Chicago Sun-Times

Protesters: Where did cops take our pals?

- BY ART GOLAB Staff Reporter/agolab@suntimes.com Stefano Esposito and Diana Novak

Some NATO protesters claimed police broke into a Bridgeport apartment building Wednesday night without a warrant, arrested as many as eight people and held them in an undisclose­d location.

Protesters’ legal teams said they tracked the arrested protesters Thursday to the police department’s organized crime division headquarte­rs in an old warehouse near Kedzie and Fillmore, but that for most of the day, police refused to even acknowledg­e that the raid had taken place.

“Basically they were disappeare­d for nearly 24 hours,” said Kris Hermes, a spokesman for the National Lawyers Guild, which is representi­ng the protesters. “We have been searching all morning and afternoon. . . . We’ve been checking in with police officials at the highest levels; they have consistent­ly refused give us informatio­n.”

He added that police showed up four hours after the arrests with a search warrant that didn’t appear to have been signed by a judge and confiscate­d beer-making equipment and a cellphone.

Around 6 p.m. police notified their attorneys that two people were in custody, Hermes said.

A police spokesman said the department had no comment.

Zoe Sigman, a resident of one of the raided apartments, said she did not go home last night after she found out that her building, near 33rd and Morgan, was surrounded by police.

“I’d like to stress that we have done nothing wrong,” Sigman said. “We have been planning to protest NATO and there is nothing illegal about expressing our feelings about a war machine. Now we’re being treated as mere criminals. As if we’re part an organized crime that they’re trying to take down. Who knows what they’re going to pin on us. We’re terrified.”

William Vassilakis, 25, of Chicago, lives in and leases one of the raided apartments. “Nothing that we’ve done is criminal. There was no warrant. We have been terrorized in an extreme way,” he said.

In response to the alleged arrests, more than 50 protesters marched Thursday night from Wellington United Church of Christ in Lake View through residentia­l streets of Lake View and Lincoln Park.

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 ?? | ART GOLAB~SUN-TIMES ?? William Vassilakis lives in one of the apartments raided by police.
| ART GOLAB~SUN-TIMES William Vassilakis lives in one of the apartments raided by police.

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