U.S.
congressional staffers stage walkout in latest police protests
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[December 12, 2014]
WASHINGTON/OAKLAND, Calif. (Reuters)
- Dozens of U.S. congressional staff staged a walkout on Thursday to
protest decisions by grand juries not to charge white police officers in
the killings of unarmed black men in Ferguson, Missouri, and New York
City.
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The staffers, including members of the Congressional Black
Associates group, held a prayer service on the steps of the U.S.
Capitol and raised their hands in a reference to the "Hands up,
don't shoot" chants that have become a feature of protests around
the nation.
The action was the latest in a series of demonstrations over
concerns about the policing of black communities. Some have turned
violent, including this week's protests in northern California.
Oakland and neighboring Berkeley, California, have seen nightly
demonstrations all week in response to decisions by two grand juries
not to charge white police officers in the killings of Michael Brown
in Ferguson and Eric Garner in New York.
On Wednesday night, about 150 protesters, fewer than on previous
evenings, left the campus of University of California, Berkeley, and
demonstrated without incident before marching south into Oakland,
authorities said.
By that point, the protesters had dwindled to about 50 people, some
of whom broke windows at a T-Mobile store and a Chase bank branch,
according to the city of Oakland. Looting was reported in an area of
small businesses at a downtown intersection, the city said.
At one point, a Reuters photographer witnessed a man who
demonstrators said was an undercover police officer and who had been
marching with them, pointing a pistol at protesters after he and
another man were attacked.
Within a minute or two, about 20 uniformed Oakland police officers
arrived and detained one of the protesters.
Chief Avery Browne, commander of the California Highway Patrol's
Golden Gate Division, said two plainclothes CHP detectives were
surrounded by up to 50 demonstrators who ignored orders to back off,
despite one of the officers first taking out his baton and
identifying himself as police.
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"We are extremely cognizant and very sensitive to the display of a
gun. It's very upsetting. It's very disturbing to individuals who
are attempting to peacefully protest, and we recognize that," Browne
told reporters by telephone.
But he said the detective involved told him he had been in fear for
his and his partner's lives. "No one has provided any evidence that
the officers were inappropriate in what they did," Browne said.
On previous evenings this week in the Bay Area, riot police have
fired tear gas and pepper spray to disperse crowds of demonstrators
that have at times been hundreds strong, some of whom have thrown
stones at the officers.
(Reporting by Emmett Berg in Oakland and Paul Thomasch in New York;
Additional reporting by Noah Berger in Oakland and Daniel Wallis in
Denver; Editing by Bill Trott, Eric Walsh and Cynthia Osterman)
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