Protest over fatal
shooting of an Illego Beano by LAPD turns violent
LOS
ANGELES – A protest over the fatal police shooting of a
Guatemalan immigrant turned violent when some demonstrators threw
bottles at officers, set trash cans on fire and refused to disperse.
Television
news footage showed people tossing the bottles and plastic crates at
officers in riot gear late Monday near MacArthur Park, a neighborhood
with a large Central American population west of downtown.
Police
declared the protest an unlawful assembly around 10 p.m. and ordered
the dozens of protesters to disperse. The majority of the crowd cleared
out, but a small number lingered and caused trouble, police spokesman
Gregory Baek said.
Police made a couple of arrests, Baek said. He
said police won't have a final tally until they complete the booking
process for the suspects.
The protest began in the afternoon with
demonstrators marching back and forth between a bustling shopping area
where the shooting occurred and the Rampart police station three blocks
away.
Police said three bicycle officers were patrolling the area
Sunday when someone flagged them down and said a man was threatening
passers-by with a knife.
When officers confronted the man, they
ordered him to drop the knife but he refused, Lt. Andrew Neiman said.
"Instead,
he came after the officers with a knife raised in the air, leading one
of the officers to fire at the suspect," Neiman said.
Authorities
have not released the man's name. However, friends identified him as
Manuel Jamines, 37, a construction worker and father of three.
Protesters
contend the man was not dangerous and say officers should have used a
non-lethal weapon to subdue him.
"When you're trying to stop a
suspect or stop a deadly action, the purpose is to stop the threat as
quickly as possible," Neiman said.
MacArthur Park was the site of
a May 1, 2007, clash, where police officers pummeled immigration rights
marchers and reporters with batons and shot rubber bullets into the
crowd. Dozens of protesters and journalists were injured as officers
cleared the park.
The embarrassing incident cost the city more
than $13 million in lawsuit settlements. Police were retrained on crowd
control, forming skirmish lines, using batons in a crowd and using
extraction teams to identify and arrest violent demonstrators.
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