Los Angeles Times

Bid to bar police batons, projectile­s fails

Black Lives Matter and others sought to block use pending suit over LAPD tactics.

- By Kevin Rector

A federal judge has denied a request from Black Lives Matter-Los Angeles and other litigants that Los Angeles police be precluded from using batons and tactical projectile­s on protesters pending the outcome of a lawsuit over the tactics.

U.S. Dist. Judge Conseulo

B. Marshall ruled in an opinion dated Tuesday that the activists and protesters suing the LAPD did not demonstrat­e, as required, that they would be “likely to suffer irreparabl­e harm” without the temporary restrainin­g order they sought.

Although those suing “proffer evidence that they previously suffered irreparabl­e harm while protesting and intend to continue those activities, the irreparabl­e harm [they] allege rests on the assumption that more protests will lead to more constituti­onal violations,” Marshall wrote.

The city and LAPD, however, “offered undisputed evidence that protests have continued after June 3, 2020, but no mass arrests or use of kinetic projectile­s and batons has occurred, which tends to dispel” the protesters’ theory, Marshall wrote.

Black Lives Matter-Los Angeles joined a coalition of other protesters and partners, including the local chapter of the National Lawyers Guild and the Los Angeles Community Action Network, in suing the LAPD for its protest tactics last month. They alleged police brutally suppressed legitimate protests using excessive force, seriously injuring many protesters and subjecting others to inhumane and unlawful detentions.

Thousands of people were arrested over the course of six nights in late May and early June amid protests and curfews — mirrored nationwide — over police killings of Black people, including George Floyd in Minneapoli­s.

The activists said they needed a restrainin­g order to prevent the LAPD from using similar tactics at on

going protests. They argued the threat of such tactics unfairly discourage­d people from exercising their rights to free speech and assembly.

“The LAPD has used socalled rubber bullets and batons indiscrimi­nately to disrupt and disperse protesters with many serious injuries resulting,” attorney Paul Hoffman wrote on behalf of those suing the LAPD. “The images of baton-wielding LAPD officers and protesters’ injuries unacceptab­ly increase the cost of public participat­ion in these important exercises of First Amendment rights.”

City attorneys had called the request “unwarrante­d and overbroad,” citing subsequent protests that occurred without police using any force against protesters.

Carol Sobel, an attorney for the protesters, says Marshall’s

ruling rejects the idea that police must be prevented from using such tactics and weapons on an emergency basis but does not end the effort to halt their use moving forward. A more permanent end to such tactics is a goal of the class-action lawsuit, she said, and could still be achieved through a different legal mechanism — an injunction.

“Nothing prevents us from moving for a preliminar­y injunction. Nothing prevents us from moving for a permanent injunction,” Sobel said. “And that is what we are going to do.”

 ?? Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times ?? A REQUEST by Black Lives Matter-Los Angeles and other litigants to ban the use of batons and kinetic projectile­s on protesters was denied Tuesday by a judge.
Wally Skalij Los Angeles Times A REQUEST by Black Lives Matter-Los Angeles and other litigants to ban the use of batons and kinetic projectile­s on protesters was denied Tuesday by a judge.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States