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Occupy Wall Street: Protesters To Demonstrate Outside Courthouses

Occupy The Courts

By MEGHAN BARR   01/20/12 04:30 PM ET   AP

NEW YORK -- Facing freezing temperatures and snowy weather, several hundred protesters gathered at courthouses across the nation Friday and some clashed with police as they protested a landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision that removed most limits on corporate and labor spending in federal elections.

In Washington, D.C., 11 people who got into confrontations with police were arrested on the courthouse steps and on the plaza, while another person was arrested inside the courthouse for unlawful entry. A crowd of about 100 protesters gathered on the sidewalk outside the court's 1,300-pound bronze doors, which were shut on account of the protest, chanting: "Whose steps? Our steps."

Earlier, demonstrators wearing black robes and pretending to be Supreme Court justices sang songs mocking the Citizens United ruling on the Capitol lawn.

Occupy Wall Street activists joined forces with Move to Amend, a grassroots coalition that organized the event in more than 100 cities, though the turnout in many places was low. In some cities, fewer than a dozen protesters showed up. Protesters said they were kicking off petition drives in support of a constitutional amendment that would overturn a 2010 court ruling that allowed private groups to spend huge amounts on political campaigns with few restrictions.

In San Francisco, where a couple of hundred protesters gathered in the city's financial district, at least 11 protesters were arrested after chaining themselves to the front doors of Wells Fargo's corporate headquarters. Others linked arms to prevent people from entering a Bank of America branch.

Many protesters spilled into the streets as police in riot gear and private security guards tried chasing them off. Two cable cars came to a grinding halt as protesters took over an intersection, and traffic in some places had to be rerouted or came to a complete standstill.

In Boston, fife and drum music played as protesters rallied at the federal courthouse. Some protestors even dressed their dogs in pinstripes and red ties, saying that dogs should be able to vote if big businesses basically can.

A demonstration of about 100 people outside the federal courthouse in Minneapolis included chants and street theater. One skit included a judge who performed a marriage ceremony between a person and a corporation.

About 50 people braved blizzard-like conditions in Chicago, waving at passing cars and chanting, "Money out of politics."

In Cleveland, about 40 to 50 protesters in hats, hoods and gloves held a morning vigil outside the Metzenbaum Federal Courthouse, followed by a march through downtown streets. During the march, paper $50 "bills" were taped over the mouths of ralliers.

About two dozen protesters drew occasional honks from passing drivers as they stood outside Baltimore's federal courthouse with signs that read: "Corporations are not people, Money is not speech," and "B-heard: Corporate money out of politics."

In Albany, about 50 demonstrators carried placards and a cardboard coffin labeled "Democracy RIP." And several dozen protesters in Denver went inside the Capitol to meet lawmakers after the protest.

But in St. Louis, just four people showed up for a planned gathering outside of City Hall. They hung around for several minutes before leaving without a rally. Those who did attend blamed the frigid weather – blustery winds and temperature in the low 20s – and an apparent lack of communication.

It was a far cry from Occupy protests in the fall, when hundreds gathered around the clock at a small downtown park near Busch Stadium.

"Back in October it was easy to find out what was going on," said 51-year-old Don Higgins of St. Louis. "You just went down to Kiener Plaza and asked somebody."

The turnout was similarly small in Indianapolis, where protester Ken Chestek, a professor at Indiana University's McKinney School of Law in Indianapolis, lamented the fact that only 15 people showed up for a demonstration against Citizens United v. FEC.

"When I heard the Citizens decision announced on NPR two years ago, I started screaming, `This is the end of the republic,'" he said. "To give corporations political power, that's the end of democracy."

Activists in New York scrambled to move their protest after a judge ruled Thursday that demonstrators don't have a First Amendment right to protest in front of a federal courthouse.

Protesters had filed a lawsuit asking the judge to overturn the government's rejection of their permit application. The permit was denied on grounds that the courthouse poses unique security concerns.

