Tag: police

Ocean Beach and the Police in the mid-1970s: demand grows for that strange and foreign concept of civilian review

 Frank Gormlie  March 10, 2009  13 Comments on Ocean Beach and the Police in the mid-1970s: demand grows for that strange and foreign concept of civilian review


It may be true, as someone has suggested, that young people of Ocean Beach today have no idea of the on-going, daily tension between the police and the youth of OB a generation ago. Things are taken for granted.

Take the concept of police review, of the idea that civilians with some authority review the activities of police officers through an independent process. Heh? What’s the big deal? you ask. Of course, there should be some sort of civilian monitoring of and control on how police act and behave toward citizens.

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Police Brutality: Deal with it!

 Source  March 10, 2009  6 Comments on Police Brutality: Deal with it!

by Norm Stamper

As police brutality cases go, it may not be one for the annals.

In late February, King County, WA sheriff’s deputy Paul Schene deposited a slender 15-year-old girl into a holding cell and ordered her to remove her shoes. The teen used her right toe to loosen the heel of her left sneaker, which she then cast off, the rubber-soled shoe apparently striking Schene in the shin.

As she began the mirror process with the other shoe, Schene stormed the holding cell, …

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Ocean Beach in the 1970s – How an armed police camp led to reforms in police practices

 Frank Gormlie  February 27, 2009  17 Comments on Ocean Beach in the 1970s – How an armed police camp led to reforms in police practices

In my earlier post, I described how all hell broke loose 35 years ago on February 22, 1974. It was the day that Pete Mahone tried to commit suicide by cop – a guy many of us active in OB’s progressive community knew. The subsequent armed take-over of Ocean Beach by the San Diego Police in response to the shooting led to an outrage among residents, an outrage that manifested itself into a campaign for human rights and reforms in police practices – a campaign that eventually did win some changes.

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6th Anniversary of death of Danny ‘the Walker’ – OB homeless man killed by police Feb 4th 2003

 Frank Gormlie  February 4, 2009  9 Comments on 6th Anniversary of death of Danny ‘the Walker’ – OB homeless man killed by police Feb 4th 2003

There will be a small vigil tonight at 6 pm at the site where exactly 6 years ago, a well-known homeless man in Ocean Beach was gunned down and killed by San Diego police officers. Danny “the Walker” Woodyard was filled with bullets on West Point Loma Avenue near the intersection with Voltaire Street, a few yards from the entrance to north beach parking lot.

Danny was a well-known homeless man, who was always seen walking around the community, hence his nickname. The morning of Feb 4, 2003, he had been dumpster diving with his only tool, an old knife.

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If the police get their tower, what does that make us?

 Frank Gormlie  January 13, 2009  12 Comments on If the police get their tower, what does that make us?

Last week the San Diego Union-Tribune reported that the City’s Police Department has decided to purchase a mobile observation tower. Paying the $119,000 price tag with funds from a Homeland Security grant, the SDPD has already tried the tower out out on numerous occasions, and expects delivery of the two-storied platform in February.
Police told the U-T that they had used the tower at the beach over Labor Day, had used it at UTC during the recent holidays and at Qualcomm when the Raiders played the Chargers. “It has assisted us in making arrests, ” police Capt. Shelly Zimmerman told the newspaper, “and has certainly been a huge deterrent.” We’re told that the El Cajon police use a similar tower at Westfield Parkway Plaza shopping mall to “monitor crowds.”

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Uprising in Greece: Protests, Riots, Strikes At One Week Following Fatal Police Shooting of Teen

 Staff  December 12, 2008  0 Comments on Uprising in Greece: Protests, Riots, Strikes At One Week Following Fatal Police Shooting of Teen

Protests, riots and clashes with police have overtaken Greece for the sixth straight day since the fatal police shooting of a teenage boy in Athens Saturday night. One day after Wednesday’s massive general strike over pension reform and privatization shut down the country, more than a hundred schools and at least fifteen university campuses remain occupied by student demonstrators.

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D.C. police arrest about a dozen Iraq war protesters

 Staff  March 19, 2008  0 Comments on D.C. police arrest about a dozen Iraq war protesters

WASHINGTON – Police arrested more than a dozen people this morning who crossed a barricade and blocked entrances at the…

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