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Indybay Feature

Police Brutality Report

by Ann Harrison (ah [at] well.com)
An account of several violent encounters between protesters and police which took place on Thursday,
March 20. Story focuses on protests outside the San Francisco Federal Building and near I80 freeway entrances.
no text
attached file San Francisco Police Brutality Report

By Ann Harrison

Over 1,400 demonstrators were arrested on the streets of San Francisco yesterday, and protests condemning the U.S. military action in Iraq continue to rage across the city this afternoon. Thursday's protest was a turning point for San Francisco's anti-war demonstrators, who expressed far greater anger, and encountered heavier police resistance than any past anti-war protests in recent memory.

Amid wailing sirens and hovering helicopters, activists marched through the financial district, massed in front of City Hall, chained themselves together at intersections, shut down the San Francisco Federal Building and stormed the Bay Bridge. Hundreds of people were arrested after surrounding the entrance to the Bechtel Corporation, a prominent defense contractor. ''No business as usual! Walkouts and refusal!'' chanted one crowd.

Some of the most violent confrontations between police and protesters took place at the entrances to the I80 on ramps leading to the Bay Bridge, and outside the Federal Building which was ringed by U.S. Marshals, and officers of the Federal Protective Service under the Department of Homeland Security. City officials put much of the blame for the clashes on protesters. Assistant Police Chief Alex Fagan Sr. described the protests as, ''absolute anarchy,'' and Mayor Willie Brown issued a statement lashing out at protesters ''who have chosen to specifically try to disrupt this city rather than gather peacefully.''

The violent incidents witnessed by this reporter were carried out by officials who were outflanked by both fast-moving groups of demonstrators, and clusters of activists who held their ground at strategic locations. The most serious incident took place at 2:50 pm yesterday when protesters blocking the entrance to an underground parking garage at the west side of Federal Building were rammed by an exiting federal park ranger truck. The protesters, who had formed a human chain, were briefly stopping vehicles before letting them pass. When the driver of the truck encountered the group, he did not stop, but instead gunned the engine striking Nadya Williams who was sitting on the ground cross legged. Williams was pulled out from under the truck's front left wheel by fellow protester John Mason.

''The bumper and the tire pushed me over, the bumper was against my head,'' said Williams who was bruised and shaken by the incident.

''She might have been run over if I hadn't pulled her out,'' said Mason. ''He didn't see her and he didn't stop for anybody.''

After striking Williams, the truck stopped on Polk Street. As I ran behind the truck to get the license number (07824), the driver saw me, threw the truck into reverse, and hit the gas, backing up for the entire length of Polk Street. I jumped out of the way.

Williams flagged down a San Francisco police officer and reported the incident. ''It's not my jurisdiction,'' said Lt. Choy of the SFPD who nevertheless agreed to gather more information for a complaint. When informed of the incident, an officer at the U.S. Park Police refused to comment. ''We don't have time for this,'' said the officer. ''We are busy.''

More Attacks At The Federal Building

At 3:30, as the protesters in front of the garage entrance were still recoiling from the truck assault, a thin, determined man in a pinstrip suit attempted to push aside 14-year-old Anastasha Nunes who was guarding the low wall surrounding the garage entrance. Nunes and the man wrestled with each other, and the man retreated angrily up Polk Street leaving Nunes in tears. ''She's been shoved by many cops all over town today,'' said her mother Aline Nunes who comforted her sobbing daughter.

At the east end of the Federal Building, where another group blocked one of the main side entrances, protesters were assaulted several times by officers. Jean Stewart of El Sobrante sat in her wheelchair next to her friend 75-year-old Robert Miller who sat in his chair beside her. As the wheelchairs were being chained together at 10 am by protester Iryna Kwasng, she said one of the U.S. Marshals guarding the entrance grabbed the chain and punched her in the face. Miller then took hold of the chain and engage in a tug of war with officers while seated in his chair. He too was stuck in the head and suffered a minor wound. ''I asked him for his name and his ID number but he refused to give it to me,'' said Kwasng. ''We do have his face on video.''

At 3:30, another scuffle occurred at the east entrance when Federal prosecutor George Bevan, who recently tried medical marijuana grower Ed Rosenthal in a high profile case, arrived at the north entrance and found it had been shut down by demonstrators. Bevan proceeded to the east entrance. Together with a small group of attorneys, he climbed over Stewart, Miller, and the other protesters. U.S. Marshals shoved at the demonstrators. Bevan was knocked to the ground during the struggle and had to be dragged to his feet through the human barricade.