In a statement late Thursday, Move to Amend said the rally would be moved to Foley Square, near the courthouse, and that activists would focus on organizing the protests rather than appealing the ruling.

__

Associated Press Writers Mark Sherman and Jesse H. Holland in Washington, D.C., Terry Collins in San Francisco, Alex Dominguez in Baltimore, Carrie Schedler in Indianapolis, Kristen Wyatt in Denver, Jim Salter in St. Louis and Michael Virtanen in Albany, N.Y., contributed to this report.

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NEW YORK -- Facing freezing temperatures and snowy weather, several hundred protesters gathered at courthouses across the nation Friday and some clashed with police as they protested a landmark U.S. S...
NEW YORK -- Facing freezing temperatures and snowy weather, several hundred protesters gathered at courthouses across the nation Friday and some clashed with police as they protested a landmark U.S. S...
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10:37 PM on 01/22/2012
I guess the Huffington post doesn't want to report this story. Way to go OWS
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2012/01/22/holy-vessel-disappears-from-church-housing-occupy-wall-street-protesters/?test=latestnews
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dbrett480
01:27 PM on 01/21/2012
At least the larger protests showed up at federal courthouses to protest. Some of the smaller ones were picketing in front of county and state courts.
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06:54 PM on 01/20/2012
UC Berkeley Professors Defend 'Occupy' Students From Police

When about 80 Occupy Cal students took over a UC Berkeley anthropology library Thursday night, some of their professors came along. The faculty told students they were both joining in the protests, and ensuring that they wouldn't be evicted by police.

"Members of the faculty and I have volunteered and have been authorized to provide the required supervision while we continue discussing a resolution...so we can avoid the immediate need to remove you from the building. I have been asked to emphasize that our continuing dialogue does not imply permission for you to stay," Anthropology department chairman Terry Deacon told the student protesters, after negotiating with the university's administration. He added, tongue-in-cheek, "I'm not going to suggest that you can't let your friends in. I didn't tell you you could...If you know someone that you trust that wants to come in here and play a role in this activity, of course, I won't notice that you're going down to open the doors."


this is why UC berkeley professors are awesome!!!! :-)
07:23 PM on 01/20/2012
Anthropology!!!
What a great major in a University. After you graduate the only job you are qualified for is to join the occupy crowd. Of course you have no brain to major in Computer Science, or any of the other Sciences or Engineering. Meanwhile your professor is being paid tons of money to teach you some useless things.
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09:02 PM on 01/20/2012
FACT: steve jobs majored in calligraphy in college.
12:02 AM on 01/21/2012
to twoangels,
I agree.
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dbrett480
01:26 PM on 01/21/2012
These are the same professors who make insane salaries and lead the protests against tuition increases. The only thing they are "awesome" at is convincing students that they are on their side.
08:58 AM on 01/29/2012
Most of the Professors at Berkeley make less than San Francisco and Oakland police officers.
05:27 PM on 01/20/2012
Pretty pathetic 'movement'
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05:07 PM on 01/20/2012
Sign the petition to Amend Citizens United:

http://movetoamend.org/
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ftkl1234
04:27 PM on 01/20/2012
It's heartening to see Occupy demonstrators clarifying their MO and focusing more clearly on sites of the targets of their reform efforts--the political, financial and now the justice system. Even with numbers dropping off, the Movement's made it's points even with bodies not in evidence. Folks at home are keeping themselves and the issues warm, we can be sure.

That doesn't mean the demonstrations have been for nothing and the issues will go way. That the rigged systems need reform is clear and will be at the top of 2012's issues, along with jobs and employment.
04:01 PM on 01/20/2012
Move to Amend, the grassroots coalition that organized the event, said protesters in more than 100 cities would launch petition drives to gain support for a constitutional amendment that would overturn a 2010 court ruling that allowed private groups to spend huge amounts on political campaigns with few restrictions. Occupy Wall Street activists have joined forces with the group."

