-Caveat Lector-

-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [Activist_List] Protests at Boston Corporate-Run "Debates"
Date: Wed, 4 Oct 2000 08:54:02 -0400
From: "Jay Moore" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: "Activist Mailing List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <Undisclosed-Recipient:@sunshine.hcr.net;>

Activist Mailing List - http://activist.cjb.net

Protesters take post-debate stage
By Raphael Lewis and Andy Dabilis, Boston Globe Staff, 10/4/2000


Hundreds of protesters confronted State Police after last night's
presidential debate in Dorchester, bursting through barricades and blocking
roads as troopers in riot gear fought back with pepper spray and billy
clubs.

At least 16 of the estimated 4,000 to 5,000 demonstrators who converged on
the University of Massachusetts-Boston campus were arrested, State Police
said, although only about 1,200 of them took part in the post-debate
protests.

Soon after the debate ended at 10:30 p.m., a large group of protesters
overturned a barricade and gathered on University Drive within sight of the
debate venue, hurling fences into the roadway, State Police said.

The protesters - mostly supporters of Green Party candidate Ralph Nader, who
was not allowed to participate in the debate - sat in the road, locked arms,
and chanted as mounted State Troopers rode through the group, attempting to
disperse them. Meanwhile, other troopers pleaded with the crowd to move off
the roadway and allow about two dozen buses through to pick up those in the
news media and the audience.

Soon afterward, the police abandoned their pleas, dragging at least 10
protesters over barriers and spraying others with pepper sray. Some officers
also yanked metal barriers over protesters lying on the ground. At that
point, some protesters began hurling stones, and one jumped onto a parked
van and tore off the windshield wipers, flinging them toward the officers.

By 11:30, about 200 protesters remained, and State Police were encouraging a
peaceful end to their demonstration, saying that all attendees had left
UMass.

At 11:35, protesters started huddling in front of police officers,
discussing whether they should demand the release of arrested protesters
before heading home.

After 15 minutes of strategizing among protest leaders, Sean Nelson, 19, a
Boston University student, secured officers' assurance that protesters would
be released by 6 a.m. today, as long as they had no outstanding warrants.
The protesters then dispersed.

The scene was in stark contrast to the circus-like atmosphere that prevailed
earlier yesterday, as costumed demonstrators and placard-waving protesters
made their way peacefully to the campus.

But soon after sundown, the trouble started. Prior to the debate, some of
the arrests followed fistfights between rival political camps, State Police
said.

Then, still more were arrested when groups of demonstrators tried, and
occasionally succeeded, in knocking down barricades near the debate site,
prompting State Police to pull out nightsticks and make arrests.

''They're shouting. I just saw another arrest made; it was someone trying to
reach a barrier,'' State Police Captain Robert Bird said by telephone during
one of the night's more volatile moments. ''It's as orderly as several
thousand people behind a fence who don't want to be can be.''

Dominic Chavez, a Globe photographer covering the event, was injured when a
demonstrator allegedly slammed him in the back with a camera. He was treated
at Boston Medical Center. A few others were treated at the scene. A state
trooper and his horse were also injured in scuffles with protesters.

One demonstrator, identified as Jonas Pool, 23, of Iowa, who said he
traveled to Boston to support Nader, was standing in front of the barricade
holding his hand aloft in a peace sign when several police officers tried to
take him into custody.

Pool turned toward the crowd, which grabbed him, and a brief tug of war
ensued. The crowd succeeded in pulling him back behind the barricade.

A short while later, about two dozen people stepped over the barricades and
toward a squadron of State Police in riot gear, while holding their hands
aloft in a peace sign.

For several minutes, it was a peaceful standoff. Then suddenly, the police
rushed the protesters, swinging batons and spraying pepper spray into the
crowd, forcing them behind the barricades. About 200 police nearby in riot
gear mobilized and moved toward the crowd, which then backed off.

The tensions followed an incident-free day marked by nothing more severe
than traffic jams.

At 5:30 p.m., the height of the rush hour, the Southeast Expressway,
normally a clogged artery, was virtually deserted heading into the city.
Apparently, all the warnings of driving chaos did not fall on deaf ears.

Not that all the hubbub didn't turn a few rubber necks as the day
progressed. A contingent of motorcycle-riding troopers parked on the
shoulder of Interstate 93 near South Bay shopping center attracted plenty of
attention.

Three times, the troopers went from sideshow to main attraction, as they
halted traffic on the expressway to allow unobstructed rides for the
candidates' motorcades.

Near the University of Massachusetts at Boston campus, where debate
preparations spiced up the normally placid landscape, many a driver slowed
to gawk at the colorful contingent of protesters ambling down Morrissey
Boulevard from the Red Line T stop.

''Their sheer numbers are disrupting traffic a little bit because they're
spilling into Morrissey Boulevard,'' said Bird. ''But it's really been
relatively quiet.''

Adding to the mix, about 7,000 people were converging on the Bayside Expo
Center yesterday for Powersystems World, a computer convention planned 18
months ago - long before UMass was designated as a place for presidential
fur to fly.

''I couldn't get into my hotel room'' Monday night, said Mel Elgar, who came
to the convention from Ontario, Calif. ''They overbooked, and I didn't
guarantee with a credit card for late arrival.''

Charlie Dec, a spokesman for the convention, said his organization sent its
travel agents scrambling to secure entire blocks of hotel rooms when UMass
was chosen as a debate site.

''We haven't turned anybody away because of hotel rooms,'' Dec said, ''but
it wasn't easy.''

Those who left their cars at the curb with hopes of securing a taxi were in
for a rude awakening.

''Every single cab except the ones that are broken down or have to get
inspected is on the road,'' said Helen Kates, a longtime dispatcher for the
Independent Taxi Operators Association.


Marcella Bombardieri, Patrick Healy, and Beth Daley of the Globe Staff
contributed to this report.


This story ran on page B1 of the Boston Globe on 10/4/2000.
© Copyright 2000 Globe Newspaper Company.


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