Four People were arrested today, in New Orleans, for protesting a meeting of the American Petroleum Institute. They are being charged with criminal trespassing, despite there being no signs stating that they were not allowed, the meeting was public, when asked to leave they complied. A Louisiana state police officer manhandled several people inside and blocked their vehicle outside, keeping them from leaving, before finally identifying himself as a police officer.

Donations for bond and legal fees can be made through:
https://www.wepay.com/donations/ots-jail-support

Livestreams of the arrests can be found here:
http://bambuser.com/v/3150179
http://bambuser.com/v/3150191
http://bambuser.com/v/3150220

 
 
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When: Tuesday, August 28 7pm

Where: Occupy The Stage 2735 C Toulouse Street, New Orleans, LA

Activists from Less Wall More Street will be visiting New Orleans August 28- 30.

Occupy The Stage invites the 99% to join activists Jen Waller and Tom Hintze for brainstorming and training as part of “Less Wall, More Street: From Mass Arrests of OWS to Mass Incarceration” – a national campaign to raise awareness and build solidarity around issues of state targeting and social control.

This training will address the scope of the growing problem of political repression directed at the 99 percent. Jen Waller and Tom Hintze’s brainstorming and training session is part of “Less Wall, More Street: From Mass Arrests of OWS to Mass Incarceration” – a national campaign to raise awareness and build solidarity around issues of state targeting and social control. These two OWS activists have been driving across the country doing legal solidarity trainings and working to raise awareness and build solidarity around issues of state targeting and social control.  Please check out their website Less Wall More Street to learn more about how they are Building Solidarity to Fight Repression from Coast to Coast.

“Less Wall, More Street” seeks to build alliances between new activists who are just recently experiencing repression, more experienced activists who have long been subject to it and members of targeted and oppressed communities – to share experiences, build understanding and work in solidarity together.

After the arrest of more than 7,000 members of Occupy Movement engaging in peaceful acts of dissent, many of which are supposedly protected by the law of the land, state sanctioned repression remains a reality of life for the 99% in the United States.

Jen and Tom will also point out things that 99 percenters can to more effectively resist repression here. That political repression is a real and serious problem for 99 percenters in New Orleans is clear enough. Under the general direction of the local Homeland Security leadership, New Orleans police have arrested scores of 99 percenters for engaging in peaceful dissent in recent years. Targets of these arrests include members of the local public housing movement, Krewe of Eris revelers, anti austerity protesters at UNO, supporters of the Avery Alexander Occupy Encampment, and an organizer of Occupy the Stage. The time is long overdue for 99 percenters to give the problem of political repression in the US that it deserves.

Come to this free and timely discussion concerning a grim political reality in Barrack Obama’s America. This event is free and open to all.

Note: This training will occur during the regularly scheduled GA. The G.A. will meet after the training.

FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CALL MIKE AT 504-587-0080 or RSVP to this  Facebook Event.


 
 

What Is Chalkupy?

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#ChalkTheWorld #ChalkTheWorld #ChalkTheWorld #ChalkTheWorld #ChalkTheWorld #ChalkTheWorld #ChalkTheWorld #ChalkTheWorld
#ChalkAllTheThings #ChalkAllTheThings #ChalkAllTheThings #ChalkAllTheThings #ChalkAllTheThings #ChalkAllTheThings

I first heard the term "Chalkupy" on March 8 when three people were arrested for drawing the Occupy Wall Street encampment with chalk at Zuccotti Park. The first occupier ever arrested at Liberty Plaza/Zuccotti was arrested and detained for writing the word “love” in chalk.

The following videos show the March 8 arrests. @Magpieluvsyou tweeted pictures of a chalkupy in Mid-City later that day.



New York-Parents for Occupy Wall Street soon issued the #M17 Call to Action: The Children’s Chalkupation in response to what they called a "...suppression of first amendment free speech..." and "...a blatant waste of time..." for NYPD.

OccupyNOLA chalkupied City Hall on March 17.


