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Observe Occupy: Watch the tactical evolution of their ‘revolution’

Author: Lt. Dan Marcou
The long-anticipated NATO Summit has arrived in Chicago. The Chicago Police Department has planned and trained extensively for anticipation of protests, to insure the NATO meeting can take place, protestors can make …

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Mayday, May Day! Preparing for Occupy 2.0

Doug Wyllie, PoliceOne Editor in Chief
Author: Doug Wyllie, PoliceOne Editor in Chief

In many parts of the world, May 1st is a day on which all manner of organized events and marches take place in recognition of “the plight of the working people.” Celebrated as an official holiday in more than 75 countries, International Workers’ Day — also known as May Day — has occasionally had peaceable demonstrations devolve into civil unrest and even full-scale riots.

If the organizers of the so-called Occupy movement have their way, that’s precisely what may happen in cities and towns across the United States tomorrow.

The Occupy movement has called for “A Day Without the 99%” on May 1st, with some organizers announcing that tomorrow will be the start of version 2.0. More worrisome is the fact that certain offshoot — anarchist — elements are vowing to use “new tactics” to “communicate” their message.

Mayhem on May Day? There are a few versions of the “official” call to action being distributed on the Internet and the Twittersphere, none of which officially condone violence. On Facebook, the official line by organizers is “No work. No school. No shopping. No banking. No trading. The people of the planet will take to the streets.”

To my knowledge, there has been no official call for violence, but there seems to be a lot of discussion about “new tactics” and a desire on the part of some to “make this one really big.” The 20-year anniversary of the Rodney King riots was widely covered on TV news over the weekend, and one has to wonder whether or not the anarchists and professional protesters saw those news reels as training films for tomorrow’s events.

You certainly don’t have to do too much digging in the comments area below that Facebook announcement to find people offering advice on everything from how to use a text alert system to quickly communicate messages to a large group to 7 rules for recording police.

“Occupy organizers promise that Tuesday will be bigger than anything we saw from the movement last fall” said an article posted on the website of Mother Jones magazine. Marissa Holmes, considered by many to be an influential Occupy organizer, said in that article “May Day will be the big kickoff of Phase 2 of Occupy. I think we will see a lot of people in the streets taking more militant actions than they had in the past.”

It remains to be seen whether or not that prediction will come to fruition, but there’s little doubt that protesters are making a variety of preparations. Some in the movement are boasting of taking “direct action” tomorrow to block bridges and tunnels.

Cities Setting the Tone? There are, according to this Occupy website, more than 125 cities and towns across America with planned May Day events, but many people are looking to two places — New York City, where the Occupy movement began on September 17th of last year, and the San Francisco Bay Area, where Occupy Oakland has frequently turned violent — as setting the tone to be followed elsewhere.

I’d add to that list Los Angeles and Seattle — the abovementioned 20-year milestone has primed the pump down there, and the 1999 WTO melee in Seattle proved just how bad things can get in the Emerald City.

In fact, the Seattle Mayor’s office issued a press release this weekend stating “evidence suggests” that people may head to that city tomorrow “with the intention of using the public demonstrations as an opportunity to commit violence, damage property and disrupt peaceful free speech activity. There has been a significant increase in graffiti and posters alluding to violence around the May 1 events. Websites have described trainings in how to conceal weapons beneath signs and banners, and how to target police officers on horses.”

Here in the Bay Area, a threat to shut down the Golden Gate Bridge has been withdrawn because organizers could not get the needed participation of the Golden Gate Bridge Labor Coalition.

Up until very recently, such a rush-hour nightmare appeared imminent, but the labor coalition sent out a press release mid-day Saturday saying they were backing out of the bridge closure.

With that plan foiled, one is left to wonder where those “Occupiers” will go. Back in December, Occupy protesters shut down the Port of Oakland — the fifth busiest container port in the United States — disrupting the supply chain of countless manufacturers well past the time when the last protester finally went home.

