By
Stephen Lendman
May 21, 2012
NATO
arrives everywhere violently. Chicago was no exception. During summit
activities, city cops are enforcers. They specialize in serving wealth, power,
and imperial interests.
Their
guerrilla warfare history is notorious. They're reliable state terror
partners.
Their
tactics include no-holds barred surveillance, vigilantism, and brutality.
They're infamous for physical confrontation, flagrant abuse, and criminal
assaults.
From 2002
- 2004 alone, over 10,000 complaints were lodged. Many involve violence,
brutality, even torture and murder. Only 18 disciplinary actions followed.
University
of Chicago Law Professor Craig Futterman heads its Civil Rights and Police Accountability Project
(PAP). It's one of America's leading civil rights initiatives.
It
focuses on criminal justice issues. Its aim is improving police accountability
and the nation's criminal justice system. It faces long odds as America grows
more repressive. Police behavior during Chicago's NATO summit is Exhibit A.
More on that below.
In 2007,
Futterman helped prepare a report titled "The Chicago Police Department's Broken System." It revealed damning evidence of systemic
brutality, illegal searches, false arrests, racial targeting, sexual assaults,
shoddy investigations, a culture of silence, and apartheid justice.
Disadvantaged
Blacks, Latinos, poor, and street demonstrators are most affected.
It called
Chicago police a "regime of not knowing." They even get away with
murder because of "a deep commitment to the machinery of denial." A
culture of silence is encouraged and enforced.
Chicago
mayors, City Councilmen and women, along with top police officials share
culpability. Main report findings, included:
Compared to other large cities, excessive force complaints are 94% less likely to be sustained by top Chicago Police Department (CPD) officials;In over 85% of cases, accused officers aren't even interviewed, except for a brief form report;Repeat offenders account for most abuses; andTop officials are most responsible for cultivating and supporting a violence-prone system.
The
Chicago Justice Project (CJP) independently evaluates city criminal justice
agencies. Its purpose is promoting reform and accountability.
In
October 2009, it published a 10-year analysis of Chicago Police Board (CPB) cases and
decisions. It examined charges filed and rulings. It covered
the period January 1999 - December 2008.
It found
a "startling difference in outcomes experienced between civilian employees
and sworn officers." Disciplinary action against police offenders is lax
and undisciplined. Few are punished. Brutality is whitewashed. Serious flaws
remain uncorrected. Justice is denied.
In April
2012, CJP reported a "very sad reality." Most police violence
complaints are denied. Chicagoans "continue to be frustrated with"
unaccountable practices.
Systemic
issues remain uncorrected. City officials come and go. Abuses continue.
Accountability mechanisms exist but aren't enforced. "The reality is that
(for) most types of misconduct....there is little to no way to prove definitive
guilt" because no one with authority wants to hear it.
Abusive behavior
is incentivized to continue. Justice is systematically denied. No significant
change occurred since the 1960 Chicago Police Board's creation. Its nine
mayoral appointed members oversea CPD practices. Instead of serving
responsibly, it systematically whitewashes abuses.
Ahead of NATO's arrival, little attention was paid to likely police tactics. Local media scoundrels ignored serious unanswered questions. "It seems like the Chicago press are not really interested unless they are taking it from a CPD press release."
CJP
listed a menu of questions demanding answers. Most important are ones related
to just treatment for nonviolent demonstrators while cops focus on serving
NATO.
The fact
that local media fell woefully short "is a scary proposition, especially
when you consider the history of the CPD and at times their proclivity to
misuse weapons" and commit systematic violence against ordinary Chicagoans
with impunity.
Former
Chicago alderman Paddy Bauler (1890 - 1977) explained best, saying:
"Chicago
ain't ready for reform."
It's
still not ready. It proves it daily on city streets. It serves and protects
wealth and power. Ordinary Chicagoans are unprotected and abused. Police
brutality victims know best. Their stories are chilling.
Thugs with tats and bar codes.
SYSTEMATIC POLICE VIOLENCE
On May
20, the Chicago Tribune headlined "Police,
protesters clash in Loop," saying:
Saturday,
Chicago cops performed as expected. Violence is standard practice. Beatings and
arrests followed "pushing and shoving confrontations."
A police
van struck one protester. Someone screamed: "They hit him! They hit
him!" An ambulance took "someone in a wheel chair" to a local
hospital. Friends identified him as New York-based OWS activist Jack
Amico.
Demonstrators
marched and chanted nonviolently. Images showed riot-clad police swinging
batons. Unknown numbers were arrested and detained. Official reports were
deliberately vague.
Hotels
domiciling heads of state and their entourages are heavily protected. Nothing
is spared to serve them. "Asked how he was holding up, one protester
(said): 'Exhausted.' "
Earlier
Saturday, police and activists clashed downtown "when protesters tried to
push through a line of police on bicycles. An officer went down." Other
riot-clad ones moved in violently. Several arrests followed.
Each time
marchers tried veering from where cops directed them, confrontations occurred.
