Several Occupy Atlanta protesters have been arrested after a rally in a city park spilled into the streets. Several hundred protesters had gathered at city's Woodruff Park and set up tents with the intention of staying overnight. Despite a police warning that anyone who remained after the park's closing time would be arrested, protesters stayed at the park longer then the mayor of Atlanta, Kasim Reed, allowed. He initially issued an executive order allowing them to stay overnight, but later revoked it. While most protesters left the park, a few people stayed behind. On October 25 more than 50 people were arrested for staying in the park after closing. Protesters began camping out in Woodruff Park on October 7 in support of OWS/99 per cent movement.
Nineteen of 20 Occupy Atlanta protesters arrested Saturday night were
granted bond during a hearing in municipal court Sunday morning.
Most were able to leave jail on signature bonds, but eight were given
bonds ranging from $300 to $500. The highest bond was given to a man
who had been arrested twice for protesting.
The 20th protester will remain jailed and faces felony aggravated
assault charges after a scrum with Atlanta police on Peachtree Street in
downtown Atlanta. A bond hearing will be held Monday morning for
Brandon Wojcik-Tremblay, reports Channel 2 Action News.
Police say Wojcik-Tremblay knocked a police officer off his motorcycle, but protesters tell a different story.
Lauren Reynolds, a member of Occupy's jail support committee, said
Sunday that marchers were crowded on Peachtree Street when a line of
police on motorcycles began to rev their engines to disperse the crowd.
The Occupy Atlanta website says the police officer then "accelerated into a demonstrator."
Retired Atlanta criminal defense attorney Brooks Franklin was one of
six attorneys volunteering his time to help protesters Sunday. Franklin,
who is now an organic farmer in North Carolina, decided to return
Sunday morning to the city where he practiced law for more than 35
years.
"I got up at 2 a.m. this morning to support these young people," said
Brooks. "Things are worse off then they've ever been. Things are just
not in sync."
Like many of the protesters, he said he's disgusted by "money-driven" politics and the inequities between rich and the poor.
"People with money are ruling the world," he said.
Just a few feet away, Occupy Atlanta supporters carried homemade
signs that said, "I'm here because I believe we can do better! We don't
need to leave the 99 percent behind."
The group of supporters shared wheat bread with cream cheese and
stood out in the cold waiting for the 19 protesters charged with
misdemeanors to be released. The majority of the protestors arrested are
either employed or in college. They included an instructor at Georgia
State University and a man who works in video production. They also
included a young man who said he was simply leaving a restaurant after a
late-night snack when he got caught up in the commotion and was then
arrested.
Saturday night's march was a surprise move by the protesters. Nearly
150 went to Woodruff Park Saturday night, with many saying they intended
to be arrested by refusing to leave the park when it closed at 11 p.m.
But shortly after 11, the group began emptying out of the park and
marching on Peachtree, which borders the west side of the small park.
Just before midnight, waves of Atlanta police began moving south down
Peachtree, forcing the marchers back. The first rank of police was
simply in uniform and carried plastic handcuffs. They were backed by
officers in riot gear — face plates, body armor and long nightsticks —
and mounted police.
A knot of protesters chanted “Shame! Shame! Shame!” as the police advanced.
The Occupy Atlanta protest began Oct. 7 with a few people and grew
into a tent-city occupation of Woodruff Park that continued for nearly
three weeks. The group lists joblessness, student debt, foreclosures, two wars, corporate greed and a lack of political representation for the middle class among its concerns.
The mayor’s office said Thursday that the first occupation of the
park cost city taxpayers more than $451,000, most of it in police
overtime.
Protesters at the Sunday bond hearing said they would return to Woodruff Park in downtown Atlanta Sunday evening.