By Dave Kempa and Raheem F. Hosseini
Demonstrators outfoxed police Monday evening, piloting a surgically
disruptive march through one of the Sacramento’s richest neighborhoods.
Police, who beefed up security around the Golden 1 Center before the
night’s Kings game, responded with overwhelming force—and escalated
tensions at a raw moment in the city.
Two days after
Sacramento County’s district attorney said she would not file criminal
charges against the two officers who killed Stephon Clark—and 12 hours
before California Attorney General Xavier Becerra announced the
same—police arrested 84 people on a Highway 50 overpass near 51st
Street.
Numerous participants and witnesses said the
quickly planned march, which began at a Trader Joe’s on Folsom Boulevard
and 50th Street before cutting through the affluent heart of the Fab
40s neighborhood, was winding down when officers declared an unlawful
assembly, hemmed in marchers and ordered them to disperse.
Around
10:30 p.m. Monday, community activist Berry Accius said he had just
left the march when he got word that Les Simmons, a South Sacramento
pastor, had been arrested. The Rev. Shane Harris, national president of
the People’s Alliance for Justice, was also arrested. Reporters with the
Sacramento Bee, Sacramento Business Journal and Sacramento State’s
college paper were also detained.
That prompted Mayor Darrell Steinberg to demand a Tuesday morning audience with Police Chief Daniel Hahn, whom he had supported. “No matter the reason an order to disperse was given, no member of the press should be detained for doing their job,” Steinberg said in a statement. Later Tuesday, he and City Council members requested an independent investigation of the incident by the Office of Public Safety Accountability. The mayor is opening Tuesday night’s City Council meeting for further community reaction.
Several protesters
gave troubling accounts that police kettled them in on the overpass,
making it impossible to follow the orders to disperse. An 18-year-old
poet and actress who goes by the name Khalypso tweeted that she
overheard one officer on scene tell another, “So we’re trapping them on
the bridge, right?”
A police spokesman didn’t immediately respond to SN&R’s request for comment. But police Capt. Norm Leong tweeted around 8:30 p.m. Monday that officers had “been seeing cars getting keyed so we are going to move closer into protest group to protect vehicle.” He added, “We have not seen who is doing the damage.”
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