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    200+ arrested at Occupy Los Angeles, 50 in Philly

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — More than 1,400 police officers, some in riot gear, cleared the Occupy Los Angeles camp early Wednesday, driving protesters from a park around City Hall and arresting more than 200 who defied orders to leave. Similar raids in Philadelphia led to 52 arrests, but the scene in both cities was relatively peaceful.

    Police in Los Angeles and Philadelphia moved in on Occupy Wall Street encampments under darkness in an effort to clear out some of the longest-lasting protest sites since crackdowns ended similar occupations across the country.

    Beanbags fired from shotguns were used to subdue the final three protesters in a makeshift tree house outside Los Angeles City Hall, police Cmdr. Andrew Smith said, describing it as a minor use of force incident. No serious injuries were reported.

    Police Chief Charlie Beck praised the officers and the protesters for their restraint and the peaceful way the eviction was carried out.

    Officers flooded down the steps of City Hall just after midnight and started dismantling the two-month-old camp two days after a deadline passed for campers to leave the park. Officers in helmets and wielding batons and guns with rubber bullets converged on the park from all directions with military precision and began making arrests after several orders were given to leave.

    There were no injuries and no drugs or weapons were found during a search of the emptied camp, which was strewn with trash after the raid. City workers put up concrete barriers to wall off the park while it is restored. As of 5:10 a.m. PST, the park was clear of protesters, said LAPD officer Cleon Joseph.

    The raid in Los Angeles came after demonstrators with the movement in Philadelphia marched through the streets after being evicted from their site. Over 40 protesters were arrested after refusing to clear a street several blocks northeast of City Hall, said Philadelphia Police Commissioner Charles Ramsey. They were lined up in cuffs and loaded on to buses by officers. Six others were arrested earlier after remaining on a street that police tried to clear.

    "The police officers who were involved in this operation were hand-picked for this assignment," Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter said. "They're highly trained and disciplined and showed a tremendous amount of restraint and professionalism in carrying out this morning's operation."

    Nutter said the eviction had been planned for several weeks and went off without largely without problems.

    Ramsey said he would have preferred to evict the protesters without making arrests, but some refused orders to clear the street and had to be taken into custody. Three officers had minor injuries. One protester was injured when a police horse stepped on her foot, Nutter said.

    The Philadelphia protesters were ordered to clear their encampment in part because a $50 million renovation project was due to start at the City Hall plaza this fall.

    "Dilworth Plaza was designated as a construction site," Ramsey said. "They had to vacate. They knew that from the very beginning."

    Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa raised public safety and health concerns in announcing plans for the eviction last week, while Philadelphia officials said protesters must clear their site to make room for a $50 million renovation project.

    By dawn in Los Angeles, trash, flattened tents and the stench of urine were the Occupy LA legacy.

    City crews were installing chain link fence and concrete barricades around once-lush lawns that are now patches of dirt strewn with tons of debris, including clothing, tents, bedding shoes, trash and two months of human flotsam. Under a tree was a guitar, a bullhorn, CDs and a black bandanna.

    Defiant Los Angeles campers who were chanting slogans as the officers surrounded the park, booed when an unlawful assembly was declared, paving the way for officers to begin arresting those who didn't leave.

    In the first moments of the raid, officers tore down a tent and tackled a tattooed man with a camera on City Hall steps and wrestled him to the ground. Someone yelled "police brutality."

    Teams of four or five officers moved through the crowd making arrests one at a time, cuffing the hands of protesters with white plastic zip-ties. A circle of protesters sat with arms locked, many looking calm and smiling.

    Opamago Cascini, 29, said the night had been a blast and he was willing to get arrested.

    "It's easy to talk the talk, but you gotta walk the walk," Cascini said.

    Police used a cherry picker to pluck five men from trees. Two others were in a tree house — one wore a crown and another taunted police with an American flag.

    In Philadelphia, police began pulling down tents at about 1:20 a.m. EST after giving demonstrators three warnings that they would have to leave, which nearly all of the protesters followed. Dozens of demonstrators then began marching through the streets and continued through the night.

    Ramsey said breaking up the camp in the early-morning hours helped minimize any disruption to businesses and traffic.

    "We acknowledge the fact that we are going to have to leave this space .... but in another sense this has been our home for almost two months and no one wants to see their home taken away from them," Philadelphia protester Bri Barton, 22, said before police began clearing out the camp.

    "Whether or not we have this space or work in the city is nowhere near done," she said.

    The eviction overall appeared to have been carried out without any significant scuffles or violence.

