http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/220/nation/Distrust_simmers_as_police_activists_brace_for_convention+.shtml

Distrust simmers as police, activists brace for convention

By Lynda Gorov, Globe Staff, 8/7/2000


OS ANGELES - Post-Philadelphia, pre-Los Angeles, the paranoia is already apparent.


One protest organizer refuses to disclose his Los Angeles location over the telephone, 
fearful that the call is being monitored. A local police official declines to discuss 
specific security arrangements, unwilling to tip his department's hand. Protest 
leaders contend that undercover officers have infiltrated the building that houses 
their headquarters. Police in riot gear turn out on Thursday to quell a loud but 
otherwise peaceful union march.


Each side calls the other capable of lies, deception, and dirty tricks.


''We've had this incredible amount of surveillance and harassment,'' said Lisa 
Fithian, an organizer of the coming demonstrations, which she stressed are intended to 
be nonviolent. ''They've videotaped our building, the fire inspector showed up 
suddenly, there are cop cars parked outside. It's outrageous.''


Countered Lieutenant Horace Frank, a spokesman for the Los Angeles Police Department: 
''We're not doing any surveillance. Our job is to be aware of what's going on in the 
community. But that's the kind of rhetoric they're stirring up in the hope we will not 
do police work.''


With the Democratic National Convention less than a week away, both protesters and 
police are, as the saying goes, hoping for the best while preparing for the worst. 
They are also looking to Philadelphia's experience for hints of what could happen 
here. But the lessons being learned are mixed.


For their part, Los Angeles police generally applaud the restraint showed by their 
East Coast counterparts: no tear gas, pepper spray, or rubber bullets fired into the 
crowds, even when a few of the mostly peaceful protests turned violent. Police 
Commander Mark Leap promised a similar response in Los Angeles, insisting that force 
would be used only as a last resort.


Demonstrators, however, say they came away from the Republican National Convention 
more worried than ever that their First Amendment rights to gather in public are at 
risk. In Philadephia, they charge, police carried out a preemptive operation to collar 
demonstration leaders, with bail for one set at $1 million although he was charged 
only with misdemeanors. In another instance, police with a now-sealed search warrant 
raided a puppet-making factory, saying they would find evidence of plans to disrupt 
the city and arresting about 70 people.


''There is more than one way to prevent people from exercising their First Amendment 
rights, and it doesn't always come at the end of a baton,'' said James Lafferty, 
executive director of the Los Angeles chapter of the National Lawyers Guild, which 
will have some 200 legal observers on the street and will represent arrested 
demonstrators free of charge. ''People are chilled. My god, even puppets are not safe. 
It's very alarming.''


The LAPD, like other police departments nationwide, does have an arsenal of weapons to 
stop any outbreak of violence during the daily demonstrations, including a recently 
demonstrated chemical that causes a person to smell so awful that others cannot come 
near. But with its already besmirched reputation on the line after the Rodney King 
beating, the 1991 riots, and an ongoing corruption scandal that is the widest in 
memory, police officials understand that their performance will be scrutinized closely.


In the wake of the scandal, in which officers in the Rampart district are accused of 
beating suspects, planting evidence, and lying in court to win convictions of gang 
members, the federal government is in talks with the city over how to improve the 
tracking of problem officers. So far, one police officer from the district has been 
fired as a result of the scandal, with other dismissals expected. Some 70 officers are 
under investigation, and there are indications that the corruption spread into other 
districts.


''I'm not going to play dumb; there have been incidents that tarnished our image,'' 
Frank said. ''We have to live through it and go beyond it. ... In all honesty, this 
convention is very important for us. It's a chance to showcase the city of Los Angeles 
and for the LAPD to shine. We're going to do that.''


The circumstances confronting both police and protesters in Los Angeles, however, are 
far different from those faced in Philadelphia, although police there were also under 
pressure to keep their weapons holstered following last month's televised beating of a 
car chase suspect.


For starters, the Republican convention was held in a sports arena on the outskirts of 
the city, and protesters gathered there in large numbers just once. In Los Angeles, 
delegates will convene downtown, creating the possiblity of intentional traffic 
tie-ups and shutdowns. Philadelphia also attracted no more than an estimated 4,000 
demonstrators. Tens of thousands are expected in Los Angeles, with some estimates 
going as high as 50,000. The same week, the homeless and other groups are to meet in 
Los Angeles, including the North American Anarchist Conference.


''We're certainly not more relaxed after Philadelphia,'' said Leap, the police 
commander. ''I can tell you that the planning and the training we did before we went 
to Philadelphia [to observe] was validated by what we saw in Philadelphia.''


The outcome - mostly peaceful protests, a few confrontations resulting in injuries to 
police as well as protesters - has also calmed convention officials even as they erect 
wire fences around the Staples Center in downtown Los Angeles. As many as four parades 
are planned each day.


''It's definitely not our place to comment on specific tactics, but I can say that 
there were real predictions of doom in Philadelphia and things went relatively 
smoothly,'' said Benjamin Austin, a spokesman for the LA Convention 2000 host 
committee. ''We applaud the city and also think it bodes well for us. They did a good 
job of balancing the First Amendment right of protesters and the needs of residents.''


But protesters who plan to start arriving in Los Angeles later this week, and the 
organizers now in place, say the city has already tagged them as the enemy. Again and 
again, they stress that they are adamant about holding peaceful protests and that they 
themselves will do nothing to turn the massive demonstrations ugly. Still, they will 
not be cowed into silence.


''We're very nervous about what Philadelphia bodes for LA,'' said Han Shan, a 
spokesman for the Berkeley-based Ruckus Society, a sort of graduate program for 
nonviolent liberal protesters whose executive director is being held on $1 million 
bond. ''We're very, very concerned. But one thing I'm gratified by is that they don't 
get it. They think they can pick off one or 10 or 50 people and end a movement that's 
calling for democracy, environmental protection, basic human rights. Well, we're still 
coming to LA.''


This story ran on page A01 of the Boston Globe on 8/7/2000.
© Copyright 2000 Globe Newspaper Company.



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