of force policies have been written to take the emphasis away from actual physical force. For some reason, many departments have been scared of officers going "hands-on" with subjects.
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iLdoRight
Encouraging The Rightest Rightness
08:15 PM on 11/23/2011
Caption suggestion; " Don't You Just Love My Protecting You From Harm ? "
05:19 PM on 11/22/2011
The retired Baltimore Lieutenant states that "it's fairly routine". If someone is being assulted by the police and they pull back their arm, or even, thru instinct, curl into a fetal position, that is justification to further, extra, force. What has happened to this Country? Where are the religious figures? Where are the leaders of our government? Where is our President?
01:50 PM on 11/22/2011
This is much worse than the response from then Govenor Reagan's police in Sacramento in 1968 when Davis students marched against the war in Vietnam. The worst thing I saw happen that day; an observor in the IBM Building held up his middle finger at the protestors.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JoeAnomie
10:55 AM on 11/22/2011
This is one of the more disturbing acts Ive seen in quite a while. Using pepper spray as a means of compliance is not why the spray was designed. It was made to meet resistance against combative protestors. They were sitting there being American and did not deserve to be attacked with that kind of disrespect . What a joke. UC Davis Chancellor Linda Katehi tripped over herself, her apology is hollow and useless. Get her and the police who made the call out of there.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Tom Joad
"While there is a lower class, I am in it "
08:56 AM on 11/22/2011
...someone needs to very quickly file a Freedom of Information Act request for all e-mail and phone records between Chancellor and Stomping Mare Linda Katehi and Chief of Gestapo Spicuzza during the last few weeks. We have a right to see the conversations the two were having with respect to their strategy on this incident...UC President Mark Yudof is a legal expert and scholar on freedom of expression - how appropriate. I hope he brings his considerable knowledge to bear on this flagrant abuse by the UCD administration...
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calmly2
Words matter.
09:54 AM on 11/22/2011
AGREED!

I'd like to see a FOIA request for correspondence between UC Berkeley's Chancellor and Ms. Katehi, too.
05:21 PM on 11/22/2011
I'd like to know that too. I would also like more information on the shadowy conference call made between city mayors just before all the crackdowns. If they were all in collusion, perhaps a RICO indictment could be made against ALL of them for violence against their own citizens.
pcs5141
cut the crap
12:07 AM on 11/22/2011
The protesters were told to move and decided to resist so I have no sympathy for them.The cop was using a non-violent way as trained to facilitate the dispersal of the protesters.Don't stick your hand in the gators mouth and then complain when you get bit.
01:32 AM on 11/22/2011
He had other options but chose to escalate. Pike isn't a wild animal. He is able to exercise self control. He chose not to do his job.
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03:34 AM on 11/22/2011
What's bothering is that the police officer seemed to enjoy what he was doing-strutting around, showing off for the crowd. His attitude was unquieting.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
JoeAnomie
10:57 AM on 11/22/2011
I noticed that too. Its as if he was getting back at them.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joe Krumbach
We are the children of an alien experiment
10:57 PM on 11/21/2011
Jack booted thugs.........She needs to go, the head of the UC Davis rent a cop, I mean police department needs to go, the rent a cop that did all this spraying, he needs to go.

Jack booted thugs.

I wonder how this would play if these kids were Tea Party Protesters?
11:48 PM on 11/21/2011
He needs to go to jail, where he will need copious amounts of a different kind of spray.

I am amazed no one bashed his head or pulled out a gun and pumped him full of bullets. We need some gangsters to start attending college.
sean62965
Do you really need my "micro-bio"?
04:33 PM on 11/22/2011
That may soon be the case if the GOP has their way. They WANT students to be armed. I doubt that would have been good in this case.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
army193
10:21 PM on 11/21/2011
What would happen to a student that called for assault on the staff of the college?
01:33 AM on 11/22/2011
Has anyone done this?
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calmly2
Words matter.
09:55 AM on 11/22/2011
You mean, tried to press charges?
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sarah 2003
Eat green -Bite a pundit
08:44 PM on 11/21/2011
The question is why were riot police there in the first place? Who called them. These were students protesting at their own university.
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08:38 PM on 11/21/2011
that cop feared for his life!

similar to arachnophobia..
08:03 PM on 11/21/2011
What are these 1st Amendment rights you speak of?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Robert Turner
News? I hurt the news.
07:43 PM on 11/21/2011
Man, things have gotten out of control in Syria. Oh, wait...
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SkyhawkIIAimer
"How many more like him are out there?"
07:42 PM on 11/21/2011
Chemical weapons, electrotorture weapons....

Tell me again how our police are operating in a free country full of liberty?
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SkyhawkIIAimer
"How many more like him are out there?"
07:35 PM on 11/21/2011
When "techniques" much milder than this were used on anti-choicers in Los Angeles, they screamed bloody murder about police brutality.