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Nicole Carty, a 23-year-old from Atlanta, hoped the group's cleaning effort would stave off any confrontation. "We tell them, `Hey the park is clean, there's no need for you to be here,'" she said. "If they insist on coming in, we will continue to occupy the space." Brown said he lost his job at McDonald's a month ago. He spent the past week and a half sleeping at the park and protesting, but he didn't want the end to be ugly. "You've got a lot of amateurs here ...," he said. "I tell people don't block the pedestrian traffic, keep a Bill of Rights handy and be respectful of police. I'm for the rule of law, not chaos." Protesters have had some run-ins with police, but mass arrests on the Brooklyn Bridge and an incident in which some protesters were pepper-sprayed seemed to energize their movement. The New York Police Department said it will make arrests if Brookfield requests it and laws are broken. Brookfield would not comment on how it will ensure that protesters do not try to set up camp again, only saying that the cleaning was necessary. Bill de Blasio, the city's public advocate, expressed concern over the city's actions as he inspected the park Thursday afternoon and listened to protesters' complaints. "This has been a very peaceful movement by the people," he said. "I'm concerned about this new set of policies. At the very least, the city should slow down." Attorneys from the New York City chapter of the National Lawyers Guild -- who are representing an Occupy Wall Street sanitation working group
-- have written a letter to Brookfield saying the company's request to get police to help implement its cleanup plan threatens "fundamental constitutional rights." "There is no basis in the law for your request for police intervention, nor have you cited any," the attorneys wrote in a letter Thursday to Brookfield CEO Richard B. Clark. The protest has led sympathetic groups in other cities to stage their own local rallies and demonstrations: Occupy Boston, Occupy Cincinnati, Occupy Houston, Occupy Los Angeles, Occupy Philadelphia, Occupy Providence, Occupy Salt Lake and Occupy Seattle, among them. Occupy Seattle protesters running a live video feed from their corporate power protest at Seattle's Westlake Park said police started making arrests Thursday. Police confirmed that 10 people were arrested. City law bans camping in parks. The situation was tense near Colorado's state Capitol early Friday, where hundreds of Occupy Denver protesters had been told to clear out or risk arrest. Police warned around 3 a.m. that they would start clearing the park, but no arrests had been made yet. Several protests are planned this weekend across the U.S. and Canada, and European activists are also organizing.
[Associated
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