Thousands of police were everywhere downtown. They came riot-clad in groups,
phalanxes, on bikes, horseback, squad cars, and overhead in helicopters.
Asked how
far police would let protesters go, Deputy CPD Superintendent Debra Kirby said
"(t)ill they tire out."
In fact,
momentum increased. It continued all day through late evening. Number grew.
Sunday may prove most daunting. Large protests and marches are planned.
Participants
know what's ahead. They're struggling on two fronts ~ against NATO and Chicago
cops protecting global menace participants. Why else would they brave
notoriously violent police for ending wars and justice.
MEDIA SCOUNDREL REPORTS
On May
19, The New York Times headlined "3 in
Chicago Face Charges of Terrorism in Protests," saying:
"The
People of the State of Illinois v. Brian Church, Jared Chase (and) Brent
Betterly" alleged possession of incendiary devices, material support for
terrorism, and conspiracy to commit it.
Charges
are spurious. National Lawyers Guild (NLG) attorneys denounced them. Sarah
Gelsomino "delore(d them) in the strongest degree." No evidence
whatever proves them.
NLG's
Michael Deutsch called them "propaganda to create a climate of fear and to
create this public perception that protesters are violent."
The Times
said defendants were targeted in early May. They and others were arrested
"when police officers and FBI agents obtained a no-knock search
warrant" to raid a South Side apartment.
NLG
lawyers said police "broke down doors with guns drawn and searched
residences without a warrant or consent."
ACCORDING TO THE TIMES:
"The
three defendants....assembled four Molotov cocktails from empty beer bottles,
with cut bandannas as fuses."
They
"were to be used in attacks against police stations, which would divert
attention from other attacks around the city."
Official
police and prosecutor accounts were cited. They're baseless without credibility.
Charges are fabricated with no corroborating evidence. The pattern repeats
constantly. As a result, many hundreds rot unjustly in America's gulag.
Yet The
Times said "defendants also (planned) to buy several assault rifles and
build pipe bombs at the time of their arrests."
"Throwing
stars, swords with brass-knuckle handles, a hunting bow, a shield with
protruding nails, gas masks and a map with details of escape routes from the
city were also said to have been found in the apartment."
Alleged
targets were said to be Obama's local headquarters, Mayor Rahm Emanuel's house,
police stations, and downtown financial institutions.
All are
well protected, especially leading up to, during, and for days after National
Special Security Events. How three youths planned doing this wasn't explained.
For attacks this elaborate, a battalion or more would be needed with plenty of
backup.
Those
charged are nonviolent activists. Bogus accusations called them
"self-identified anarchists." State's attorney Anita Alvarez said:
"The
individuals we charged are not peaceful protesters. They are domestic
terrorists."
Another
arrested but uncharged activist said:
"They
raided my home illegally to intimidate us, and to stop us from doing the
important stuff we were doing."
No one
arrested planned terrorism or other violent acts. Nonetheless, the so-call NATO
3 face a harrowing ordeal ahead. Few charged with these types of offenses end
exonerated.
Even if
found not guilty, new charges likely follow. When federal, state and local
prosecutors want someone convicted, results usually turn out that way no matter
how long it takes.
Sometimes
one or more trials are protracted. Including appeals, resolution can take
years. The cost burden is enormous. Proving innocence is daunting when
government determines to convict.
A
deplorable Chicago Tribune editorial headlined "The NATO
3," saying:
Police
and prosecutors claim "three men who traveled to Chicago" came to
commit "terrorism."
"So
we bristled when" NLG attorney Gelsomino "said the arrests were part
of 'an intimidation campaign on activists.' What intimidation campaign?"
Police
claimed an "imminent threat." Baseless accusations don't square with
facts. The editorial quoted CPD Superintendent Garry McCarthy saying police
"marching orders" were to "protect free speech (and) First
Amendment rights...."
"Good
call," it added in response to nonviolent activists charged with
terrorism. They face long prison terms if convicted.
Federal,
state and local authorities deplore free expression, assembly rights, and other
constitutional freedoms. Chicago ones are notorious.
They
proved it with warrantless break-ins, bogus charges, false arrests, baton
swinging violence, other aggressive confrontations, and running down one
activist with a van.
Perhaps
they're saving their heaviest-handed tactics for Sunday when large rallies and
marches are held. Low intensity conflict may follow throughout the day and
evening.
Participants
and downtown residents fear the worst. Our neighborhoods may become
battlegrounds.
PHOTOS GATHERED AROUND THE NET
Over 60 veterans tore off their medals and tossed them into the gutter.
Nuns have changed since I was a kid. Peace keeper Activist Sister Kathleen Desautel on the move.
Arrest of Getty photographer.
Photoshop "The Doctors" and replace with "The Dictators"
How much Koolade did this man drink? His sign reads "100% Disabled Vietnam Vet, Pro-Military,
Pro-NATO, Pro-Chicago, Pro-Police. And if you don't like it, GTFOOH"
Sadly, this donut tactic did not work with the Chicago police.
The true criminal gang in this whole mess.
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