Criminal Mischief

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When Occupy The Stage traveled to Occupy DC, on the way home, we stopped at Occupy Birmingham and slept in front of Regents Bank in solidarity. In the morning, we chalkupied the sidewalk before returning to New Orleans.

In Birmingham, I was holding several pieces of sidewalk chalk when approached by Birmingham officials who asked who was responsible for the "criminal mischief. "I don't know," I replied.

That evening, I received a text message from a member of OBham. The Birmingham police were threatening to arrest Occupy Birmingham people. Eventually the NLG stepped in and nobody was arrested.

Since then, I've been following The Fresh Juice Party on Twitter and admiring their weekly community Chalkupies that take place in Oscar Grant Plaza in the former Occupy Oakland encampment.

Over the weekend, I learned that The Fresh Juice Party has released a detailed "How To Chalkupy" guide.

The timing couldn't bet better considering the recent call to action in solidarity with Occupy Los Angeles.


Los Angeles Solidarity

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On Thursday, July 12, members of Occupy The Stage watched on Ustream as LAPD attached citizens attending ArtWalk with rubber bullets because they were writing with sidewalk chalk. One arrestee wrote “I love the world” and then LAPD promptly arrested him.

The following statement on OccupyLA's website was written by an individual participant in Occupy LA but is not an official statement.  All official statements have to have consensus from Occupy LA's general assembly.


CHALK WALK BREAKING NEWS

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

LAPD PUSH, SHOOT, KICK MAN IN FACE, ARREST HIM AT ARTWALK
LAPD Arrested and Harm More Artwalkers than Occupiers at “Chalk Walk”

LOS ANGELES – Early Sunday morning videos surface online of LAPD violence at Thursday’s Downtown LA Art Walk. LAPD pushed at least one unknown man, shot him in the chest at close range, then kicked him in the face while Occupiers were trying to help him, then the cops squish his face into the ground, then the cops arrested him.

As seen in a youtube video ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WBfNg6XoRg8  skip to 4:45 ) recorded from above, the man was clearly backing up from a line of at least 30 police officers. He turns and walks onto the sidewalk when a police officer pushes him into the street and other officer shoots him in the torso at close range.

After the man stumbles to the ground, two Occupiers come to his aid but police move in, chase the occupiers off, 14 officers surround the man, while one officers kicks the man in the face, then other officers smash his face into the pavement, and violently arrested him. Another youtube video (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TUZB9blaqO0  ), shows the incident from on the ground.

Occupy activists say at least 4 people were injured with police projectiles.

One young man admitted himself to the hospital Friday after complaining of pain and numbness in his face where he said a bean bag hit him as he was walking into a 7/11 store. Pictures ( http://www.flickr.com/photos/11165691@N03/7560557338/sizes/l/in/photostream/  ) from the Thursday night show his face swollen, bruised, and bleeding.

Reportedly, occupiers took him to a safer place further from the police and called the ambulance for him but the paramedics told him it would cost over $1,000.00 to take him to the hospital and if he could not afford it he could walk or take the bus (which were mostly likely not running because of the police violence downtown).

Allegedly, after this young man got out of the ambulance, the police arrive, hand cuff him tightly, stick him in the back of a squad car and interrogate him.

Another online video ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2BLpFwT_tsM  ) shows LAPD shooting three shots into the crowd in three different directions within seconds of each other. The video also features one of the victim’s bleeding wound.

Members of Occupy LA say that 100% of the people that the LAPD injured with ‘less-than-lethal’ weapons are not active members of their group and nearly 90% of the people arrested by LAPD Thursday night were non-occupiers.

Amateur video ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_cAExitqATc  ) shows police wrestling a small woman to the ground and body slamming her boyfriend. Another amateur video ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FKNL5-cQAds  ) shows parts of three different arrests including a female that two LAPD officers pushed repeated before slamming her to the ground and arresting her.

Occupiers claim that only two of the 17 or more arrests made by LAPD were of occupiers and the rest were downtown artwalkers. In addition, members of Occupy LA say that at least 7 of the 9 vandalism arrests were made before 9pm, long before police in riot gear made it to the scene.

