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Police
Anti-Demonstration Tactics in D.C.
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Practices
ACLU Files Class-Action Lawsuit Challenging
Unconstitutional Mass Arrest of Antiwar Demonstrators in Washington
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE WASHINGTON- In a lawsuit filed in federal
court today, the American Civil Liberties Union of the National Capital
Area charged police officials with deliberately violating the constitutional
rights of more than 400 peaceful antiwar demonstrators and bystanders by
directing them into a police trap and then arresting them although they
had not violated the law.
"In this country, the government is not
supposed to arrest you unless you break the law," said Arthur Spitzer,
Legal Director of the ACLU of the National Capital Area. "But the evidence
will show that the police deliberately rounded up hundreds of people who
had not broken any law, many of whom were not even involved in the demonstration.
No one in the neighborhood was safe from the lawless conduct of the D.C.
police."
Among those arrested were a retired U.S.
Army Lieutenant Colonel and his daughter, a Maryland grandfather who was
detained for more than 24 hours, and a man who suffered from broken ribs
after being knocked down by the police.
The arrests occurred on September 27, 2002
in Pershing Park, located on Pennsylvania Avenue two blocks from the White
House. Arrestees were charged with failing to obey a police order, but
no order to disperse was ever given and people who tried to leave were
physically prevented from leaving, according to the ACLU complaint. The
true purpose of the mass arrests, the ACLU said, was to disrupt and prevent
peaceful political demonstrations scheduled for that weekend.
The lawsuit also charged that arrestees
were unjustly detained for as long as 30 hours in tight handcuffs and painful
wrist-to-ankle restraints, with limited access to food and toilets, and
were denied access to lawyers and given false information about their legal
options.
The ACLU lawsuit, which names as defendants
D.C. Police Chief Charles Ramsey and officials in the District, seeks compensation
for each person whose rights were violated and a court order prohibiting
the government from using similar unconstitutional tactics in the future.
The case was filed by the American Civil
Liberties Union of the National Capital Area, the National Lawyers Guild
D.C. Chapter, and the law firm of Covington & Burling.
The lawsuit was filed as a "class action," in which a few representative individuals sue on behalf of the entire group whose rights were violated. The plaintiffs in the lawsuit include: Julie Abbate, a local attorney and graduate
of Howard Law School who was observing the demonstration when she was trapped
in Pershing Park and arrested.
No date has yet been set for a court hearing.
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