    Later Wednesday morning, workers used front-end loaders to scoop up tents, trash and other debris and dump it into trucks to be hauled away, while others swept the plaza clean.

    Demonstrators and city officials in both Los Angeles and Philadelphia were hoping any confrontation would be nonviolent, unlike evictions at similar camps around the country that sometimes involved pepper spray and tear gas. The movement against economic disparity and perceived corporate greed began with Occupy Wall Street in Manhattan two months ago.

    The Los Angeles officers staged for hours outside Dodger Stadium before the raid. They were warned that demonstrators might throw everything from concrete and gravel to human feces at them.

    "Please put your face masks down and watch each other's back," a supervisor told them. "Now go to work."

    The officers came from a wide range of specialized units within the force, including the bomb squad, and the arson unit. Scores of officers in hazmat suits also were sent in to deal with potentially unsanitary conditions in the park.

    Before police arrived in large numbers, protesters were upbeat and the mood was almost festive. A protester in a Santa Claus hat danced in the street. A woman showed off the reindeer antlers she had mounted on her gas mask.

    ___

    Matheson reported from Philadelphia. Associated Press writer Shaya Tayefe Mohajer in Los Angeles also contributed to this report.

     

    1,123 comments

    • Craig  •  Philadelphia, United States  •  5 mths ago
      If you want to prevent (or at least lessen) the financial crisis
      that Caused this:
      #1 Reinstate the Glass Steagall Act that separates commercial
      and investment banks, enacted during the Depression and repealed
      in 2000, eight years before the crisis.
      #2 Regulate the credit rating agencies.
      #3 Reward and recognize companies that keep jobs in the US
      #4 Don't allow mortgage backed securities to be resold with a different rating
      #5 Use Anti-trust laws to break up companies and banks that are too big to fail
      #6 Repeal the Commodities and Futures Modernization Act of 2000 that
      de-regulates Derivatives.
      The folks on Wall Street own the government and everything the candidates are saying.
      • Thomas 5 mths ago
        These are interesting suggestions. I wonder if any of the candidates for presidency might consider listening. So many people in this country have such great suggestions...oh if only we could find leaders who actually know how to listen!
      • Geff 5 mths ago
        I'm afraid it's too late. If I had enough money, I would leave this country while we still can.
      • Craig 5 mths ago
        Don't expect politicians to institute any of these policies on their own. It is gonna to take a tremendous amount of pressure from American Citizens to make sure these priorities are addressed.
    • Texan  •  5 mths ago
      If Obama were to declare a kingdom for himself here tomorrow, would you go out and protest? The fact is that we have rights for that sort of thing. If it becomes illegal to assemble in the public squares then we have lost something foundational to the preservation of liberty. Just because some people who don't understand what the right is for attempt to use it not knowing what they're there for doesn't mean we should give up our rights to get rid of them. Try educating them instead. One day it could be you and me out there for a worthy cause.
      • Rude_Rick 5 mths ago
        Protesting = Good
        Camping in a public park = Bad

        How hard is that to understand?
      • SLIP 5 mths ago
        I thought he already did.
      • Jo 5 mths ago
        Dear Texan-
        When I show up at a rally or protest you can bet your rear that I WILL NOT be pooping in someone's lawn, I will not fling projectiles at the police or anyone else, I will not stay over night unless the facility is specifically designed for such. At which thime I will pay my fair share to be there, meaning I will either clean up after myself and take my garbage to the dump myself or I will pay someone to do it for me. I will not make the tax payers pick up the tab.
        It in not illegal to assemble in public, but it is illegal to disturb others lives while doing so. Learn the difference.
        New Jersey
    • Sig-P226  •  5 mths ago
      I cant seem to remember anyone being arrested during tea party protest.
      • GrammarCop 5 mths ago
        Because they didn't spend days at a time "protesting". in public places...aka bathing and brushing their teeth every so often!!!! LOL!!!
      • Chuck 5 mths ago
        They were too busy tea bagging each other.
      • White 5 mths ago
        Kinda gets you worked up doesn't it Gay Chuck
    • Jim  •  5 mths ago
      Where is Michael Moore? Unions got sort of quiet all of a sudden. Maybe Phocahontas in picture helped shut them up.
      • bobbi 5 mths ago
        The Unions are just regrouping now. Just watch Jim, all the Union #$%$ will be back in Wisconsin in full force come about April of 2012. They are going to be dumping millions of dollars into the Governor Walker recall. It's kind of like Custer's last stand for them here.
      • RussellRichard 5 mths ago
        Thugs helpin thugs, now nice bobbi
      • Wayne 5 mths ago
        Thugs help the next generation of thug... how cute. Bobbi things did fair well with Custer and his boys, the unions are wasting members money. What arre unions but another layer of bosses to feed off the sweat of the honest hard worker.
    • Harry Baals  •  5 mths ago
      Nancy Pelosi’s husband, a real estate developer and investment banker, stands to make millions of dollars in a previously undisclosed residential real estate project in California as a partner with the father of a woman Mrs. Pelosi helped become ambassador to Hungary. Go Occupy Nancy's House!
      • Dragnet 5 mths ago
        yea, pitch your tents on her private land.
    • riprap  •  New York, United States  •  5 mths ago
      They need to be protesting in Washington D C.
    • SysRq  •  5 mths ago
      Where's Jesse Jackson, Al Sharpton, ACLU, NAACP?

