Occupy Oakland: More than 100 arrested; police defend tactics


Oakland police arrested more than 100 people during a night of clashes with Occupy Oakland protesters on the streets of downtown Oakland.

The scene had finally cleared after midnight Wednesday, but police were on alert in case crowds returned.

Oakland Interim Police Chief Howard Jordan said arrests were continuing and the total number might rise. Eight-five of those arrests were made early Tuesday, when officers raided the Occupy Oakland encampment on the plaza along with an annex in a park near Lake Merritt.

Jordan justified his department's use of tear gas.

"We were in a position where we had to deploy gas in order to stop the crowd and people from pelting us with bottles and rocks," he said.

Protesters had also thrown paint "and other agents" at officers, he said. The crowd reached about 1,000 at its peak, Jordan said, noting that police used bean bag rounds to disperse demonstrators. He said no rubber bullets were used -- a claim disputed by protesters.

Two officers were injured, Jordan said. He did not know how many demonstrators may have been hurt.

In an interview with KTVU-TV Channel 2, Officer David Carman said he had been hammered by paintballs and more.

"The crowd started throwing bottles, paints, beer, eggs at myself and the other officers," he said.

But some activists criticized the police tactics.

Kat Brooks, an Occupy Oakland activist and spokeswoman, said she took her young daughter home about 9:30 p.m. Tuesday because she did not want to expose her to the tear gas flooding downtown Oakland.


Protesters had marched from Frank Ogawa Plaza at City Hall to Snow Park, a swatch of green near Lake Merritt where an annex encampment had also been torn down by police this morning. They then returned to City Hall.

"We weren’t there but a minute before they started giving the dispersal order," Brooks said. "The first time they said five minutes, this time they said 'now.' They shot off the flash grenades and people scattered."

Brooks said her neighbors just returned home teargassed.

"This is the most disciplined I’ve ever seen Oakland be. There was no damage to property," she said. At one point, Brooks said, several officers were hit with paintballs, but she said they had come out swinging batons.

"From the way they came into the camp this morning to the way they acted tonight, they have gone beyond what was necessary," she said.
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