In New York, all but one of the announced events appears peaceful. A “fun and family-friendly” event in Bryant Park in the morning, a mid-day march of “1,000 guitar-playing musicians” in Bryant Park to Union Square followed by two events allegedly organized by “faith & community groups.” The one that concerns me, though, is the so-called “After party” scheduled to begin at 2000 hours local time. The details remain “to be announced” but the name itself is menacing: “The Haymarket Martyrs Memorial Resistance Rager.”

In case you don’t get that reference, let’s get a little history lesson from my friend and PoliceOne Columnist Lance Eldridge.

“The conscious choice of May 1st for the protest suggests the organizers are more interested in the political symbolism of anarchist, socialist, or communist workers' alleged unity than the responsible exercise of the protestors’ First Amendment rights,” Eldridge said to me in an email exchange we had over the weekend.

“In 1891,” Eldridge continued, “the Second Socialist International selected May 1st in honor of the violent Chicago Haymarket riots that left several protestors and seven policemen dead.

“Though the so-called Martyr’s Monument, a National Historic Landmark often referred to as the Workers’ Statue of Liberty, has remained unharmed, the statue commemorating the policemen killed has not fared so well. The City has moved the statue on several occasions to help ensure its safety. A bomb, planted by the Weather Underground, destroyed the statue in 1969. After the statue was rebuilt, the Weathermen again blew up the statue in 1970.”

Being the Good Guys As I have previously written, police presence at all these events fulfills two totally different mission objectives:

• LEOs are present at these events to ensure First Amendment rights to free speech and peaceable assembly • LEOs are duty bound to protect the community in the event that such an assembly turns to a violent riot

My good friend and PoliceOne colleague Dan Marcou has plenty of experience in crowd control tactics with his many years of service in La Crosse, Wisconsin (where riots were a fairly common occurrence for a while).

During a tremendous seminar session at ILEETA two weeks ago, Marcou spoke about how a chaotic scene such as a riot offers police officers the opportunity to come out looking absolutely fantastic.

I’m paraphrasing, but during that ILEETA session Marcou basically said that by being professional and precise in deploying sound police tactics, your YouTube moment will get 50 views, not 50,000.

“With this group it sounds like a great opportunity for the police to come out looking like the good guys with a trained, professional response,” Dan said to me when I asked him to comment on tomorrow’s events.

I also reached out to my friend Jack Hoban, who alongside Bruce Gourlie writes the Ethical Warrior series of PoliceOne columns.

Hoban said, in part, that police officers “have to meet disrespect with respect — not of the agendas — but of life, safety, and laws. It is irritating, but they must treat the screaming and profanity like they would treat a crying baby: overlook it and try to create calmness. This takes maturity, communication skills, patience — and physical self confidence.”

Hoban added that when the expression of these people’s opinions starts to supersede the livelihood of others, it must be stopped. If it escalates into life-threatening violence, it immediately has to be stopped.

“If the assembly turns violent, the time for talking is temporarily suspended. The violence has to be stopped immediately with the minimum amount of force necessary – which may be damn hard to calculate. But it is especially hard to calculate if the LEO loses his professional cool (protector mindset) and reacts emotionally and/or with excessive force. So they have to use their protector ethics and tactical skills with a clear and controlled mindset. That takes training,” Hoban said.

Marcou concluded, “Agencies and their partners — prosecutors and other government entities — need to be ready a variety of appropriate responses for actions these groups may take. The Constitution gives people a right to peacefully assemble and speak. There is no Constitutional right, however, to ‘militancy’ in all of its forms.”

Occupy groups remained relatively dormant though the winter months despite widespread proclamations made in the late fall announcing intentions to “stick it out” even through the most inclement conditions. Now that spring has sprung, however, we can be assured that these events will be back — and possibly back with a vengeance.

We can hope for the best, but we must prepare for the worst.

