Baltimore Sun

Policing tactics vary from city to city amid protests

Retreat or deploy? How cops respond in riots on display

- By Stefanie Dazio and Denise Lavoie

LOS ANGELES — On two consecutiv­e nights of unruly protests against police brutality, officers retreated from their posts in some cities, while in others, they deployed batons, flash-bang grenades and tear gas to quell the unrest.

The range of responses exacerbate­d tensions with the protesters in several locations and brought global attention to the tactics police use during riots as they try to find a balance between keeping the peace and protecting the safety of officers and the public.

The protests came in the wake of George Floyd’s death in Minneapoli­s after a white police officer pressed a knee into the 46-year-old black man’s neck for more than eight minutes on Memorial Day. Floyd was handcuffed as Officer Derek Chauvin pushed his face into the pavement amid his pleas for help.

Tensions reached a crescendo late in the week Friday night as protests erupted in cities across America.

On their smart phones, social media feeds and TVs, viewers saw the extremes in tactics play out, even as the majority of cops nationwide tried to keep the peace.

In Minneapoli­s, leaders decided to evacuate a police precinct Thursday and surrender it to protesters who set it on fire.

Protesters also broke into the police headquarte­rs Friday in Portland, Oregon, and ignited a fire.

In New York, officers used batons and shoved protesters down as they took people into custody and cleared the streets. One video showed an officer slam a woman to the ground as he walked past her in the street.

On Sunday, Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms said two police officers have been fired and three placed on desk duty pending review over excessive use of force during a protest Saturday.

Bottoms said she and police Chief Erika Shields made the decision after reviewing body-camera footage. It shows officers in riot gear and gas masks surroundin­g a car driven by a man with a woman in the passenger seat. The officers pull the woman out and appear to use a stun gun on the man. They use zip-tie handcuffs on the woman on the ground.

Minneapoli­s police and Mayor Jacob Frey have been criticized for the noticeably non-confrontat­ional strategy Thursday in handling the protests after Floyd’s death.

After being fired, Chauvin was arrested Friday and charged with third-degree murder and second-degree manslaught­er.

To some, the act of protesters taking over the evacuated Minneapoli­s precinct amid fires could stoke further flames.

“You’ve got to defend that,” said former Los Angeles Police Deputy Chief Michael Downing. “That’s your command operation. Symbolical­ly, it looks bad if you have to give that up.”

Downing witnessed the Los Angeles riots firsthand in 1992 following the acquittal of four officers accused of beating black motorist Rodney King.

In Los Angeles, the center of the uprising was an intersecti­on, Florence and Normandie avenues, and the violence spiraled into five days of riots and fires. More than 60 people died, including 10 fatally shot by law enforcemen­t.

In 1992, then-Lt. Downing would typically oversee that intersecti­on, but he was on vacation and a different lieutenant was in charge.

The lieutenant made a decision: He ordered his officers to abandon the intersecti­on. An hour later, a truck driver was pulled from his vehicle and brutally beaten by rioters.

“I think that sent a signal to the rest of the city,” said Downing.

“When you have that coupled with political leadership saying ‘show your anger, go to the streets’ it was kind of like permission to go out and misbehave and be violent,” he said.

Nearly 30 years later, police officers around the country were confronted with an eerily similar dilemma, even as National Guard troops arrived in some cities.

The presence of armed National Guard troops in Minneapoli­s and elsewhere brings back memories of the civil rights and anti-war protests of the 1960s and ’70s, but they are only there as a support to local law enforcemen­t and do not have the authority to make arrests.

They can use their weapons in “self defense” but are trained in less lethal crowd control tactics that attempt to deescalate tensions, unlike the combat techniques that have largely been abandoned since the Kent State University shootings in Ohio in 1970 left four students dead.

Alex Vitale, a sociology professor at Brooklyn College, said that when deciding how to manage protests, police and political leaders look for ways to facilitate “legitimate outpouring­s of anger” while trying to limit the likelihood of injury and property destructio­n. But he said the difficulty is trying to strike that balance.

“The crisis of police legitimacy has become so great that then to use the police to manage the situation just enflames the problem,” he said.

 ?? WONG MAYE-E/AP ?? Police detain protesters in front of Trump Tower at a weekend rally in New York City. Demonstrat­ors took to the streets in a number of cities to protest the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.
WONG MAYE-E/AP Police detain protesters in front of Trump Tower at a weekend rally in New York City. Demonstrat­ors took to the streets in a number of cities to protest the death of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States