By 4:30 over 1,500 protesters had marched from City Hall to the north entrance of the Federal Building. Pinned between federal police guarding the entrance, and a phalanx of motorcycle police lining the other side of the Turk Street, the demonstrators sat down in on Turk Street. The action included seven anti-war demonstrators who emerged from the building after being arrested in mid-morning as they tried to block
employees and visitors from entering. ''This is what democracy looks like,'' chanted the crowd. ''Show me what democracy looks like.''

Attorney Bob Waggener, stood in the crowd of demonstrators, conspicuous in his suite. Waggener said he supported the protesters, but had a client inside that he
was concerned about. ''I don't support this war and the demonstrators send a message,'' he said. ''But I'm here to help my client, he is in jail and that is not a good thing.''

Field medics Damien McAnany and Alex Haddad watched the crowd carefully. The two men said they had been all over the city that day, but were particularly concerned about police actions at the federal building where they had treated three protesters for minor injuries. ''The worse brutality we've seen is here,'' said McAnany.

The federal building has been the site of protests since 7 am Thursday morning when
a group of protesters offered a prize of five bus passes for the person who could drink the most red, white and blue tinted milk in 30 seconds, and then puke the fluid back up on command. The plaza in front of the federal building was marked by drying pools of vomit. Amid the stench, a group of lithe people serenely pulled out mats early in the afternoon, and practiced yoga in front of the assembled officers at the building entrance.

''Militarism makes me sick,'' explained Dan Abbott, one of the vomit action organizers. ''Puking was the most disgusting display of emotion I could think of. What is the point of trying to appeal to people's sensitivities when other people are dying? You have to smell the bile within me.''

Marching On The Freeway Ramps

By 6 pm, protesters at the Federal Building had converged back on Market Street. Several thousand demonstrators than circled Union Square, San Francisco's main shopping district. Marching past the elegant boutiques and the photos of chic hollow cheeked models, the group again crossed Market Street and headed towards the freeway.

With darkness falling, protesters could see that the California Highway Patrol had blocked off the freeway on ramps to the Bay Bridge which protesters had been attempting to seize and shut down throughout most of the day. By 6:20 CHP had engaged demonstrators in a tense standoff at Harrison and Fremont Streets. Wearing full riot gear, the offers were backed by a line of tightly packed motorcycle police. ''This is not democracy!'' chanted protesters who sat and lay down in front of the police line.

Two observers from the city Office of Citizens Complaints narrated the scene into their hand held voice recorders. ''CHP officers on motorcycles need to back off,'' they said. ''They are now arresting a man in a sleeveless t-shirt with 'Fuck Bush' painted on the front.''

Minutes later another group of CHP officers encircled the protesters from the other side of Fremont Street closing off the group who were now surrounded and penned on the sides by chain link fence. Realizing that they were being caught in a pincer action by nervous highway patrol officers who were not accustomed to engaging protesters, the crowd knew that the confrontation was about to get very ugly. ''We will let the fascist cops beat us and we will take it smiling,'' yelled one man. ''Peace! Now!''

As officers on foot and on motorcycle began advancing toward the crowd, protesters retreatred quickly down the hill towards the second group of police on Howard Street who waited by two buses intended for detainees. Fleeing protesters cheered runners above on the overhead freeway who were sprinting towards the bridge. But once under the freeway overpass, protesters found themselves herded together in a panicked crush.

Officers then began beating protesters with their nightsticks. One man who was hit dragged himself to the side of the fence where he lay in shock surrounded by a group of demonstrators calling for a medic. They were ignored by police, who protesters said unleashed pepper spray on those who did not flee fast enough. Dozens of people sat handcuffed on the ground. Distracted by the mayhem, the line of officers at Howard Street broke their wall of blue to make arrests, allowing hundreds of demonstrators to slip past the police cordon.

Cheryl Savan crawled out of the crowd after being beaten to the ground. ''They hit me once and they kept hitting me until I went down,'' said Savan as she limped painfully up Market Street at 6:40 p.m.. ''I started chanting, 'Peaceful Protest,' and they came directly at me hitting me in the left knee and left arm and on the right side. I called the medic number for the protest, but they said they had no medics to dispatch.''

