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Week of January 23 - 29, 2002
New York Cops Vow to Crush Violent Protest at World Economic Forum
Law of the Fist
by Richard Esposito

een through the eyes of New York cops, the anti-globalization
movement looks like one bloody line of terror and mayhem, stretching
back to the Seattle riots of 1999 and heading right at them. If the
protesters pouring into the city for the World Economic Forum at
month's end have plans for creating more scenes of violence and
destruction, the NYPD says they can just think again.

"If there are demonstrations, they will certainly be allowed to go
forward if they are peaceful. If they are disruptive and they break
the law, we will take action," says Police Commissioner Raymond
Kelly. "We are confident. We are prepared." He and the other brass
say they know full well how ugly things can get:

Melbourne, 2000�Armed with cellular phones, grid maps of the city, noxious chemicals, 
urine, and a plan formulated on the Internet, violent anti-globalization protesters 
succeeded in halting the opening of the World Econo
mic Forum.
Philadelphia, 2000�Burned-out police cars, stomped and key-scratched corporate "black 
cars," and finger-pointing at police became the signs of success for violent 
anarchists at the Republican National Convention.
Genoa, 2001�A summit of the G-8 ended with pools of blood inside a school where 
nonviolent union protesters took refuge from cops and with headlines of "Ragazzo 
Morto" dramatically mourning a young anarchist slain in a st
reet battle by carabinieri who then ran him over.
Seattle, 1999�"Speechless in Seattle" is a fair summary of just how startled law 
enforcement officials were by the out-of-control demonstrations there during a World 
Trade Organization meeting. Powerful water cannons, sma
shed shop windows, and baton-bashed protesters all left a powerful retinal memory on 
world consciousness.

Now these same protesters are expected in New York for the economic forum, which runs 
from January 31 to February 4 at the Waldorf-Astoria hotel. Kelly and company expect 
some 200 jet-setting troublemakers to infiltrate l
aw-abiding activists, with the goal of damaging property, hindering access to the 
meetings, and garnering media attention for their anti-globalization agenda. They'll 
be met with a disciplined, experienced, blue-collar di
vision of uniformed police, two battalions of detectives, three more of Secret Service 
and diplomatic security service operatives, and two more of FBI agents. The goal is to 
ensure that "Fortress Waldorf" is a safe enviro
nment for the 3000 attendees and that New York City is not the subject of any form of 
further violence. By all accounts, police will have their hands full with the 
sophisticated techniques of these determined anarchists.

Taking their cue from demonstrations in other cities, the NYPD practices mass arrests.
(photo: Jake Price)
In the post-9-11 world of law enforcement, cops see these brick throwers and car 
burners as almost Al Qaeda-like, down to their transnational wandering, their leaders' 
wealthy backgrounds, and their fundamentalist message
. The anti-globalization movement objects to the unfettered migration of capital in 
search of the best deal on labor, and holds the not-unreasonable paranoia of a global 
corporate oligarchy.

Of course, that same migrating capital�as with arms maker Krupp, explosives king 
Nobel, and yellow-journalism baron Hearst�is what fuels its yang. By 1996, one of the 
movement's funding organizations had banked more than
$34 million to fuel its agenda, according to Internet versions of a Left Business 
Observer essay. The publication goes on to report that the founder of this group has 
an Ivy League M.B.A., a track record at the U.S. Agenc
y for International Development, and money provided by well-heeled parents from the 
retail trade.

None of this wins the favor of the blue-collar former Philadelphia police commissioner 
John Timoney. "There is a core group of anti-capitalists who throw noxious substances, 
toss red liquid at cops, turn over cars, and in
terfere with the rights of peaceful demonstrators," he says.

Dublin-born and blunt as a spade, Timoney came to New York as a teenager with a blue 
work shirt and not much else. "I came here to teach you people a lesson," he says, not 
totally in jest.

