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NEWS & LETTERS, MAY 2003

Oakland cops' brutal attack on dockers, protesters

Oakland, Cal.--Oakland police went on a rampage on April 7 when 500 war protesters gathered at the Port of Oakland to prevent loading of munitions onto American President Lines cargo ships headed for the Persian Gulf.

Protesters had hoped to form a massive enough picket line that dockworkers could legitimately refuse to cross the line for safety reasons. The new ILWU contract does not permit the union to strike over objections to loading military hardware.

But there were no such shipments scheduled for that day. When demonstrators learned as much, they shifted from blocking trucks and workers to marching and chanting in large circles.

Even so, police closed in and ordered the picketers to disperse. Clusters of demonstrators that didn't move fast enough were blasted apart with concussion grenades. They then picked off scattering individuals with wooden dowels, metal shot beanbags and stingballs. The attacks were repeated as pickets regrouped and more protesters arrived on scene. Nine longshoremen who were not participating in the demonstration were among the dozens injured.

An hour or so after police had set the tone for the day, a group of about 50 picketers promptly complied with an order to disperse and marched clear away from the terminals to assemble at Maritime and 7th Street. Moments later, 25 motorcycle cops roared up on them while a phalanx of riot troops let loose its full arsenal on the retreating crowd.

This time there had been no warning. Though there was no panic, even among the injured, one protester saw the assault as an attempt to "shock and awe" all demonstrators into staying away from the docks.

Oakland Police Chief Richard Word corroborated that police overreaction to the non-threatening contingent was a preemptive strike. He speculated that if police "had simply waited it out and facilitated protesters, there could have been thousands, not hundreds, out there; and we would have been overwhelmed."

Police claims that picketers throwing rocks and bottles precipitated the barrages are not supported by anyone but the police. This is significant, because every anti-war action for the past several weeks has had participants only too eager to denounce (usually as "anarchists") those who ruin the "peace movement" with their penchant for violence.

Even TV news failed to provide a smoking gun. In an effort to back up police, one reporter told viewers to listen for the sound of a breaking bottle in footage she was about to run. Sure enough you could hear the sound--but only long after the assault began.

Despite shock and awe tactics and preemptive strikes, the battered activists moved on to the Federal Building and then to City Hall where they called upon Mayor Jerry Brown to investigate this unprecedented use of police force.

The following night they kept Oakland City Council from its agenda long enough to force council president Ignacio De La Fuente to leave the chambers in frustration. Councilmember Jane Brunner took over and scheduled a special hearing for April 29.

--David Mizuno'Oto

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