Antelope Valley Press

Protesters to file TRO request against LASD

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LOS ANGELES (CNS) — Attorneys for demonstrat­ors suing over their treatment by law enforcemen­t during protests over the in-custody killing of George Floyd said today they would ask a federal judge to put an immediate stop to the alleged continued use of rubber bullets, pepper spray and other “excessive” crowd control tactics by the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department.

A proposed class-action suit filed in Los Angeles federal court last month alleges the mass detention of more than 2,600 demonstrat­ors in downtown Los Angeles in May and June was a violation of their rights under the US and California constituti­ons. The suit mirrored a similar complaint brought in June on behalf of Black Lives Matter-LA.

An LASD spokeswoma­n said the department does not comment on pending litigation.

It was not clear when the request for a temporary restrainin­g order against the department would be filed with the court.

The lawsuit contends that on at least three occasions — in Grand Park on May 30, near Pan Pacific Park on June 2, and in Compton on June 21 — sheriff’s deputies imposed arbitrary curfews, declared unlawful assemblies without ensuring that their order was heard, subjected peaceful protesters to excessive detention without access to bathrooms or medical care and used “indiscrimi­nate and unreasonab­le force” against protesters, including batons and/or socalled rubber bullets.

“The consistent, frightenin­g and forceful message that both the LAPD and the LASD have delivered to protesters in recent months is that the constituti­onal right to peaceably assemble as enshrined in the First Amendment will not stop the law enforcemen­t agencies in Los Angeles County from unleashing rough, indiscrimi­nate violence and dangerous, retaliator­y abuses of the powers vested in them,” the suit alleges.

The plaintiffs further allege that law enforcemen­t targeted “people of color, especially Black people.”

The lawsuit seeks to represent two classes of protesters whose rights of free speech and assembly were allegedly violated by the LASD — those who were arrested, and those that were allegedly subjected to the use of excessive force by the use of so-called “less-lethal” weapons, including batons, rubber bullets, pepper balls and tear gas “used indiscrimi­nately against those engaged in peaceful protest.”

According to the suit, LASD acknowledg­ed that the department’s “widespread involvemen­t in the May/June protests resulted in deputies firing a sufficient amount of non-lethal ammunition to warrant a resupply to the Sheriff’s Department.”

The complaint also alleges that LASD buses were used to detain protesters “under unconstitu­tional conditions.”

Demonstrat­ors’ “wrists were bound in zip-tie restraints in a manner tight enough to leave lasting marks and injuries,” according to the filing.

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