Seattle mayor says illegal for Trump to send military to clear
protesters
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[June 12, 2020]
By Gregory Scruggs
SEATTLE (Reuters) - The mayor of Seattle
said on Thursday it would be unconstitutional and illegal for U.S.
President Donald Trump to send military forces into the city to clear
protesters occupying a neighborhood, as he has suggested.
But Mayor Jenny Durkan, speaking at an afternoon press conference, did
not say how or when authorities would remove the roughly 500
demonstrators who have established a makeshift encampment behind
barricades in the Capitol Hill district.
"It is unconstitutional and illegal to send the military into Seattle,"
said Durkan, a first-term Democrat. "There is no imminent threat of an
invasion of Seattle."
Activists have occupied the area since police on Monday moved street
barricades and abandoned their East Precinct station in a move city
officials say aimed to reduce tension.
In a Youtube video https://bit.ly/30xNvm7, Seattle's police chief,
Carmen Best, said it was not her decision to leave the precinct.
"You fought for days to protect it, I asked you stand on that line day
in and day out to be pelted with projectiles, to be screamed at,
threatened and in some cases hurt," Best told her department in the
video published on its Youtube page.
Protesters used the police barricades to section off the area, calling
it the "Capitol Hill Autonomous Zone."
"We're not going to let this happen in Seattle. If we have to go in,
we're going to go in," Trump told Fox News on Thursday.
"Let the governor do it. He's got great National Guard troops ... But
one way or the other, it's going to get done. These people are not going
to occupy a major portion of a great city."
On Sunday, a man drove his car into a crowd of protesters in the area
that became the "autonomous zone" the following day. He then shot and
wounded a demonstrator who confronted him as he came to a stop,
according to police and eyewitness video.
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Artists fill in the letters of a "Black Lives Matter" mural on E.
Pine Street as protesters establish what they call an autonomous
zone while protesting against racial inequality and calling for the
defunding of Seattle police, near the department's East Precinct in
this aerial photo taken over Seattle, Washington, U.S. June 11,
2020. REUTERS/Lindsey Wasson
The man who was shot was in stable condition at a hospital while the
driver was arrested.
Major U.S. cities have been convulsed by marches, rallies and
sometimes violence for more than two weeks over the death of a black
man, 46-year-old George Floyd, while in Minneapolis police custody.
A bystander recorded video of the now-dismissed officer holding a
knee on Floyd's neck for nearly nine minutes.
"What we have been given here is a unique opportunity to see how a
police-free zone can be facilitated," protester David Lewis told
Reuters, standing in front of the abandoned East Precinct.
"Making this a community or education center would be a momentous
and very powerful movement that the city can commit to the lack of
police brutality and also an acknowledgement of the debts of the
past."
Police officers returned to the East Precinct building on Thursday
to inspect it for damage but it remains unstaffed.
Best said the neighborhood could not remain occupied but neither she
nor Durkan would say how the city planned to dismantle the camp."We
have to make sure we don't recreate the entire cycle we were able to
disrupt," Durkan said.
(Reporting by Gregory Scruggs in Seattle; Additional reporting by
Steve Gorman in Los Angeles and Sabahatjahan Contractor in Bengaluru;
Writing and additional reporting by Dan Whitcomb and Bill Tarrant in
Los Angeles; Editing by Grant McCool and Clarence Fernandez)
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