      DOH! I almost forgot, these are all white folks.
    • Zach  •  Punxsutawney, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Wether you are for or against the protesters you must agree that this counrty needs some great reform in the way are leaders lead and our government is run and being that the government is the people, by the people, and for the people; we the people must make the biggest changes in order to effectively put what is left of what once was arguably a great democracy back on track for a bright future.Our childrens future and hence forth their childrens- childrens.Time is precious and pointing fingers is useless.Let the change begin where it always begins with your vote.May a chicken be in every pot and a car in every garage.May god bless america again.
    • Finn  •  5 mths ago
      "The whole world's yawning!"
      "The whole world's yawning!"
      "The whole world's yawning!"

      /snicker
    • White  •  5 mths ago
      If OWS does not like bank bailouts why don't they protest Obama for bailing out European banks as we speak
    • Jahudi  •  5 mths ago
      Revolution not going well. Kinda like in Egypt! Oops Try Again....
    • Steven J  •  Alexandria, United States  •  5 mths ago
      The picture looks like it's a small bunch of people sitting there protesting, with a larger bunch of curious people watching them.
    • David W  •  5 mths ago
      The sad thing is: Most of these protesters would have no idea the Fed's move last night was directly against everything they have been protesting for. Truthfully, nobody is listening to these people.
    • Heartland  •  5 mths ago
      Why aren't they camping out at Nancy Pelosi's house? Lord knows she's stolen enough cash to feed the entire state for years.
    • Gig  •  5 mths ago
      "Before police arrived in large numbers, protesters were upbeat and the mood was almost festive"
      That's all this nonsense is, a party. A place to hang out looking for sex, drugs and hippies.
    • railroad man  •  Columbus, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Does anyone really think ugly naked guys dressed in Halloween costumes and sleeping in their own filth are going to change this country
    • Finn  •  5 mths ago
      They aren't the 99%. They are the 47%!
    • J.G  •  5 mths ago
      " Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa raised public safety and health concerns in announcing plans for the eviction last week "

      Isn't this the same Antonio Villaraigosa who led the ACLU?

      Funny what a politician will say and do to stay elected.
    • Jane  •  Malvern, United States  •  5 mths ago
      Did you see the S&M Indian? I bet even the protesters were happy to see him go.
    • Craig  •  Philadelphia, United States  •  5 mths ago
      To everybody out there blaming Obama, Bush or any other singular government official as the cause for America's prosperity getting flushed down the toilet. You're missing the big picture. The situation is simple: The near entirety of the US government is corrupt and run by political Bribe-takers bought and paid for by people who have amassed the most wealth overall in this country (Top 1% of the US Population). These politicians, now solely representing their funders and not the voters turn around and pass legislation that gives the Super Rich here every advantage possible, including free money (Quantitative Easing/Bailouts), lower taxes and zero accountability for their actions. In order to prevent revolts from the increased burden to the unrepresented in this country, the Super Rich have set up a bogus political party to siphon off and redirect the anger of the masses (The Republicans) and an equally bogus party who acts as weak and ineffectual as possible in the face of "strong republican pressure" all while pretending to care about the masses (The Democrats). In addition, they have co-opted and bought out nearly all of the mainstream media in order to filter out any info that would lay the blame on the true culprit, instead leaving the majority of America divided and focusing their energies on decoy scapegoats and partisan nonsense. The super rich and those they pay for care not one bit about jobs or the welfare of the country they grew from. They merely care about having as many digits as possible for their bank statement balance. And if that means the middle/working class will eventually need to vanish, then so be it. The entire system is broken.
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