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Arizona.md

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Phoenix

Officer tackles and arrests person walking home from protest | May 30th

An officer tackles a protester who is walking home. The officer screams "put your hands behind your head" twice and then "stop resisting" twice; the protester responds "I'm not". The officer yells "put your hands behind your head" several times, and the protester responds "I'm trying".

tags: beat, arrest, inhumane-treatment, threaten, tackle, protester

id: az-phoenix-1

Links

Officers arrest dozens of people, fail to exhibit probable cause | May 30th

Officers arrested 114 people on Saturday, May 30, most for rioting (a low-level felony). The probable cause statements submitted to the court by police justifying the arrests of many defendants were identical from one defendant to another, and alleged only that a crowd of people had engaged in criminal activity, without alleging that the particular defendant arrested had engaged in criminal activity. One defendant, a DACA recipient, was transferred to ICE custody despite a judge finding that her arrest lacked probable cause. She has since been released.

tags: abuse-of-power, arrest, protester

id: az-phoenix-2

Links

Photographer injured by rubber bullets | May 30th

A news article describes a photographer in full view of an ABC news crew as he was shot repeatedly by rubber bullets. Protesters took him to police to get him medical care. Police struggled to get an ambulance, so they took him to the fire station, who then brough him to the hospital.

The photographer now has four staples in his head, a concussion, and a bruised lung.

tags: journalist, shoot, rubber-bullet

id: az-phoenix-5

Links

Officer arrests a woman on the sidewalk outside her home for curfew violation | May 31st

On May 31, police forced protesters who were out after curfew into the Garfield neighborhood using tear gas and other means. Police then began arresting protesters in the Garfield neighborhood en masse. Officers approached Elizabeth Lemay, who was not part of the protests and was standing on the sidewalk outside her home. They tried to arrest her and tackled her in the process. She told the officers "I live here" and "I'm allowed to be on my own property;" the officer responded (in a cheerful tone of voice) "You're on the sidewalk. You guys think you know. You think you know everything."

Several other residents of the Garfield neighborhood have complained of police behavior that night, including one who says she passed out in her yard due to a tear-gas-induced asthma attack and awoke to find an officer handcuffing her.

tags: arrest, tackle, tear-gas, bystander, zip-tie

id: az-phoenix-3

Links

Protests at Trump rally met with pepper spray | June 23rd

Protesters gathered on the sidewalk and on a shut down street outside a Trump rally in Phoenix, Arizona.

Footage shows police declaring the assembly unlawful and telling protesters to get on the sidewalk even though the street has been shut down. Protesters comply, but later footage shows they are pepper-sprayed while on the sidewalk.

Captions on Twitter and an NPR article state tear gas and flashbangs were deployed.

tags: pepper-spray, tear-gas, stun-grenade, spray, protester

id: az-phoenix-4

Links

Tempe

Police pepper spray protesters on sidewalk | June 27th

On June 27th, protesters gathered on the sidewalk for a 'chalk walk' protest.

Full footage from instagram shows police chasing, tackling, kneeling on and arresting a protester. Police refused to answer when protesters asked why they were being arrested. At 2:20 in the instagram video, the filmer asks why the protester was tased, but this appears to be erroneous; the protester was pepper-sprayed.

Police then attempted to clear the protesters from the sidewalk into the lawn of a shopping center. One protester remained seated and police manhandled her.

Several protesters, including the filmer, shouted at the police for treating the protester roughly. The officer then told these protesters to back up. They obeyed. The officer then pepper sprayed them repeatedly as they walked away. Police continued to harass protesters, pushing them from the sidewalk to the lawn. It is unclear why police asserted the sidewalk was an unacceptable place to stand.

From an article in the Arizona Mirror, Tempe police are allowed to use pepper spray "against violent or non-compliant subjects, and on vicious animals." In addition, they must give verbal warning that they will escalate. No such warning was given.

tags: shove, pepper-spray, spray, tackle, knee, arrest, protester

id: az-tempe-1

Links

Police charge and arrest protesters | July 27th

Footage shows police charging protesters in the street without warning and tackling an individual with a skateboard to arrest them. Additional footage shows police using pepper spray to clear the area. 7 protesters were arrested. One officer was allegedly injured when a projectile lacerated their face.

tags: shove, tackle, protester, arrest, pepper-spray, spray

id: az-tempe-2

Links