Occupiers claim LAPD provoked the crowd, so they could escalate their force against them.

The first arrest took place shortly after 7pm and moments after the group walked onto Spring Street from 5th Street. Witnesses report seeing at least 3 motor cycle cops, 5 patrol cars, 12 cops, and 4 private security guards.

Shortly after that arrest, LAPD Lt. Peter Casey and another officer used their batons to push Occupiers into a bolted-down garbage can, a parked van, and into the streets.

According to Lt.Casey, police are applying Penal Code 594 http://www.leginfo.ca.gov/cgi-bin/displaycode?section=pen&group=00001-01000&file=594-625c , an anti-vandalism State law, as reported by Dan Bluemel for L.A. Activist. Demonstrators say LAPD and prosecutors would have to prove ‘malicious intent’ to get any convictions.

Occupiers claim water-soluble chalk on sidewalks does not warrant probable cause for malice.

One arrestee wrote “I love the world” and then LAPD promptly arrested him.

“There’s nothing malicious about chalk on a sidewalk,” said the occupier, “and besides, sprinkles of light rain had washed away most of what had been written before riot police showed up.”

As seen in yet another amateur video ( http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dLNAMF5dWgc  ), one male artwalker drews a heart with the words ‘the police’ next to the heart on the sidewalk as Occupiers read off California Civil Code 52.1, “The Bane Act”, to at least 10 LAPD officers standing by.

The Bane Act provides protection from interference by threats, intimidation, or coercion or for attempts to interfere with someone's state or federal statutory or constitutional rights.

Four LAPD officers quickly detained the unknown man who drew a heart for the police, forcing him into the street. Video of the arrest shows Lt. Casey pushing on the back the unknown man’s neck forcing his head down while 3 other officers push the man for behind.

“The man was freely expressing love toward law enforcement,” says another Occupier, “How could that be malicious, evil, or immoral? LAPD was the only malicious ones at Artwalk. ”

Occupiers say the LAPD are trying to threaten them with intimidation and coercion. Occupiers maintain that LAPD over reacted, used excessive force, and began the violence with arresting peaceful people without warning.

“Using chalk to deface public or private property is against the law. When a police officer tells you to stop doing something that is against the law, you need to stop.” Chief Beck told news reporters.
Occupy activists say the LAPD personnel cannot even seem to agree on whether washable chalk constitutes a crime of vandalism.

LAPD Officer Karen Rayner told the Huffington Post “it’s not vandalism because it’s not permanent.” She went on to say that she really did not know though.

Timothy Paul Adams, from Orlando, was the fourth person arrested Thursday night. As LAPD arrested him, Adams told the arresting officers about his friend, Timothy Osmar, an occupier that Orlando PD arrested for chalk earlier in the year.

The city of Orlando spent $200,000 defending the Osmar’s arrest, yet the courts sided with the occupier’s Constitutional Rights.

The Occupiers planned the evening with the goal of “having fun, staying safe, and reaching out”. In a briefing before what they call “Chalk Walk”, activists announced they were hoping there would be no arrests during Artwalk.

Occupiers remained peaceful while continuing their outreach efforts until riot cops showed up nearly three hours – and half a dozen arrests— later.

Occupy LA has taken part in the monthly Artwalk each month since their encampment began on City Hall lawn last October. There had been other Occupy arrests at previous Artwalks, however, activists say this is the first time cops responded with riot gear and projectiles and violence on Artwalkers.

~ TD

Los Angeles Chalk Walk Injuries from June 12

#Chalkupy Petition Investigate LAPD use of force on Angelenos at Art Walk on 7/12/12

We're signing this petition. Will you sign it too?

Investigate LAPD use of force on Angelenos at Art Walk on 7/12/12

Greetings,

I just signed the following petition addressed to: Mayor Villaraigosa, Governor Jerry Brown, Attorney General Eric Holder.

