NYC

  • Bloomberg: Protestors = terrorists?

    Fuck the election. How do we impeach him?

    From the NY Times:

    “It is true that a handful of people have tried to destroy our city by going up and yelling at visitors here because they don’t agree with their views,” Mr. Bloomberg said. “Think about what that says. This is America, New York, cradle of liberty, the city for free speech if there ever was one and some people think that we shouldn’t allow people to express themselves. That’s exactly what the terrorists did, if you think about it, on 9/11. Now this is not the same kind of terrorism but there’s no question that these anarchists are afraid to let people speak out.”

    The city was fined for contempt of court for violating habeas corpus. Here is a picture inside the pier for holding protestors, from Indy Media.

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    More from the NY Times:

    A state judge in Manhattan yesterday angrily ordered the city to release more than 550 protesters who had been detained without seeing a judge – some for as long as 60 hours – after they were arrested at demonstrations against the Republican National Convention. When not all the protesters had been released by 6 p.m., he held the city in contempt and ordered a fine of $1,000 for each person still held, without setting a time frame.

    The judge, John Cataldo of State Supreme Court in Manhattan, demanded during a noon hearing that the city immediately process the demonstrators. Throughout the afternoon, knots of exhausted but relieved-looking protesters with disheveled clothing and grime-covered hands and arms emerged onto Centre Street from the Criminal Courts Building.

    Many raised their hands in triumph and were greeted with boisterous cheers, whistles and sometimes even flowers from hundreds of onlookers who had gathered. Others looked on nervously, waiting to hear news of relatives and friends.

    Yesterday’s abrupt release of the detainees and the threat of tens of thousands of dollars in fines capped a dramatic episode surrounding the convention, as more than 1,000 protesters who were swept off the streets Tuesday night were sent in handcuffs into the city’s criminal justice system.

    The city said it had cleared court dockets and opened additional courtrooms to handle the expected flood of protesters, but on Wednesday only a trickle of those arrested the night before appeared in court.

    Judge Cataldo held another hearing at 7 p.m. to check on the city’s progress and was not satisfied. “We’re coming back again until this is settled,” he said. “Once again, the order is, release these people.”

    Defense lawyers and protesters said something was amiss in the Police Department’s detention process. City officials had maintained that those arrested were not being held for longer than 24 hours – the legal limit – without seeing a judge and that they were being given access to lawyers.

    The defense lawyers and protesters claimed the police were using long detentions as a tactic to keep the streets clear until the convention was over.

    Yesterday, during the noon hearing in Judge Cataldo’s courtroom, the city conceded that some protesters were held too long. “We couldn’t get everyone processed as quickly as we liked,” Mr. Cardozo said.

    He said the police had been overwhelmed by the number of arrests within a four-hour period on Tuesday, when about 1,200 people were taken into custody at different locations in Manhattan for offenses that ranged from disorderly conduct to resisting arrest to various degrees of assault. “We’re doing our best” to move people through the system, he said.

    Judge Cataldo replied, “I’m ordering that.”

    At one point, clearly exasperated, the judge told Mr. Cardozo, “These people have already been the victims of a process. I can no longer accept your statement that you are trying to comply.”

    Judge Cataldo referred to a list produced by the court at 8 a.m. indicating that 120 people had been in police custody for more than 38 hours, and that 440 others had been in jail for a day and a half without having had an arraignment – the hearing at which charges are brought and bail is set. The State Court of Appeals ruled in 1991 that anyone arrested in New York who is not arraigned within 24 hours is eligible for immediate release.

    The city and police officials said they could not pinpoint the cause of the delays. “I’m presuming it’s volume,” said Paul J. Browne, the chief spokesman for Police Commissioner Raymond W. Kelly. “What I’m assuming is that the volume caused some delay. I’m not prepared to say where in the process the delays were.”

    He denied that the long holding time was a deliberate tactic to keep protesters behind bars until the convention ends.

    During the hearing, Norman Siegel, a veteran civil rights lawyer, told the court that one client, a 17-year-old Trinity School student, had been in jail for 42 hours. “There is no reason, I submit, that this process had to take this long,” Mr. Siegel said. The charge against the student was not known.

    Mr. Siegel, along with lawyers from the Legal Aid Society and the National Lawyers Guild, filed writs of habeas corpus and began arguing in court on Wednesday that some protesters must be released. They said the vast majority of protesters were being held not for felonies but for misdemeanors like disorderly conduct that should have been processed in a few hours.

    Mr. Siegel complained to Judge Cataldo that the protesters were being treated worse than criminals. “The only people being disadvantaged here are the protesters,” he said. “We’re arraigning robbers who have only been in 10 hours.”

    One lawyer, Elizabeth Fink, contended in court that some protesters in custody were wrongfully arrested in the first place. Accounts from people who said they were going about their business on the streets when they got caught in mass arrests seemed to back up her claim.

    The center [the pier pictured above] has been a focus of steady complaints; many detainees said they were covered in oily grime from the floors. Without conceding conditions were poor, city officials said yesterday that the holding area was carpeted on Wednesday.

    Ms. Ingber said the officers told them the process would not take long. In her account, as they sat outside the detention center in the bus, several of the men complained that their handcuffs were too tight; one was yelling that he could not feel his hands, which another man said looked blue. Two officers came aboard. “What do you want me to do?” said one, “I’m not a doctor.” The other one said, “You were the ones who had to riot. This is what you get.”

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  • New August 29 Photos

    Todd Gibson, of From the Floor fame, sent me some of his photos from the August 29 anti-GOP march. Here is a nice one, showing Scooter Goons (undercover cops). They are now using paramedic vehicles for NYPD business, including transporting support people.

    I put up a gallery, including a sub-gallery for the great signs he spotted.

