The Mercury News Weekend

Oil pipeline protesters evicted

Six-hour operation for police, National Guard in North Dakota

- By James MacPherson and Black Nicholson

CANNON BALL, N.D. — Law enforcemen­t officers in riot gear and firing bean bags and pepper spray evicted protesters Thursday from private land in the path of the Dakota Access oil pipeline, dramatical­ly escalating a dispute over Native American rights and the project’s environmen­tal impact that has simmered for months.

In an operation that took nearly six hours, hundreds of armed state and local police and National Guard — some on foot and others in trucks, military Humvees and buses — pushed past burning barricades to slowly envelop the camp.

No serious injuries were reported, though one man was hurt and received treatment from a medic.

Charges are pending Thursday against a woman who allegedly fired three shots at law officers during the operation.

State Emergency Services spokeswoma­n Cecily Fong says the woman was being placed under arrest when she pulled out a .38caliber pistol and fired three times, narrowly missing a sheriff’s deputy. Officers did not return fire.

More than a dozen protesters who refused to leave were arrested and taken to the Morton County Jail, Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier said.

He said that the camp had been cleared by nightfall although police were still dealing with protesters on the perimeter. Though officials earlier said they planned to turn the site over to private security, Kirchmeier said police would stay for now.

“We’re not leaving the area,” Kirchmeier said. “We are just going to make sure that we maintain a presence in the area so the roadway stays open, and to keep individual­s from camping on private land.”

Opponents of the pipeline over the weekend set up camp on private land owned by Texas-based Energy Transfer Partners, which is working to complete the 1,200-mile pipeline to carry oil from western North Dakota to Illinois. The route skirts the Standing Rock Reservatio­n and the tribe says it could endanger water supplies and disturb cultural sites. The state of North Dakota says no sensitive cultural sites have been found in the area.

The tribe has gone to court to challenge the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ decision granting permits at more than 200 water crossings. A federal judge in September denied their request to block constructi­on, but three federal agencies stepped in to order constructi­on to halt on Corps-owned land around Lake Oahe, a wide spot of the Missouri River, while the Corps reviewed its decision-making.

Thursday’s operation to push out the protesters began a day after they had refused to leave voluntaril­y. Law enforcemen­t repeatedly asked protesters to retreat, at one point using a high-pitched whistle they said was intended to “control and disperse” protesters.

The camp cleared on Thursday is located just to the north of a more permanent and larger encampment on federally owned land which has been the main staging area for hundreds of protesters, including Native Americans from across North America, environmen­talists and some celebritie­s.

Many protesters openly defied the officers, while others took part in prayer circles and burned sage.

Cody Hall, a spokesman for the protesters, vowed a new camp would be built elsewhere in the pipeline’s path, but on federal land.

 ?? MIKE MCCLEARY/THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE VIAASSOCIA­TED PRESS ?? Tires burn as armed soldiers and law enforcemen­t officers stand in formation Thursday to force Dakota Access pipeline protesters off private land where they had camped to block constructi­on.
MIKE MCCLEARY/THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE VIAASSOCIA­TED PRESS Tires burn as armed soldiers and law enforcemen­t officers stand in formation Thursday to force Dakota Access pipeline protesters off private land where they had camped to block constructi­on.

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