Time to give Occupy protesters the respect and coverage they deserve.. it's freaking cold out there and they are not daunted by weather, sleeping conditions, brutality, truculent rhetoric, arrests, RW media disdain, political largesse, and callous dismissal of their commitment to democracy, shared sacrifice, shared prosperity, shared respectfulness.
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05:12 PM on 01/20/2012
Fav'd for your support. Although the Occupy Movement isn't getting the coverage it deserves from corporate-owned media, you can learn more:

http://interoccupy.org/
http://news.occupy.net/

Also, you can sign the petition to amend Citizens United:

http://movetoamend.org/

Real change takes courage, perseverance and ALL of us working together!
05:27 PM on 01/20/2012
Throngs of 6 or 7 protestors
07:28 PM on 01/20/2012
You have forgotten shared Responsibility and getting a jpb and work.
Remember what President Jack Kennedy said.
" Ask not what the Country can do for you but what you can do for the Country".
After your politicians screwed up the housing market along with the economy you are blaming the job and wealth creators. You are barking up the wrong tree.
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05:27 AM on 01/21/2012
You are making a lot of assumptions.
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noelie19
02:22 PM on 01/20/2012
A heartfelt 'Thank you!' to the Huffington Post for help keeping the dream alive!

-Seattle Occupier, we are the 99%!
07:29 PM on 01/20/2012
99% of the lazy ones. When was the last time if ever when you had a job.
11:52 PM on 01/20/2012
to two angels,
Why should they bother to look for jobs when they expect everything to be handed to them?
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noelie19
01:04 PM on 01/26/2012
As a matter of fact, just yesterday!
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DrHopeful
Retired teacher, honors program director, author.
02:00 PM on 01/20/2012
Though coverage of Occupy has dwindled in the media, it's good that HuffPo reminds us that the movement is flourishing throughout the country and in other parts of the world.
05:28 PM on 01/20/2012
It's dwindled because no one cares and their parents cut their allowances if they didn't go to school
06:59 PM on 01/20/2012
to Grabski,
I agree,I am bored with having to see articles about them. They should be looking for jobs.
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megandvc
Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right.
11:44 PM on 01/20/2012
my thoughts exactly. my favorite are the smelly homeless guys with OCCUPY stickers on their hats, asking for money. Wanna occupy something? How about a shower?
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11:56 AM on 01/20/2012
It's about time to start revolution against Lobbies and the financial establishment.
07:34 PM on 01/20/2012
Take your revolution to Mexico. They have there a never ending revolution and that is why they are coming here illegal because they can not find a job there.
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corte33
11:47 AM on 01/20/2012
Great piece of work on OCCUPY! It restores my faith in the American people. Let's carry this forward into November and extricate the vermin from Congress.
11:46 AM on 01/20/2012
corperations are just money hungery people who dont care about the america and its people
07:03 PM on 01/20/2012
sto joel mura,
Try imagining what would happen to our economy without corporations.
07:37 PM on 01/20/2012
Same thing what happened to the old Soviet Union. They imploded. Government can not create wealth or give jobs. They can take from the makers ( workers " and give it to the takers, those who don't want to work.
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Lightfoot Letters
11:45 AM on 01/20/2012
" petition drives to gain support for a constitutional amendment that would overturn Citizens United v. FEC, a 2010 court ruling that allowed private groups to spend huge amounts on political campaigns." - Huffington Post. It is not understandable that these groups do not object to the millions of dollars spent to stop the will of the average citizen by the Public Employee Uniion Democrat Party Complex. One can only believe they know nothing or just another partisan hack protest for the Democrat Party and Public Employee Unions. To not understand that a coporation is an artificial person with like rights, necessary to conduct everyday business is an example of 'know nothing' or just partisan whining for the 'authoritarian socialist.'
07:38 PM on 01/20/2012
You are 100% right
11:44 AM on 01/20/2012
Watch how "nothing" changes in the elections now unfolding. First we protest, mic check, then they are forced to address our issues. Did you notice what happened with SIPA yesterday?