When the streets of Philly flared during the 2000 GOP convention, Timoney adopted a 
much criticized policy of arresting demonstrators by the hundreds, sometimes slapping 
them with $1 million bail for charges that were lat
er radically reduced or dropped altogether. The strategy led to accusations of 
jailhouse brutality and suppression of lawful protest, but in the end, the violence 
was contained, if not quelled.

With a bare trace of brogue and a ruddy complexion, Timoney embodies the flip side of 
globalization�the migration of labor as it seeks a better life. As CEO of Beau Dietl 
Associates, a private security firm, the Philly co
mmissioner is back to protect the kings and queens of capital at the Waldorf summit.

"Obviously, these violent anarchists strike at what they think are the symbols of 
capitalism," says Timoney. "So they scratch black cars and cost the poor drivers a 
day's pay."



Global anti-globalization protesters, meet globo cops: John Timoney, New York police 
commissioner Ray Kelly, Kroll bioterror expert Jerome Hauer, Madison Square Garden GM 
Michael Julian, Secret Service special-agent-in- c
harge Steve Carey, Diplomatic Security Service regional boss Patricia Kelly, Waldorf 
security chief Sal Caccavale. These are just a few of the resources New York has drawn 
upon.
Thick Blue line: Cops face a mock protest at Shea stadium.
(photo: Jake Price)
Timoney was bloodied in Philadelphia; Hauer was side by side with the cops in 
Melbourne; Ray Kelly, well, Ray Kelly led the marine contingent in Haiti, ran U.S. 
Customs, and has returned for a second tour of duty as New Y
ork's police commissioner. They embody the blue-collared, multi-ethnic centurions who 
will keep order at the Waldorf when the conference begins.

Last Thursday, in the parking lot of Shea Stadium, many of those cops were on hand for 
a media show-and-tell of the NYPD's tactical-response ability. "Operation Decorum at 
the Forum," it was dubbed on the covers of briefi
ng books held by senior police officials. The drills featured blue and white 
helicopters jug-jugging smoothly to landings on the edge of mock demonstrations. 
Squads of chestnut horses guided by the yellow-striped navy leg
gings of their mounted unit riders took up position to block more protesters from 
joining. Wedges of blue behind riot helmets poked their nightsticks forward, shouting 
"Move, move" in unison with each half-step.

This is not CHiPS, buddy�this is New York. Our centurions don't inspire fear, 
resembling in their bunched and belted tunics a Busby Berkeley version of a Fats 
nightmare on the eve of a big eight-ball tournament. But they
do mean business.

As a point of pride, the officers and agents the Voice spoke to make clear they are in 
no mood for any blots on New York, not with the city still finding its legs after 
September 11. They also make clear that if these rag
ing hordes want to do something for labor, they might consider protesting in favor of 
a pay raise for New York's finest. Four months after crawling out of the World Trade 
Center, cops here still make about 22 percent less
 than their counterparts who patrol leafy Long Island villages such as Locust Valley, 
where crime is generally limited to speeding and unleashed dogs.

There were a few details jarringly wrong about the protesters, played by young cadets 
out of the New York City Police Academy who chanted "No justice, no peace" as they 
linked arms in locked boxes and sat down demanding t
o be arrested. Most were nonwhite. Most were not yet college graduates. They looked 
more likely to have a parent who was a partner in a bodega or a newsstand than an 
accounting firm.

"No justice, no peace, no justice, no peace," they chanted as cops practiced the art 
of freeing arms locked by carabiners from the finest outdoor-supply stores. On hand 
were Emergency Service Squad vans and imposing chrom
ed trucks filled with riot shields and helmets, nonlethal Tasers, very lethal Colt 
M-4's, Beretta 9mm's, and scoped Ruger varmint guns.

