Protesters, police rest

By Christian Hill | The Olympian • Published November 15, 2007

Kim Chaplin, 35, was among the women who sat in the road in a show of solidarity when police began the individual arrests. She said the women told police repeatedly that they would not resist arrest. Halfway through, officers began aggressively moving back the supporters standing behind them in an attempt to disperse the crowd to avoid making more arrests, she said.

Police used these nonlethal weapons during Tuesday night's protests at the Port of Olympia:

"Stinger balls" that explode and disperse rubber pellets were used at Fourth Avenue and Plum Street, Olympia Police Chief Gary Michel said. "They were used to where we needed to clear the intersection of Fourth and Plum rapidly," he said. "All along Marine Drive, people were throwing rocks at the convoys and police."

Pepper guns were used to shoot pepper balls at protesters who would not leave the area, Olympia Police Sgt. Jim Partin said. The pepper balls contained pepper spray, and the pepper guns used to shoot them are similar to paintball guns, Partin said.

Pepper spray also was sprayed at protesters. Pepper spray contains a chemical that is a derivative of hot cayenne peppers. It causes temporary blindness and inflames the breathing tubes, cutting off all but life-support breathing, according to www.peppersprayinc.com, which sells pepper spray.

Beanbag rounds shot from shotguns were fired at protesters Tuesday night, Partin said.

Batons were used to push people back. Asked about officers swinging batons at protesters, he said, "I'd be interested in looking at that." Michel added that whether baton-swinging is appropriate depends on the circumstances. "I can certainly imagine times when it would be appropriate," he said.
Those arrested

The Olympia Police Department on Wednesday released the names of the 58 people who have been arrested during the recent protests at the Port of Olympia. They are:

Nov. 8

•Shyam Khanna,
19, address unknown

Evan A. Rohar, 21, Tacoma

Johnathan Steiner, 20, Olympia

Saturday

•Elizabeth W. Amory,
23, Olympia

Christopher Grande, 18, Olympia

Kathleen K. Hutchison, 23, Olympia

Joji W. Kohjima, 20, Seattle

Kyle M. Liedowitc, 18, Olympia

Joseph J. Mills, 24, Olympia

Davi Y. Rios, 21, Olympia

Gabrielle K. Sloane, 24, Olympia

James M. Steele, 18, Olympia

Peter E. Vachon, 18, Olympia

Sunday

•Joshua A. Eliott,
26, Olympia

Luke E. Noble, 23, Olympia

Tuesday

•Amanda N. Askea,
22, Olympia

Amory E. Ballantine, 23, Olympia

Rachel A. Beckman, 18, Olympia

Alexa Borken, 18, address unknown

Erin E. Brigy, 18, Olympia

Holly A. Carter, 26, Rochester

Kimberly Y. Chaplin, 35, Olympia

Emily P. Cox, 23, Olympia

Jaime M. Crawford, 18, Olympia

Sierra C. Daley, 20, Olympia

Jennifer N. Delp, 25, Olympia

Janis A. Duddles, 56, Olympia

Rachel L. Erickson, 19, Othello

Elizabeth Q. Evans, 19, Olympia

Michelle L. Fleming, 20, Olympia

Anna C. Gherard, 19, Olympia

Samuel F. Green, 20, Olympia

Valery E. Hagel, 21, Olympia

William W. Hamilton, 60, Olympia

Gabriel A. Hoffman, 20, Olympia

Patricia G. Imani, 45, Olympia

Madison S. Johnson, 20, Olympia

Cristen Love, 26, Olympia

Nicole M. Miller, 25, Rochester

Daisy J. Montague, 24, Olympia

Jarrett D. Olsen, 18, Olympia

Michella C. Onnis, 18, Olympia

Vita T. O'Shea, 25, Olympia

Julianne E. Panagacose, 19, Olympia

Emily A. Pieper, 21, Olympia

Molly R. Porter, 23, Olympia

Robin Rice, 18, Bellevue

Jennifer N. Richards, 18, Olympia

Andrea M. Robbins, 20, Olympia

Fabiola Romero, 23, Olympia

Kate C. Schiffman, 20, Olympia

Gabrielle K. Sloane, 24, Olympia

Stephanie N. Snyder, 24, Olympia

Allison Van Nostran, 18, Olympia

Katherine M. Waldeck, 20, Olympia

Sarah L. Warren, 20, Olympia

Robert F. Whitlock, 29, Olympia

Shizuno M. Wynkoop, 26, Olympia

"It was like they were trying to predict what was going to happen next and contain the situation, in an escalating way," said Chaplin, who said she was in police custody from about 10:30 p.m. Tuesday to 4 a.m. Wednesday.

Police Chief Gary Michel suggested the change in tactics was because the department didn't have space to hold dozens of people after their arrests. The Olympia City Jail has room for 28 people. All the protesters police arrested had been booked and were released by Wednesday morning.

"We were totally full," he said.

City attorneys will review the cases and decide whether to prosecute the protesters, most likely for pedestrian interference, a misdemeanor. It is illegal to obstruct traffic on a public roadway.

Demonstrators have claimed police have used excessive force since shortly after their protests began Nov. 6, the day after the USNS Brittin docked at the Port of Olympia to unload equipment and vehicles used by the 3rd Stryker Brigade Combat Team, 2nd Infantry Division during 15 months in Iraq. The brigade's 3,600 soldiers returned home last month.

Olympia Port Militarization Resistance has coordinated the protests to oppose the military's use of the publicly funded port and to demand an immediate withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq. Its members planned to "contain" the equipment and vehicles at the port to stop them from being used in Iraq again, but the police presence has thwarted those efforts.

The department has received one formal complaint of excessive force, and it is being investigated, Olympia police Lt. Bill Wilson said.

"I had been expecting more based on what I had heard and read," he said.

Most of the equipment and vehicles have returned to Fort Lewis, but some remains at the port, Olympia police Cmdr. Tor Bjornstad said.

Michel wouldn't guess Wednesday how much the overtime and extra resources that the Olympia police used during the protests will cost.

"We're probably a week away from knowing that exactly," he said.

Fifty-eight protesters have been arrested during the recent protests. Thirty-seven were arrested in May 2006 when the brigade's equipment was loaded at the Port of Olympia on its way to Iraq.

Olympian reporter Jeremy Pawloski contributed to this report.

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