Saturday night war zone


The evening of December 6th in a quiet Berkeley neighborhood

by Daniel Borgström

It was Saturday night (Dec 6th), and I was about to watch a video when a noisy helicopter started whirling overhead where I live in north Berkeley. This is a quiet residential neighborhood; the chopper was really noisy, and it didn't go away. Finally I went outside to look. It was flashing a bright spotlight downwards. So what might that be about? A robbery in progress? Maybe someone held up a liquor store over on University Avenue; that's where the spotlight kept pointing.

Four or five police vehicles shot past my house, red and blue lights flashing. Wow! The police seemed to be taking this really seriously, whatever it was. I guessed they were overreacting, but who knows, there might be a gunman holed up with a hostage. Curiosity got the better of me, and without even pausing to get my notebook I headed out. University Avenue was only a few blocks away, walking distance.

Sirens were wailing out there on the dark tree-lined streets. The chopper continued to rattle around overhead. I passed three elderly persons and stopped to ask them if they knew what was happening. "It's a demonstration," said one, "If we were 25 years younger we'd be out there marching with them." The others chuckled approvingly.

On Acton street, just north of University, police vehicles were blocking the street. Would they let me through? (This was my neighborhood, after all.) I continued on; they weren't stopping me. In a dark parking lot behind a liquor store to the right of me, was a bunch of riot police, dozens of them. In the shadows of the street behind it even more riot police were hidden away; it looked like hundreds -- a small army of militarized police, ready to turn our neighborhood into a war zone.

(News sources later reported that a hundred police came from other cities around the Bay Area.)

Reaching University I saw it was not a really large demonstration, 200 or maybe 300. There seemed to be more cops than protesters. (News reports put the number at 400 marchers and said there'd been over a thousand earlier in the evening.) They were in the midst of the intersection and no traffic was getting through.

"I can't breath!" they were chanting -- the last words of Eric Garner. It was only ten days since a grand jury had refused to indict the Ferguson cop who murdered Michael Brown, and this week a New York grand jury echoed the Missouri decision, refusing to indict a police officer in the chokehold killing of a seller of illegal cigarettes. That's what this demonstration was about -- a call for police accountability.

Most of the protesters were young, presumably students from UC Berkeley. A few elderly persons in the gathering identified themselves as nearby residents who'd come out to join them. "Isn't it great to see these young people out here!" one of them said to me, "They're not going to give up on this!"

I was glad to see Russell Bates of Berkeley Cop Watch there on the scene, and
KPFA reporter Anthony Fest.

A dozen riot police were lined up along the sidewalk, brandishing their clubs menacingly. The rest of them, the ones I'd seen on my way here, presumably continued to lurk in the shadows beyond. Why were they there? And so many of them.

Protesters here in the intersection seemed to be keeping their cool. Finally around 8:30 p.m. the demonstration set out marching back towards Shattuck, and I went home.

That was what I saw in the brief time span from roughly 8:00 to 8:30 p.m., Saturday, December 6th.
There was a lot more that I didn't see that night. Earlier that evening the riot police had attacked the demonstration on MLK Way; following that windows were smashed. The work of agent provocateurs? That's what some of the protesters suspected, that cops in street clothes had infiltrated the demonstration and were involved in the vandalism. Later that evening, after I left, police attacked the demonstration again. Among the memorable moments is a video of riot police in some residential area. It's in the middle of the night and police are waking people up with loudspeakers, advising them to close their windows because teargas might be used in the neighborhood. (I suppose we could call that a public service announcement, courtesy of the Berkeley Police Department.)

DANIEL BORGSTRÖM
December 2014


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Here's an audio of a pubic comment I made at KPFA's Dec 13, 2014 board meeting, concerning
KPFA reporter Anthony Fest and the station's coverage of this event. (The above incident happened near the station). (KPFA is at 94.1 FM)


UPDATE:

There's more to the above story, which is coming out now.

Berkeley police (or Homeland Security?) commandeered a Berkeley residential street in December, using it for a staging area, setting up checkpoints and severely restricting residents access to their own homes. The neighborhood was under martial law. The purpose was to give police (Mutual Aid cops from other cities) a base of operations.

That was on McKinley Street in Berkeley, beginning Dec 6th and lasting several days.

It's on the agenda of the POLICE REVIEW COMMISSION hearing for tonight (Wednesday, Jan 14th), at South Berkeley Senior Center, at 7:00 P.M., at 2939 Ellis Street, Berkeley


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I attended the hearing on Jan 14, then wrote the below article:

Five Days in December 2014
The McKinley Ave Lockdown -- a Homeland Security takeover?

by Daniel Borgström









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