Behind the trucks and vans and horses and helicopters sat other vans marked 
"Communications," "Temporary Headquarters," "Queens North Task Force," "Queens South 
Task Force." These communications and tactical command posts
 bristled with a forest of aerials. Inside, ranking chiefs and inspectors could 
monitor the flow of moving demonstrations and cope with ruses put on by protesters to 
lure cops away from targets and then rush unprotected d
oors. Wary of brutality by their own, the commanders could monitor video footage shot 
by the Tactical Assistance and Response Unit.
Arms and the men: But they promise not to squelch peaceful dissent . . .
(photo: Jake Price)
The demonstration capped two weeks of twice-a-day preparation drills. In addition to 
the overwhelming uniformed presence on the streets, the Eighth Floor Operational 
command at One Police Plaza will be at full tilt, as wi
ll the FBI command center at 26 Federal Plaza. The Office of Emergency Management's HQ 
will be on alert for bioterrorism. Around the Waldorf, a frozen zone of roughly five 
blocks will inconvenience New Yorkers, but will f
urther protect the stately hotel.

"It will be Fortress Waldorf," says Timoney. He notes the protesters are skilled at 
posing as delegates, hotel workers, and maintenance workers� whatever it takes to 
infiltrate, agitate, and disrupt. They face a police fo
rce and its federal backfield that have weathered Crown Heights, a million-plus 
millennium celebration, a World Series in the midst of an anthrax scare, a 
terror-threatened New Year's Eve, and 600-plus demonstrations a ye
ar that are shrugged off as almost routine.

"You could say we practice every day," says Police Commissioner Kelly. "We are 
disciplined. Confident. The World Economic Forum will go smoothly. We do not 
anticipate any trouble." But if it comes, Kelly's troops are read
y.

"Before we even planned this meeting we asked then mayor Giuliani and his police 
commissioner if the city could handle it. 'Yes, we can handle it,' they told us," says 
Charles McLean, spokesman for the forum, which moved
to New York to lend economic support to the staggered city.

According to law enforcement sources, more than 600 detectives will be assigned to 
diplomatic protection, while hundreds of others will work with FBI and other federal 
colleagues in monitoring intelligence reports that mi
ght indicate terrorists are seeking to capitalize on any chaos. So far, there are no 
reports of that kind, federal and city law enforcement officials say.

Operating under the guidelines of the Handschuh agreement, a memorandum of 
understanding limiting political surveillance, the New York City police have also 
developed intelligence on potentially violent protesters. Meanwh
ile, they're taking care to avoid doing anything that might be construed as 
interfering with the right to free speech for those with no history of lawbreaking. 
"That is the tightrope we walk, as we should," Timoney says.


It was Timoney who during the 1992 Democratic National Convention in New York selected 
Michael Julian to head the initiative to allow for peaceful protest while preserving 
order in the city and the rights of the conventio
neers. "Mike is the guy we know who cares the most about these rights," he says.

Julian�"a new-age wheel" in police parlance�has since gone on to the executive suite 
of Madison Square Garden. While he is reluctant to talk now, back then he said, "We 
have to give these people the place to protest, but
we don't have to give them the right to interfere with others, do we?" So he erected 
"pens" that gave protesters a view of the entrance to the convention but kept them far 
enough away to allow delegates free entrance and
egress.

Much the same strategy will be in effect outside the Waldorf. The major difference 
from the point of view of the intelligence and security services is the presence of as 
many as 70 international leaders.

"Basically, Secret Service will provide 24-7 protection for each head of state and 
their accompanying spouse," says Steve Carey, special agent in charge for this region. 
In addition to the plainclothes members, officers f
rom the heavy-weapons-trained uniformed Secret Service division will also be on hand. 
Carey's colleague Patricia Kelly, of the State Department Diplomatic Security Service, 
provides similar security for ministers and othe
r foreign dignitaries. She points out that no matter how good a job the federal agents 
do, the bulk of the responsibility will fall on Ray Kelly's NYPD.

"Our concern is very high," she says, "but we have a very strong team and the New York 
City Police are exceptional at what they do."

Now the world will see whether they can walk that line between protection and 
repression, whether they can hold back anarchists who have prevailed elsewhere, and 
whether Ray Kelly is prepared enough to keep order in New Y
ork without getting his own forces spanked.



Related story:

"A Field Guide to Anti-WEF Protest in New York City" by Ariston-
Lizabeth Anderson
http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0204/anderson.php

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