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The eviction of occupy London & Warhorse-Double Standards-03-10-2012


We take a close look at the new president of Russia, Vladimir Putin. As the Rupert Murdoch’s case gets murkier could there be a new murder investigation? And what a horse got to do with it? We also talk to George Barda from occupy London about the millions fighting inequality as capitalism faces its biggest crisis in history. These and much more are all reviewed in this edition of Double Standards with Afshin Rattansi. Watch this video on our Website: www.presstv.com Follow our Facebook on: www.facebook.com Follow our Twitter on: twitter.com

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Terrorism monitor closely watched Occupy protests

CSIS says surveillance was used ‘to assess the potential for politically motivated violence’

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Sean Parker and Al Gore discuss ‘Occupy Democracy’ and the ‘hacking’ of U.S. politics at South by Southwest

AUSTIN, Tex. — Most years at the technology portion of South by Southwest festival here, the buzz follows location-based apps, games or communication tools. This year, though, a political undercurrent has charged the event. Read full article >>

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Anonymous: Occupy the November election

Hacker group joins forces with Occupy movement to urge citizens to vote out lawmakers, but also declares war on the government.


Anonymous and Occupy are launching a new operation encouraging people to vote in the November elections.

(Credit:

Anonymous/Occupy Movement
)

Is one of the biggest digital rabble-rousers about to go legit?

Not quite, but Anonymous, the hacktivist collective that’s been on a months-long rampage breaking into corporate and government networks, says it will partner with the Occupy movement to urge people to vote in the November elections.

The activist group today announced a new joint effort to hold politicians accountable to the people.

“Last year, many of our elected officials let us down by giving in to deep-pocketed lobbyists and passing laws meant to boost corporate profits at the expense of individual liberty,” the groups said in an online flyer. “Our senators and representatives showed how little they cared about personal freedoms when they voted overwhelmingly to pass the National Defense Authorization Act (NDAA).”

The NDAA allows for the indefinite detention of terrorism suspects, even U.S. citizens, without trial and expands the use of U.S. military in this country. Civil libertarians allege that the law violates due process and other constitutional rights and gives the military authority to engage in civilian law enforcement.

And then there’s the proposed SOPA/PIPA (Stop Online Piracy Act/Protect IP Act) measures, which have been in limbo since Wikipedia, Google, and other sites staged blackouts and other actions to protest the legislation. Anonymous and other opponents argue such a measure would give authorities broad power to shut down Web sites for the mere accusation that they had pirated content on them.

Anonymous launched denial-of-service attacks on the Web sites of the Justice Department, the FBI, Universal Music, the Motion Picture Association of America, and others in an anti-SOPA protest after the arrest of the founder of the file-hosting site MegaUpload for alleged piracy.

“Even if the goal was to merely regulate pirated content, the ambiguous wording demonstrates that the authors and supporters of SOPA and PIPA have little-to-no understanding of the Internet’s architecture or the frightening implications of the legislation,” Anonymous writes.

The collective urges people to hold elected officials accountable for supporting NDAA, SOPA, and PIPA. (The activists have also been active in opposing the European antipiracy law called the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement (ACTA).

“We are calling on voters, activists and keyboard warriors under all banners to unite as a single force to unseat the elected representatives who threaten our essential freedoms and who were so quick to minimize our individual constitutional rights for a quick corporate profit,” the statement says, followed by a list of senators and representatives who are up for reelection this year.

In a seemingly contradictory message, an Anonymous video went up today calling for a “revolution,” saying that voting has been “useless” and declaring a war on the United States over the proposed Cyber Security Act of 2012, which critics say is too broad and could authorize wiretapping and curtail civil liberties.

“We are not calling upon the collective to deface or use a distributed denial-of-service attack on a United States government agency Web site or affiliate. We are not calling upon the people to occupy a city or protest in front of a local building. This has not brought on us any legislative change or alternate law. It has only brought us bloodshed and false criticism,” the video says. “For the last 12 years, voting was useless. Corporations and lobbyists are the true leaders of this country and are the ones with the power to control our lives. To rebuild our government, we must first destroy it.”

The Anonymous actions have grown increasingly political in nature, with operations organized in support of labor movements in Mexico, charity workers in Florida, and pro-democracy movements in Syria and other countries. The online activists heavily promoted the Occupy movement when it emerged last September as Occupy Wall Street and helped organize offshoots in other cities.