According to several demonstrators, police were also assaulted yesterday. Protester Michael Hernandez said he witnessed two police officers being attacked by a crowd of 200 protesters at 8th and Mission about 3 p.m. Thursday. Hernandez said the crowd beat the officers with the mobile barricades set up to contain the demonstrations. Police were not available to comment on incident. Hernandez said he did not join in because his group, the International Socialist Organization does not support such action. ''We're for peace,'' said Hernandez.

Demonstrators also took out their frustration on the press. Newspaper boxes on Market Street were smashed, and both boxes and TV satellite trucks were spray painted with the word, ''lies.'' Demonstrator Steve Freed showed a photo he had just taken minutes earlier of a sleek blond Channel 2 news reporter before, and after, a cream pie was heaved at her face. ''There was a big dispute and she was accused of not reporting accurately of what was going on here,'' said Freed.

By 6:30 pm, protesters were back on Market and Montgomery blocking a long black limo that was attempted to turn right on to Market Street. Businessman John Holmes was on the corner arguing with protesters that the occupants of the limo should be allowed to pass. ''This sucks. I'm totally into free speech but you shouldn't block him,'' he's just trying to get to work,'' said Holmes. ''It's about oil dude,'' yelled back one protester. ''So you can wear your three piece suits and drive your SUV.''

In front of the San Francisco Shopping Center at Powell and Market, two young men held signs, one of which said, ''God Bless Our Troops.'' They were surrounded by a group of anti-war protesters. ''We support our government leaders, they are protecting us,'' said Eric Young, of the two pro-war protesters. Young said that he and his friend were on a spring break road trip from Minneapolis, and planned to go to West Point next year.

''We are stopping Hussein from hurting his own people,'' said his friend who added that he was a devout Christian.

''Do unto others as you would have them do unto you, don't kill,'' shot back an
anti-war protester named River. ''What part of the bible to your edit, and what part to you leave in?''

''I think he's very brave to come out here,'' said Meil Bacon of the pro-war protesters. She who held a sign that said ''Respect our troops, don't make them murderers.''

As the night wore on, groups of protesters continued to assemble on Market Street were they blocked intersections and were dispersed by police. ''The whole point of today was to shut the city down,'' said a demonstrator named Davor, standing on the street with his megaphone. ''I might not have the opportunity to do this next week, we don't know how intense the oppression will get.''

At about 7 pm, a group of thirty police officers approached a dozen protesters standing on Market Street near Market and Montgomery. The protesters included a a man with a young child on his shoulders. A police commander approached and asked the man to leave before he gave the order to arrest. Other protesters begged the man not to get his child involved. ''Somebody could accidentally hit your child,'' they pleaded. The man did not move. ''It's not an accident when bombs are dropping on Iraqi children,'' he replied.

Both sides held their ground until it was clear that the police were not going to advance. The man with the child then turned away. ''I'd like to report a revolution,'' said one observer as he watched a journalist reach for their cell phone.































Add Your Comments

Comments (Hide Comments)
by Xylem
Date: Fri, 21 Mar 2003 08:01:16 -0800 (PST)
From: Xylem (xylem [at] scpj.org)
To: minkursson <minxon [at] sonic.net>
Cc: No-War-in-Iraq [at] yahoogroups.com
Subject: Re: [No-War-in-Iraq] spewage + treatment of police + media


i have to so fully agree with this -- though there are various actions of
protesters i strongly disagree with -- taunting and pissing off the police
and media being high among them -- this vomit stuff was just beyond
ridiculous. what kind of message is *that*, when *we* have to step
through it?

as i walked around the Fed Bldg i had no idea what it was all about even
till this email, i thought it was various people who had accidentally
upchucked or something.. but i think this sinks to new lows, for all the
reasons given below.