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Investigate LAPD use of force on Angelenos at Art Walk on 7/12/12

On July 12, 2012 LAPD used excessive force on the citizens of Los Angeles creating an unsafe environment and violating the civil rights of the citizens they are sworn to protect resulting in a tactical alert being issued for the downtown area. LAPD has for weeks been arresting individuals for using chalk on public sidewalks in violation of settle law. MACKINNEY v. NIELSEN No. 94-15438 http://caselaw.findlaw.com/us-9th-circuit/1464004.html.
We encourage all citizens who were endangered, injured, suffered property damage, or were arrested to file a formal complaint with the LAPD at: http://www.lapdonline.org/home/content_basic_view/37673.
On July 12, 2012 LAPD made at least seven more such arrests before deploying at least an additional 140 officers in riot gear in the downtown area further escalating tensions with the citizens enjoying LA's monthly Art Walk. Commanders on the ground then ordered officers to fire on citizens with rubber bullets, bean bags, and tear gas without warning and without issuing orders to disperse or declaring an unlawful assembly causing injury to many Angelenos. Eventually arresting 20 in a situation the commanders on the ground they created.
The LAPD has violated the civil rights of its citizens and put lives and property in jeopardy. We call for an independent investigation in to LAPD's actions the night of July 12,2012. We assert they LAPD escalated a peaceful event jeopardizing lives and property. That LAPD did not follow their own policy on use of force. And that LAPD had no grounds for their actions.
LAPD cannot be allowed to violate the civil rights of the citizens they are sworn to protect when it suits them and commanders on the ground cannot be allowed to antagonize citizens through civil right violations threatening public safety and private property not to mention the great cost in taxpayer money to mount such a large police action due the great childhood pastime of using chalk on public space.
----------------

Sincerely,

[Your name]



NOLA Chalkupy June 13

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While chalking the sidewalk in the arts district on Friday, July 13, I encountered three NOPD officers. From the police car they informed me that they would not be shooting me with rubber bullets or arresting me and that I did not have to stop chalking. It rained soon after, so this coming weekend, I suspect OccupyNOLA will have some serious Chalkupying to catch up on.

Special thanks to The Fresh Juice Party for providing the detailed "How To" guide and Chalkupy song.

To learn more about Chalkupy, follow @FreshJuiceParty on Twitter or Like the Chalkupy Facebook page, or ever better, take it to the streets in color.

~ smallz





Some Chalkupy Tweets in No Particular Order  (go to Twitter and search #Chalkupy)

 
 
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After being held in Orleans Parrish Prison for making a speech from Wednesday at 1 am until early Tuesday morning, founding member of Occupy The Stage was transferred to East Baton Rouge where he was finally released around 8:30 pm Central Time. Members of OTS met him at the gate.

 
 
 FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

June 26,  2012

Occupy The Stage founder, Justin Warren was held at Orleans Parish Prison from June 20 - June 26 and transferred to Baton Rouge Parish Prison on a warrant he didn't know existed. His bond in Eastern Baton Rouge for charges of disturbing the peace and resisting arrest totaled 1,000.

Justin Warren has a voice that can carry and be heard over the din of city streets. His key voice at assemblies and protests in the occupy community has demonstrated his dedication as an advocate of freedom of speech. The charges he is facing are for allegedly disturbing the peace on the steps of the capitol building in Baton Rouge. On the 12th of March, he was in Baton Rouge with Occupy The Stage, Occupy NOLA and Occupy Baton Rouge for the opening of the 2012 session of the Louisiana Legislature that included a protest against budget cuts in education.

He was making a speech when an officer approached him and attempted to silence him. He continued exercising his First Amendment rights and was then approached by several officers who attempted to grab him from behind.
However, he slipped out of his jacket and left the steps of the State Capitol.