And the group has taken numerous actions in support of WikiLeaks and its founder Julian Assange, including targeting PayPal, MasterCard and other financial sites that had suspended payments to the whistleblower Web site in late 2010.

This past weekend, WikiLeaks began publishing confidential e-mails Anonymous affiliate AntiSec allegedly stole from global security analyst firm Strategic Forecasting, better known as Stratfor. In the several hundred e-mails released so far, there are purportedly 5,000 total, topics range from insider information on the 2008 U.S. presidential election to paying off media sources and global spying, according to WikiLeaks.

While much of the group seems focused on using the Internet to promote and organize online and offline protest and civil disobedience, some continue to attack police and government Web sites in furtherance of their anti-authoritarian sentiment and for the “lulz,” hacker lingo for “laughs.” Last Friday, AntiSec defaced the Web site of a private firm that operates prisons, Geo Group, to protest alleged corruption in the for-profit incarceration industry.

But Andrew Metcalf of the Watch D.C. blog sees the Stratfor hack and data dump as a real turning point for Anonymous. “I’ve always thought of Anonymous as knee-jerking graffiti artist rebels,” he writes. “This marks a turn for the hacking collective that has remained relatively embedded in niche internet communities like IRC and 4chan. It shows a realization that their work, which has been maligned as vandalism, has a broader value than them just flexing their muscles.”

The group is very active on Twitter and other social media sites, using them to spread their message, organize actions and disseminate photos and slick videos. The efforts have garnered Anonymous a nomination for the Shorty Awards in the #activism category. The awards honor real-time short form content on social media sites.

Article source: http://news.cnet.com/8301-27080_3-57386042-245/anonymous-occupy-the-november-election/?part=rss&subj=news&tag=2547-1_3-0-20

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2 cops disciplined for name covering at Occupy Oakland

By Matthew Artz Contra Costa Times

OAKLAND, Calif. — An Oakland police officer is facing a 30-day suspension for concealing his nameplate with black tape during an Occupy protest, and the lieutenant who removed the tape has been demoted for not properly documenting the incident.

Officer John Hargraves remains on duty while contesting the suspension issued early last month, department sources said. But Lt. Clifford Wong was unable to challenge his demotion to sergeant.

They are the first officers known to be disciplined in connection with Occupy Oakland protests, although several officers remain under investigation for a variety of incidents.

"The actual punishment is, I think, appropriate under the circumstances, but the real issue for us is why (Hargraves) felt that he could do this with impunity," said attorney James Chanin, who had asked a federal judge to take action against the police department over the incident.

State law requires that internal police discipline remain confidential, and the officers’ attorney, Justin Buffington, said he was "outraged that there has been a leak and these officers have had their rights violated."

Hargraves is entitled to contest the suspension — a process that can take over a year. Wong was still in a probationary period as lieutenant, so he couldn’t contest the demotion, department sources said.

A video posted online shows Hargraves deployed outside police headquarters shortly after 9 p.m. during the Nov. 2 Occupy protests, when Terrence Jerod Williams approached with a video camera and asked about the tape covering the nameplate on Hargraves’ uniform.

The officer refused to respond, and Williams then spoke to Wong, who talked to the officer and removed the tape.

Hargraves concealed his nameplate because he had heard that another officer videotaped by Occupy protesters later had personal information posted online "along with calls for violence against that officer and his family," according to court papers.

The incident comes after the Oakland Police Department has struggled to implement all of the reforms stipulated in a 2003 settlement of a civil case concerning a group of rogue officers known as The Riders.

Chanin and attorney John Burris, who both represented the plaintiffs in the Riders case, filed a complaint about the nameplate incident with Judge Thelton Henderson, stating that it showed police still were ignoring the stipulated reforms.

Although Wong noted the incident in a complaint-tracking system, the attorneys wrote that he violated policies by not reporting Hargraves’ conduct to Internal Affairs and not informing the Williams of his right to file a complaint.