[ Below i give a long critique of how some protesters treat the media and
police at our street protests ]

now i'd like to get back to this issue about how people yell and insult
the police and media. where is *that* getting anyone? it is so entirely
juvenile and silly to vent one's anger at the larger forces at play this
way, i personally find. they are all of them human, and when you have one
to one conversations with them as they stand in their lines or do their
reporting, (as i regularly make an effort to do) doesn't it seem like
talking with them would be the thing that would endear them to your cause
the most, make it most likely that they're less likely to hit you or the
next person harder with their baton the next time they have to use it, or
that the reporter will take a very positive view of the protests, and
report on them that way?

it is one thing to call out "shame" when cops are unnecessarily beating
the crap out of someone, and i do this, or talk to them telling them it
isn't right etc. -- it is another thing to taunt them without provocation,
call them "pigs" etc. when they're just standing in line or marching along
-- why else do they get angry and take it out on unsuspecting innocent
protesters at time, after a day of frustration where they've had to bottle
it all up?

i had so many conversations with the cops throughout the day as they stood
in their lines, often they would be cold and reserved initially, but i
would draw them out, say that i would bet that a lot of the police weren't
for the war, and that how had their day been going, how did these protests
compare to before etc. -- i found it really a very human interaction, i
always do. obviously, when they form rank and draw batons, things become
very militant very quickly, and they *will* hit you if ordered to -- but
you have made it harder for them to do this easily, once you have broken
past the barrier of "us vs. them" and they see *you* as a fellow human
that they can't hate as easily.

to this end, i want to esp. point out a woman cop A. Calahane that i
talked to at the attempt to retake the bridge around 7.30pm, when it was
clear the police were out in force and there was no way they were going to
let us onto the bridge, and people dispersed away (i had to catch a
Caltrain back to Stanford at 8, for our debriefing meeting about our
cluster's morning action, so couldn't march all nite, though i would've
liked to!), i just talked with her for a good while, and she was really
cool. :>

second -- what the *hell* does yelling at reporters do? many (most?) of
*them* are also on our side. obviously they are under tremendous
editorial and social pressures at times to report things in a certain way,
because of the way that corporate media works (and if anyone hasn't yet
done some learning about the media through e.g. Bagdikian's books or
<fair.org> etc. then it is high time -- media consolidation, and hence,
their lying crap, has gotten only worse in recent years, and i personally
believe they should totally be our next primary targets, because of how
badly they are representing reality to the general public. e.g. like CNN,
which has a downtown SF suite office, but this is for another email..).

but these reporters are human in the same way, and they're *not* going to
take any more of a liking to you or report your story better if you yell
at them. it just hardens the divide, makes them see you as an immature
person who needs to vent your rage somewhere, any pretext will do, and
they happen to be the unlucky target.

after a particularly vituperative tongue-lashing by some protesters of a
hispanic cameraman for KPIX (many people had been doing the same to the
reporter with him, Manny Ramos, and another camerawoman standing on top of
their van), i went up to him and said that not all protesters were like
that, thought like that. and he said he really appreciated me saying
that, pointed out that the "f--- corporate media" graffiti somewhat had
scrawled on their van's hood didn't esp. thrill him either, and that
reporters were out in this melee trying at least to cover it, and that the
media in fact were *what* kept the protesters from being beat up badly at
times, etc. (btw, i'd say it's one thing to deface public or semi-public
property like SFChron newsstands, a whole 'nother to do it to private
property, which no one likes to have done to anything of theirs).

and then we had a long conversation about all these issues, media
censorship and bias (which he agreed with), how much his work had been cut
at times, that he wanted to actually go work for Reuters (i didn't even
know they did TV), etc. he *also* told me that he had been in Palestine
last year (Jenin etc.), had done a really great story on it that he was
proud of, that it wasn't cut, and that he would send me a copy if i
wanted. so i took his # down and will call him and get that.

now which approach is going to endear us and our causes to them more?


i think the elements in our movements who engage in such puerile behavior
have lost their way to the strength and discipline of past movements such
as that led by MLKing, and will need to regain it to grow up slowly, gain
the focussed power those movements had to effectively make *nonviolent
change* actually happen, so that we *can* stop this f'd up war, and all
future ones.

peace friends, thanks for reading through if you did, and thanks for being
in the streets if you were -- and don't stop now -- we are *just*
beginning!!!

power to the peeps, see you in the streets-
-X

ps. did yest. overall *ROCK*, or what..??? :>


On Fri, 21 Mar 2003, minkursson wrote:

