-Caveat Lector-

http://www.apbnews.com/newscenter/breakingnews/1999/12/07/stamper1207_01.html
                         Seattle Police Chief Quits After WTO
                         Violence
                         Blames Himself for Lack of Officers, Supplies

                         Dec. 7, 1999

                                              SEATTLE (AP) -- The city's
police chief
                                              announced his resignation
in the wake of
                                              violent, fiery protests
that marred the World
                                              Trade Organization's
conference here last
                                              week.

                                              Chief Norm Stamper, 54,
revealed the decision
                                              in a letter given to Mayor
Paul Schell over the
                                              weekend and in an
interview published in
                                              today's Seattle
Post-Intelligencer.

                         The chief said he decided last month that he
would retire in January, but
                         moved up the announcement because of the WTO
protests. His resignation
                         will take effect in March.

                         "I certainly do accept full responsibility that
our officers did not get all the
                         support they needed and deserve," Stamper said
of the protests. "As the
                         chief, it's fundamentally important for people
to understand that we knew
                         this was going to be big. We knew that there
was a potential for violence
                         and destructive behavior."

                         Protests sparked widespread vandalism

                         Seattle still is reeling from the WTO protests,
during which thousands of
                         people took to the streets to rally for human
rights, labor, the environment
                         and other concerns.

                         There was widespread vandalism and police used
tear gas and fired rubber
                         bullets on people during violent protests. The
National Guard was deployed,
                         a curfew was put in place and more than 500
people were arrested.

                         No serious injuries resulted, but downtown
merchants have reported more
                         than $2 million in property damage and $17
million in lost retail sales.

                         King County Sheriff David Reichert and some
Seattle police officers openly
                         blamed Stamper and Schell for the chaos.

                         Innocent swept up in arrests

                         Police critics said tear gas and rubber bullets
                         were fired indiscriminately and that innocent
                         workers, shoppers and residents were swept
                         up in the arrest of more than 500 people late
                         Tuesday and Wednesday.

                         Some officers said the chief's failure to
                         anticipate violence left their ranks so thin
and
                         supplies of tear gas and pepper spray so
                         limited that they could not maintain order.
                         Many said they spent nearly 20 exhausting
                         hours on the front lines without food or backup
                         support.

                         Stamper's resignation follows nearly nine
                         months of turmoil over the integrity of the
                         police department's internal investigations
                         division -- the latest in a series of episodes
                         that strained relations between the chief and
                         the city's 1,200 uniformed officers during his
                         nearly six-year tenure.

                         Rocked by corruption accusations

                         Since March, the department has been rocked
                         by corruption accusations against two
                         prominent homicide detectives.

                         Stamper was lauded by supporters as a
                         stalwart advocate of community policing who
                         landed millions of dollars in federal funds for
                         the effort.

                         Barely six months into the job, he riled many
in the ranks by wearing his
                         uniform in a gay-pride parade while barring
officers from marching in uniform
                         at a March for Jesus the same weekend.

                         Before coming to Seattle, he was the executive
assistant police chief in
                         San Diego.



http://www.apbnews.com/newscenter/breakingnews/1999/12/07/stamper1207_01.html

Bard

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