Copyright 2012 Contra Costa Newspapers

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68 Occupy protesters arrested in NYC on New Year’s

By Meghan Barr Associated Press

NEW YORK — Authorities say dozens of Occupy Wall Street protesters were arrested as they tore down the barricades surrounding New York City’s Zuccotti Park just before midnight on New Year’s Eve.

Police say 68 people were arrested during the scuffle. At least one person was accused of assaulting a police officer, who suffered cuts on one hand. Other charges include trespassing, disorderly conduct and reckless endangerment.

Protester Jason Amadi says he was pepper-sprayed when police tried to prevent the crowd of about 500 demonstrators from taking down the barricades. Amadi says the crowd piled the barricade pieces in the center of the park and stood on top of them, chanting and singing.

Police are still processing arrests but say some protesters have been released. No other details were available Sunday.

Copyright 2012 Associated Press

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Occupy LA protesters to get free speech classes

By Kate Linthicum Chattanooga Times Free Press

LOS ANGELES — Many Occupy L.A. protesters arrested during demonstrations in recent months are being offered a unique chance to avoid court trials: pay $355 to a private company for a lesson in free speech.

Los Angeles Chief Deputy City Attorney William Carter said the city won’t press charges against protesters who complete the educational program offered by American Justice Associates.

He said the program, which may include lectures by attorneys and retired judges, is being offered to people with no other criminal history and who were arrested for low-level misdemeanor offenses, such as failure to disperse.

There have been more than 350 arrests at Occupy demonstrations in Los Angeles since protesters first set up camp outside City Hall in October.

The most recent arrests occurred last weekend, when six protesters climbed a wall and jumped onto the City Hall lawn, which has been fenced off for rehabilitation since police cleared the encampment Nov. 30.

Carter said the free-speech class will save the city money and teach protesters the nuances of the law.

"The First Amendment is not absolute," he said, noting that the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled government can regulate when, where and how free speech can be exercised.

But a civil rights attorney who has worked closely with the protesters called the class "patronizing," and said the demonstrators who were arrested are the last people needing free-speech training.

"There they were exercising their First Amendment, their lawful right to protest nonviolently," said attorney Cynthia Anderson-Barker.

Several Occupy protesters, many of whom are fueled by anger at what they perceive as corporate greed and the increased privatization of public services, have noted the irony of being asked to pay a private contractor for the program. The tuition will go to the company, not the city, officials say.

In the past, first-time offenders arrested in L.A. protests were typically granted an informal hearing at the city attorney’s office.

City Attorney Carmen Trutanich has taken a tougher approach. In several instances, he has gone to court to prosecute protesters, especially if they had tied up traffic or police.

This year, the city has filed charges against 50 Occupy protesters arrested for more serious offenses or who have criminal records.

But prosecuting the remaining protesters arrested on lesser charges would unduly burden the city attorney’s office, said Trutanich’s chief legal adviser, Curt Livesay. The office has seen its budget cut 25 percent in recent years.

The city often turns to privately run pretrial diversion programs like the one offered by American Justice Associates, Livesay said. The programs have different themes, depending on the low-level offenses involved. The city is likely to divert more cases to such classes given overcrowding in jails, he said.

First-time arrestees at other protests this year, including antiwar demonstrations and protests against tuition hikes, also may be offered a chance to enroll in the free-speech diversion program, Carter said.

Anderson-Barker said many Occupy protesters already had paid for their actions, and shouldn’t be subjected to a costly class.

The bulk of Occupy protesters — those who were arrested on the night of the LAPD eviction — were held on at least $5,000 bail and locked up for two days.

"Spending that much time in jail was definitely punishment enough," she said.

Copyright 2011 Chattanooga Publishing Company

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Occupy Assange: Corrupt banks, corrupt money [London,RT]


The founder of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, attended the protests in London that are part of a worldwide action against corporate greed and austerity measures. Assange said that he was there to show his solidarity with the Occupy London movement, which was inspired by the Occupy Wall Street protests in the US. Assange traveled to London from his friend Vaughan Smith’s country mansion in Suffolk, eastern England. Assange is living there on bail as he fights extradition to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning over allegations of rape and sexual assault made by two women.

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