> That was an amazing day of roving protests and beautiful or stirring scenes.
>
> I just want to say something about puking for peace.
> One group forced themselves to vomit all over the sidewalks in front & back of the Federal Building.
> To witness it was pretty disheartening.
> Puking has a kind of violence to it, an assault on the senses and
> a fouling of the commons upon which we were going to be standing & milling & sitting-in
> all day. I racked my brain for ways to see this as an action against the war.
> Maybe if they had gone inside the FBI office upstairs & puked, it
> would have been so. It felt more like they vomitted at us.
>
> The other thing is that it fits into the range of actions at the edge of
> the spectrum which invariably are used to demonize us. Not just by the media...
> we know they will put us in a bad light anyway. But to the rank&file citizens of
> the city. If we are saying this is a massive revolt, we're shutting down the city,
> then we want the tendrils of connection to go everywhere possible. Even inside the Federal Building.
> Who knows where the next Daniel Ellsberg might be sitting, inside the Imperial Court?
> Of course, if we're doomed, if we're just making a last strangled gasp
> with no hope...then who the hell cares if we are remembered as the
> people who vomitted for peace?
by class war
"second -- what the *hell* does yelling at reporters do? many (most?) of *them* are also on our side."

I haven't yet heard a single reporter who is spending half as much time engaging the organizers about their reasons for this as they are the two patriots standing waving their flags along the highways in right-wing rich areas.

It took them ALL DAY on Thursday to even figure out that they had to stop following the police scanner and cover the actions where there were no police.

They have no clue about why people are doing this in the DOWNTOWN as opposed to all over town. And they aren't interested in knowing why, or really reporting on it. They like to show glass on the ground and people screaming, but they don't want to have calm discussions with organizers so anyone can get the deeper message.

And puking is gross, but so is war. Everyone has thier own way. Leave them alone.

Real class war will mean the eventual take-over of the media, maybe months from now, maybe years, maybe never. And by then, corporate reporters will be wishing people were only yelling at them and pieing them. If they don't know to get on board sooner rather than later, that's thier own darwinian destiny.
by bbb
The Baking Brigade's report of the pie incident is here

http://www.indybay.org/news/2003/03/1587531.php
by Alan Evil
Hitting authority figures with pies is a time honored tradition of the non-violent. Oddly enough, a news reporter is part celebrity and part authority figure so it works on many levels. Bravo, I say, especially if it was live.
by a
The vomit-in was fucking inspired!

The taunting of police is stupid. Especially stupid is jokes about fajitas to the rank and file, from whom the leaks came that brought the scandal down. They're some cops in there with some integrity.
by Xylem
Yes, i liked the pie incident, very targetted, very justified. very dif. from randomly yelling at media people.

I'm glad others also recognize taunting police overall is silly, thanks.

And i still have yet to see the real value of the vomit-in.. blech!

-X
by Lotte Folke Kaarsholm
Information, Monday, March 24. 2003

ENCIRCLED IN SAN FRANCISCO

The trap closed on a peace march. Information was on the street in San
Francisco this weekend when 90 people were arrested.

By Lotte Folke Kaarsholm

SAN FRANCISCO - When the police encircled us it came like a bolt from the
blue spring sky of San Francisco. One moment they are some helmet behind
a car window, a chattering voice from afar in a megaphone; the next
moment they are standing there, with faces beneath the helmets, right
under our very noses, no matter where we can see.

USA has attacked Iraq, and San Francisco is deadlocked. Here in the city
there hasn't only been demonstrations, the city has been one long
demonstration since Bush said "Let's Rock" to general Franks and went
home to eat his dinner with Laura in his big white house. San Francisco will
not go into war.

But this is not even the big demonstration. This is the 5 o'clock
demonstration, which is the place to meet on the way home from work, and
it is not even the first day of the war. The first day of the way, 1300 people
were arrested, but they were disobedient on purpose. They would chain
themselves and stand in the way, trying to shut down the city. We don't do
that today. We are listening to a sort of speech in front of Macy's where the
consumers unmoved consume on, and afterwards we walk up Market St in a
happy, long demonstration-snake. Because it is San Francisco we are a
motley crowd of people: stinking homeless people are walking on one side
of me, a suit wearing mobiletelephonist on my other side, masked
Palestinian young people in front of me and feminists with black armbands
behind. Even is a recorder player, dancing around trying to shout louder
than the tambourines of the hippies.

Demonstrations are demonstrations. You never know where they go, but it
is cozy and tickling to walking there in the huge crows. People are smiling.
Today, it is nicest to be in the middle of the flock because above us two
helicopters are rumbling threatening, and out in the street busses with
armored police; passive but watchful. Inside the flock it feels like you are
walking inside a room with the people you are together with. Ahead they
shout in a megaphone that we have to stay on the sidewalk or we will be
arrested. That's okay.

