Chief Timoney in Review – Crackdown to become Lockdown
Miami crowd control would do tyrant proud
30 November 30, 2003 – By ROBYN E. BLUMNER – St. Petersburg Times
Miami police Chief John Timoney must be mighty proud of the social order he maintained during the Free Trade Area of the Americas summit a couple of weeks ago in Miami – sort of the way Saddam Hussein was proud of quieting dissension in his country.
Timoney has a well-deserved reputation for using paramilitary tactics to turn any city where large protests are planned into a place where the Constitution has taken a holiday. During the FTAA meeting on Nov. 20, Timoney dispatched 2,500 police officers in full riot gear against a crowd estimated at 8,000 people, mostly union members and retirees.
The result was a show of force that would have made a Latin American dictator blush.
Slavish public officials such as Miami Mayor Manny Diaz touted Timoney’s handiwork as “a model for homeland defense,” and the Miami Police Department has responded to complaints by saying that officers demonstrated “a tremendous amount of restraint.”
But this is hardly the way eyewitnesses described it. The scene was a “massive police state,” according to the president of the United Steelworkers of America, who has demanded a congressional investigation. Congress gave Miami $8.5-million for security during the FTAA meetings – funds slipped inside the $87-billion measure for Iraq. The steelworkers called it money for “homeland repression.”
The National Lawyers Guild, a liberal legal organization, said the day was punctuated by “indiscriminate, excessive force against hundreds of nonviolent protesters with weapons including pepper spray, tear gas, and concussion grenades and rubber bullets.”
Observers said the provocation for officers to shoot rubber bullets and paint balls filled with pepper spray at the predominantly peaceable crowd was often one person lobbing an orange in the direction of police or lighting a trash can on fire.
Nikki Hartman, a 28-year-old Pinellas County resident, was shot three times with rubber bullets – once, she said, when a police officer fired point-blank at her behind after she stooped to pick up a bandanna she’d dropped. The officer had kicked it her way before shooting her. She was later shot in the back while retreating from police lines. Her friend Robert Davis was shot seven times while trying to help Hartman to her feet.
In addition to such shootings, police abandoned any legitimate basis for searching and arresting people. Miles Swanson, 25, a legal observer for the lawyers guild, was punched numerous times while being taken in by officers for pointing out undercover police dressed up as protesters. Eight of 60 guild observers were arrested that day; they wore distinctive green hats and were apparently targeted. When Swanson was grabbed off the street by three Broward County sheriff’s deputies – two of whom were in ski masks – he said they told him “this is what you get when you f– with us.” Then, Swanson said, the deputies drove him around while looking for another legal observer to arrest. He ultimately pleaded no contest to one charge of obstructing justice so he could return to law school in Washington, D.C. …more