After he departed, Officer Holman (badge # 6071) said on camera that Justin was no longer disturbing the peace and would not be arrested. (see min 1:40 here: http://youtu.be/86OSs6YmM8s)

When questioned as to why Louisiana State Police were interfering with Justin's First Amendment rights, Officer Holman replied that he was speaking without a permit. Apparently, The Tea Party had scheduled a separate event in
the same area, and they were not approached by the police because they had obtained said permit. The New Orleans protesters did not have a permit, nor did they need one according to The Bill of Rights. Occupy movements across the country continue to battle relentless attacks on free speech and assembly, which are assured to all citizens by our Constitution and Bill of Rights. The warrant and the ensuing transfer to Baton Rouge are obviously a ridiculous waste of taxpayers' money. No citizen should need a permit to exercise freedom of speech in the State of
Louisiana. Public spaces, including the steps of the capitol building, are protest points where free speech has been exercised for decades.

Justin Warren was released after spending 6 days in Orleans Parish Prison and 1 day in Eastern Baton Rouge Parish Prison. He needs to be compensated for his loss of income while being held for no justifiable reason.

In Solidarity,

Occupy NOLA

 
 
Occupy NOLA Direct Action Working Group Approves Jail Support for Founding Member of Occupy The Stage

On June 23, The Occupy NOLA 99% Direct Action Working Group voted 12 - 0 to support Occupy The Stage in accepting donations for Jail Support for Justin Warren via WePay. The donation link is available here: https://www.wepay.com/donations/188968


This Jail Support account has been endorsed by the following Occupy NOLA working groups and individuals:

  • 99% Direct Action Working Group
  • Occupy The Stage
  • C3/Hands Off Iberville
  • Occupod
  • Socialist Alternative
  • Digital Media Working Group
  • Occupy Politics Working Group
  • Emergency Committee to Stop Gulf Oil Disaster
  • Andy Washington

The founding member of Occupy The Stage was arrested 06/20/2012 while Occupy The Stage was hosting the Occupy Caravan. Justin Warren was house-sitting for a friend in the neighborhood and went a few blocks up the street to feed the cat. He was next seen in the back of an NOPD car as it passed the OTS warehouse. Occupy The Stage held an emergency meeting with the members of Occupy Caravan the night of Justin's arrest and unanimously agreed to begin collecting Jail Support funds. At the time of his arrest Justin was playing a lead role in helping organize the New Orleans stop of the national Occupy the Caravan.

He is currently being held without bond because of a warrant issued by the Louisiana State Police for Disturbing the Peace and Resisting Arrest on March 12. He was not arrested that day and was unaware of the warrant.

He is facing extradition/transfer to East Baton Rouge and has been waiting to appear before the magistrate.

The Occupy The Stage Working Group borrowed $500.00 for Jail Support to pay the lawyer from the Occupy NOLA Legal Team, but he has still not released due to the Baton Rouge charges. If bond is set in Baton Rouge, OTS would like to be prepared with funds. They will also be traveling to Baton Rouge. 
 
Justin Warren is a Master Carpenter who works at least 60 hours a week and will have missed a full week of work if/when he is taken to Baton Rouge and released by sometime Tuesday. The Occupy The Stage Warehouse hosts Occupy NOLA General Assemblies, activist "Teach-Ins," a community kitchen, a community library, a bike repair shop, and a digital media station. He typically uses his wages to pay the lease on the warehouse, the utilities including Wireless Internet that is used during Occupy NOLA General Assemblies, to pay for his own livestreaming service which he has used to record members of Occupy NOLA who have performed at OTS, to contribute to the community kitchen, to print and circulate materials about the Occupy Movement, and to support other occupations. He has at times paid musicians who perform at the FREE shows Occupy The Stage welcomes the community to attend.

He was planning to attend the Occupy National Gathering and had spent most of the money he'd earned prior to arrest preparing for the Occupy Caravan, which stayed at OTS for 2 nights.
 
The Occupy The Stage website  has been updated with info about the Baton Rouge warrant, a copy of the speech he was reading, and more videos of March 12. You can also see the photographs section to get a sense of the amount of work that this warehouse has produced - banners, protest signs, tentmonsters, educational materials, and more.

Sincerely,

The 99% Occupy NOLA Direct Action Working Group