Judge upholds eviction of Wall Street protesters

NEW YORK,  (Reuters) – A judge upheld New York City’s  right to evict Occupy Wall Street protesters from a park yesterday after baton-wielding police in riot gear broke up a  two-month-old demonstration against economic inequality.

Protesters affiliated with the Occupy Wall Street movement shout slogans against the police as they return to Zuccotti Park in New York yesterday. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz

Protesters who had been kicked out in a surprise predawn  raid were allowed back 16 hours later but were banned from  bringing the tents and sleeping bags that had turned a  square-block park near Wall Street into an urban campground the  past two months.

New York Supreme Court Justice Michael Stallman found the  city was justified in enforcing a ban on sleeping in Zuccotti  Park, saying the new rules still protected protesters’  free-speech rights under the First Amendment of the U.S.  Constitution.

The judge ruled merely that the case lacked the urgency to  approve or strike down the new park rules immediately. The  underlying case will be heard at a later date.

After the judge’s ruling, police lifted barricades at two  points, letting people back in one by one. Several hundred  protesters were in the park under a light drizzle, and the  crowd thinned as the night wore on. The mood was largely free  of tension.

Demonstrators have occupied the park since Sept. 17 to  protest what they see as an unjust economic system that favors  the wealthiest 1 percent at a time of persistently high  employment. They also decry a political system that bailed out  banks after reckless lending sparked the financial crisis.

Mayor Michel Bloomberg ordered the eviction, saying the  square-block Zuccotti Park had become a sanitation hazard and a  fire trap.

The decision angered members of a movement that has spread  throughout the United States and the world, and it came two  days before demonstrators planned to shut down Wall Street  outside the New York Stock Exchange.

“He’s a billionaire and he’s defending his class. He is the  1 percent,” said Naomi Brussel, 69, retired social worker from  Brooklyn.

Hundreds of police stormed the camp around 1 a.m. (0600  GMT) and dismantled tents, tarpaulins, outdoor furniture,  mattresses and signs, arresting 147 people, including about a  dozen who had chained themselves to each other and to trees.

The New York Civil Liberties Union said it was “deeply  concerned” about the police department’s “heavy-handed tactics”  and said seven journalists covering the events were arrested.

While the park was cleared of protesters, sanitation  workers blasted the square with water cannons, erasing odors of  urine and human waste.

“His (Bloomberg’s) res-ponse makes him seem completely out  of touch to me and he comes off as a benevolent dictator,” said  protester Douglas Paulson, 31, an artist from the New York City  borough of Queens.

The eviction followed similar actions in Atlanta, Portland  and Salt Lake City. Unlike in Oakland, Califor-nia, where police  used tear gas and stun grenades, New York police said most  protesters left peacefully.

In London, authorities said they were resuming legal action  to try to shift anti-capitalism protesters who have set up camp  at St Paul’s Cathedral.

Toronto officials also told protesters to break camp and  leave on Tuesday. In Los Angeles, city officials have opened  talks with some members of the Occupy L.A. group to work out a  timeline for moving their encampment from the lawn surrounding  City Hall, where about 500 tents are standing.

BLOOMBERG’S
CALCULATION      

Bloomberg, a self-made billionaire whose wealth made him a  target of the protesters, ordered the eviction at the request  of the park owner, commercial real estate company Brookfield  Office Properties.

The mayor’s loyalties have been divided since the pro-tests  began. Socially liberal and a supporter of free speech rights,  Bloomberg is also a former Wall Street trader who made a  fortune selling news and information to the financial industry  through his eponymous company, Bloomberg LP. He has two years left on his third and final 4-year term.

“The political clock was already winding down toward people  opposing him. I think this will further weaken him. It will  mobilize his opponents more than it will mobilize his  supporters,” said Ken Sherrill, professor of political science  at Hunter College.

Three prominent potential successors — City Council  speaker Christine Quinn, comptroller John Liu and public  advocate Bill De Blasio — issued statements using language  like “unacceptable” and “legally questionable” to describe the  raid. All are Democrats and Bloomberg, now a political  independent, was first elected as a Republican.

But Bloomberg also pleased his allies on Wall Street and  neighbours who had grown tired of the protest.

“It’s made him look like a stronger leader. He sought to  avoid violence and control what could have been a very  difficult situation,” said political consultant Hank Sheinkopf.  “He’ll be remembered for handling this the right way.”