At Polk St. the demonstration-snake turns around the corner. I thought we
were going to the Castro, the gay neighborhood, but who cares. This is a
demonstration. The party is where we are at. It's a race to get over for
green light, because if we block the traffic, the police can arrest us, and
they would really like to take the opportunity to cut the snake into little
pieces when the red light separates us.

CAUGHT
At a crossroad a guy comes running shouting that we are walking the wrong
way, that we have to turn around and walk back. But you can't turn around
a flock of people like that. We walk on. I look over my shoulder and see
that the police have formed a chain behind me. Part of us is behind the
chain. Then I see that a chain of police men are waiting in front of us. To
minutes later we are surrounded.

Helicopters are rumbling scornfully and the atmosphere is imploding. From
being brave, singing and defiant, we become collectively small and scared.
The long waving demonstration-snake becomes a freezing human herd
inside a ring of police uniforms, coming closer and closer as we move closer
and closer. Half of our flock has been separated and with us left behind the
battle cry changes immediately from "WE WANT PEACE" to "LET US GO!".
But they will not let us go.

I want to one of the uniforms and ask if I can leave the demonstration. He
signals with his hands that I cannot come closer than 5 feet from him and
shakes his head. Kindly, but determined. More people try, but no one gets
permission. An autonomous type by my side shouts : "Come on, we all walk
towards them and they'll have to lets us pass! I am counting down : 10-9-
8-7," - the autonomous type gets most people to count with him, but they
are interrupted by one who got arrested the day before: "this is precisely
what we did yesterday. If we storm them, we are sure to be arrested.
Maybe we still have a chance if we wait".

HANDCUFFS
Two hours later we are still standing looking at each other. Us with our signs
and badges and mobile telephones. The police in a close ring around us,
and behind them a small flock of people seeing that we have been caught. I
borrow a mobile telephone and call home to say that it looks like we have
been arrested. My Fullbrightvisa is conditioned by me "not involving myself
in any improper political activities", and I don't like think about if being
arrested falls under this category.

Finally, the paddy wagon arrives and the police carry the demonstrators,
one by one, to be photographed and ID-checked, before they are
handcuffed and but on the ground to way to be driven away. It is like
madness because we are at least 300 people in the crowd. It will take all
night to ID-check everyone. We pass some time by wondering why a large
fire truck is moving into the crowd with its ladder erected and searchlight
on. The laughter spreads when people discover a guy being fished out of
the treetop where he had been hiding, trying to avoid being arrested. We
applaud him as the armored policemen carry him away.

As the crow slowly is shrinking and the police flashbulb is flashing, I search
my backpack in panic trying to find my press card amongst the papers at
the bottom. I insist to show it to the most authoritative looking of the cops
and persuade him to let me out, even if he is skeptical toward the word
'expiratory date' and my small blue card. Outside the ring the suit wearing
mobiletelephonist comes to me. He got out minutes before the rind enclosed
around us. His name is Van Jones and it turns out that he is a local hero.
Jones is a civil rights activist and manager of the Ella Baker Center for
Human Rights. He is the one who called the TV-stations to come here.

"This is the situation we have been using 10 years to avoid", he says into
one of the cameras.

"They are arresting people without warning them, without having anything
to arrest them for and without having anything to prove in the law suits
come afterwards."

Assistant Police Chief Alex Fagan Sr. speaks: "We have gone from what I
would call legal demonstrations to total anarchy. San Francisco has spent
450.000 dollars to take care of the demonstrations."

No demonstrators were arrested in New York this weekend. 65 were
arrested in Chicago, 26 in Washington, six in Portland. And 900 in San
Francisco.

When I walk away from the freezing crowd, waiting to be driven to the
police station, I feel like a traitor. But this is San Francisco after all:
Tomorrow, there will be another demonstration.


http://www.information.dk/Indgang/VisArkiv.dna?pArtNo=20030324142577
.txt

by Lotte Folke Kaarsholm (lfk [at] information.dk)
Hi, who translated my article?! You're welcome to send me an email, also let me know if something important is going on.
Anyway obviously there's a mistake in the byline - 900, and not 90 people were arrested in San Fran that Friday.
Best,
Lotte
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