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  • Guantanamo on the Hudson

    The New York Press isn’t exactly a left-wing paper, but here is what they have to say about the barbed wire holding pens on the pier on the Hudson:

    By the time we hit the streets with this issue, we’re sure it will be common knowledge, but it wasn’t until late last week that the NYPD announced their plans to turn Pier 57, at 11th Ave. and 15th St., into a giant holding pen. It was originally intended, of course, for the thousands of protestors they’re intent on rounding up during the convention.

    The message sent by all the security preparations prior to the convention was clear, but never so perfectly encapsulated as this makes it. What the NYPD and the GOP are saying to protestors of every stripe (and New Yorkers in general) is this: “If you don’t agree with us, we look at you as enemy combatants, security threats and would-be terrorists. And we’re going to treat you like the diseased cattle you are.”

    The most disturbing bit of information concerning the West Side holding pen, however, was buried in the Post’s account. Just a brief mention:

    “Cops fear some protesters might hang around after the convention to disrupt other events, like the U.S. Open, so the pen will remain open indefinitely.”

    The U.S. Open? Other events? Like what, the 3rd Ave. Street Fair? The grand opening celebration at a new Payless Shoe Source in Queens?

    In other words, a year-round internment camp is now part of the ongoing West Side development project. Does the Olympic Committee know about this?

    UPDATED: NYC Indymedia has photos of the internment pier. More to follow.

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  • Young GOPer kicking an activist on the floor

    Tom Tomorrow provides us with a link to a non-mac friendly video from local ABC affiliate of a young GOPer kicking an AIDS activist during ACT UP’s action inside MSG.

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  • Antidote for the “they’re all white trust fund kids” meme

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    AIDS activists protest in New York’s Grand Central Station Thursday, Sept. 2, 2004, on the final day of the Republican National Convention. About 100 well-organized protesters gathered on a pre-arranged signal for a short, noisy demonstration during the morning rush hour, calling on the president to do more in the fight against AIDS. (AP Photo/Stuart Ramson)

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  • Not Godwin’s Law

    Wietold Riedel is well aware of the history of the part of the world where he was born. Read tonight’s post.

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  • Phrase of the day

    Scooter Goons.

    Also, can someone explain why I still have helicopters flying low over my apartment building at 23rd and 8th at 12:10am?

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  • Antidote for the “they attacked a policeman on a scooter” people

    The NY Daily News, not exactly a left-wing paper — they talk about Bush’s hard-knuckled approach after 9/11 rather than mention his hiding out all day — has this today:

    Demonstrators also complained about the use of plainclothes cops on scooters during a Monday protest on Eighth Ave. Video shot by legal observers shows several scooters driving directly into the crowd and running into people.

    A detective on one of the scooters was pulled off and badly beaten.

    Last night, cops on bicycles plowed into demonstrators at W. 28th St. and Broadway, and at Herald Square, hitting people as they went. A News reporter was jabbed in the ribs with a handlebar at Herald Square. The officers then used the bikes as barricades.

    Mayor Bloomberg defended the aggressive tactics yesterday.

    “This isn’t something like it’s supposed to be a fair fight. We have laws,” he fumed. “You break the law [and] you’re going to find yourself arrested. Period. End of story.”

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  • A beautiful protest from Fernando Suarez del Solar

    I can’t find a better description of this, so I’m stretching fair use a bit to give you the whole blog post from Salon. You can click on a day pass to see it on their site.

    Fernando Suarez del Solar wasn’t very political before his son, a 20-year-old marine named Jesus, was killed in Iraq last year. Since then, though, the 48-year-old has left his job to spend all his time agitating against the war, and last night, he took his message to Madison Square Garden.

    A friend lent him a media pass, and at around 9 p.m., as Arnold Schwarzenegger began speaking, he unfurled a three-foot-wide sign with his son’s picture and the words “Bush lied, my son died.”

    A group of delegates immediately called security, which ushered him into Madison Square Garden’s lobby. There, he says, he gave a few interviews while some passing Republicans jeered, saying, “Get out of here. You’re unpatriotic.” More security showed up, including members of the FBI and the Secret Service. “I say to them, ‘I pay with my son’s life for my freedom of speech, but you can arrest me, it’s OK.’ The police said, ‘no sir.’”

    “The surprise for me,” says del Solar, “is some people, Republican people, say to me, ‘I’m sorry for your loss, you are right.’ About seven, eight persons say, ‘I am Republican, but you are correct, this war is not necessary.’”

    Here is another article about the same protest. When people filed out after watching Schwartzenegger’s speech, he was still in the lobby with his sign.

    As delegates, fresh from Schwartzenegger’s pro-Bush speech, marched into the comparatively fresh air, they were greeted by Fernando Suarez del Solar, who silently held a pink sign showing a young man’s face and the reading, “Bush Lied, My Son Died,” Suarez’s son Jesus was killed in battle on March 27, 2003, at the age of 20. His was one of the first fighting deaths of the war. Fernando Suarez, who traveled from San Diego to protest the war in Iraq, encountered few problems while making his statement. “Most people don’t say nothing. Some people say, ‘I’m sorry.’ Only one person has said ‘Get Out of Here.’ People give me respect.” Suarez and his pink-clad protest partner Nancy Mancias eventually attracted the attention of security, who circled the two and began questioning them on the specifics of their press credentials. At that moment, a member of a Spanish language television network claimed the two as part of their network and escorted them upstairs to be interviewed. After the interview, security escorted Suarez and Mancias out of Madison Square Garden.

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  • ACT UP interrupts Andrew Card speech at convention

    I bet the security people are embarrassed…

    AP story with video.

    Watch ACT UP’s site for further updates. It should appear at the bottom soon.

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