Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Why did federal police square off with abortion rights protesters in L.A. streets?

- Tribune News Service Los Angeles Times

An abortion rights protest had been going on peacefully for hours in downtown Los Angeles on Tuesday when a “help call” suddenly went out over police radios about 9 p.m.

The SOS didn’t come from Los Angeles police officers, but a small group of federal officers with the Department of Homeland Security. They claimed, according to a statement by the LAPD, that they had come “under attack” from protesters while in their patrol cars near the intersecti­on of 5th and

Hill streets — about a half-mile away from the federal courthouse where the protest had begun and where federal officers have jurisdicti­on.

Video showed protesters banging on the officers’ cars and taunting them in a circle, and the officers shoving protesters and screaming at them to

“back up.”

Some witnesses have accused the officers on social media of instigatin­g the confrontat­ion by straying beyond the courthouse, driving into the crowd and using aggressive crowd control measures. Regardless, it ratcheted up tensions between law enforcemen­t and protesters at what until then had been an orderly demonstrat­ion over a draft Supreme Court opinion that, if adopted, would undercut abortion rights nationwide.

The scene also raised questions as to why federal police officers were squaring off with street protesters in L.A. — especially so many blocks from the courthouse.

“I am confused as to why federal agents were out in Los Angeles doing crowd control during last night’s abortion rights protest?” activist and City Council candidate Albert Corado tweeted Wednesday, in response to a video of the encounter that has been viewed 3.5 million times.

A spokesman for the Federal Protective Service, an arm of Homeland Security to which the federal officers are assigned, referred questions from The Times to the main DHS public affairs office. In a statement Thursday, that office said DHS “strives every day to protect Americans’ freedom of speech and other fundamenta­l rights,” and that the FPS “is conducting a review of this incident and the actions of any DHS personnel involved.”

In its own statement, the LAPD said the department had not requested assistance from Federal Protective Service during the protests and that its officers had not been working in conjunctio­n with the federal officers who called for help.

The incident is the latest in recent years in which federal agents have stepped into and seemingly exacerbate­d tensions at protests in U.S. cities, where their role and legitimacy in enforcing laws are on shaky legal ground, according to legal scholars.

Activists and city officials have called out the presence of federal authoritie­s at protests in Portland, Ore., Seattle and Washington, D.C. In one altercatio­n that drew fierce condemnati­on from elected officials and others, federal agents used tear gas and other forceful measures to clear racial justice protesters and members of the media from Lafayette Park near the White House in 2020, as then-president Trump was staging a heavily criticized photo shoot at a nearby church.

Legal experts said Tuesday’s incident raised serious questions.

“What was the justificat­ion? What was the need for federal law enforcemen­t officers to be deployed in that instance, where there appeared to be no threat to the federal courthouse?” said Jimmy Gurulé, a University of Notre Dame law professor and former undersecre­tary of enforcemen­t at the

U.S. Department of the Treasury, where he oversaw various federal law enforcemen­t agencies.

“It’s a very fundamenta­l and reasonable question, and if they can’t answer that question, then that raises some serious questions as to whether they were there to maintain the peace or to instigate.”

For part of Tuesday, federal officers were protecting the federal courthouse in the 300 block of W. First Street downtown, where protesters had gathered to denounce the draft Supreme Court opinion.

About 7:30 p.m., protesters moved from the courthouse toward Pershing Square — a shift LAPD officials said they discussed in advance with organizers of the protest and helped to facilitate by blocking traffic. Speeches were given in both locations.

Organizers declared the march over about 8:30 p.m., and the crowd began dispersing. Up until that point, there had been “no incidents of note,” the LAPD said.

The FPS officers were at the intersecti­on of 5th and Hill streets by 8:40 p.m., when dozens of protesters were departing the park and spilling into the street. Some began banging on the hoods and trunks of the FPS officers’ cars.

Videos of the scene posted to social media, as well as statements from the LAPD and witnesses, show that LAPD officers took a more forceful stance against protesters after the FPS officers squared off with protesters. That, in turn, quickly escalated tensions further as protesters jeered at and taunted the officers and the officers screamed back, pushed people and hit them with their batons.

Videos posted online by Vishal Singh, who regularly chronicles protests in L.A., and other activists showed an FPS officer driving through a crowd of protesters into the intersecti­on with the car’s sirens blaring. Another FPS officer then stepped out of a second patrol car in the intersecti­on with his baton drawn.

“Back up,” the FPS officer said to protesters, a few dozen of whom can be seen in the video. The officer can then be seen shoving a protester backward after the person spoke to him.

“Back off,” the officer said. “Don’t do that, you understand me?”

More protesters moved forward at that point, yelling at the officer to back up.

Another video showed a different FPS officer moving through the same crowd, shoving people along the way to reach the side of the first officer and a few others, who had retreated a short distance toward a Metro bus in the street.

LAPD officers soon arrived in large numbers and a LAPD commander at the scene quickly declared the gathering unlawful. People were ordered to disperse and LAPD officers formed skirmish lines and began pushing through protesters to clear the street.

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