Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Los Angeles. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 25, 2012

LAPD officers, Occupy L.A. protesters clash during ArtWalk downtown

Crowd throws bottles and cans; at least 2 officers injured

By Melissa Leu and Stephen Ceasar, Los Angeles Times

July 13, 2012
July 13, 2012 LA Times


A confrontation in downtown Los Angeles late Thursday between police and
Occupy L.A.protesters appeared to have stemmed from a sidewalk
chalk-drawing demonstration, witnesses said.

At least two officers were injured and several arrests had been made.

A woman who identified herself as part ofOccupy L.A. said protesters
attended the monthly L.A. ArtWalk on Thursday night with the intention of
showing support for people previously arrested for chalking on the
sidewalk. A Facebook event advertised the planned demonstration.

Discuss at 9 a.m. Friday: Skirmishes at L.A. ArtWalk

Some of the messages written at the intersection of Spring and 5th streets
included, "May the youth rise" and "End the Fed."

"We were handing out free chalk for freedom of speech," said Cheryl
Aichele, 34, a member of Occupy L.A.

Police arrived at the intersection shortly before 10 p.m. to move
protesters blocking the street. At one point, an unidentified man tossed a
glass bottle over his shoulder that landed in front of a line of LAPD
officers gathered on Spring Street between 4th and 5th streets. The man
was shot with what appeared to be a non-lethal weapon, witnesses said.
PHOTOS: The ArtWalk confrontation

Police used batons and non-lethal projectiles to disperse the crowd, which
in turn threw bottles and cans at officers and chanted, "Whose streets?
Our streets!"

Hundreds of officers in riot gear systematically moved the crowd away
block by block as people gathered in the windows of nearby apartments and
bars to watch and snap cellphone pictures. It took officers about two
hours to quell the protest.

"I came down for ArtWalk and it turned into this," said 25-year-old Susan
Enciso.

Wednesday, July 11, 2012

RUNNING DOWN THE WALLS 2011

LA ABCF

Locations for this years run: Cities:
Los Angeles, CA
New York City, NY
Denver, CO
Connecticut River, MA
Guelph, Ontario
Tucson, AZ
Prisons:
USP Terre Haute
USP Tucson
On Sunday, July 31st, 2011 at 10 a.m., the Los Angeles Anarchist Black Cross will host a 5k run / walk / jog / bike at MacArthur Park, in downtown Los Angeles, CA. This event is designed to raise much-needed funds for the ABCF Warchest and Revolutionary Autonomous Communities (RAC)
We are attempting to reach the goal of $3,000 with the run. Funds will be divided among the two programs:
ABCF WarchestThe ABCF Warchest program is now almost 16 years old; funds for the Warchest are divided and distributed through monthly stipends to political prisoners who receive little or no financial aid. Prisoners use this money to cover the basic necessities of everyday living. Funds have been used by prisoners to pay for stamps, shoes, clothes, as well as assisting their families with what little they can.
Revolutionary Autonomous Communities: Revolutionary Autonomous Communities (RAC) was created in the aftermath of the May Day 2007 police riot targeting migrant workers who dared stand up for our human rights. Members of the MacArthur Park area and others joined together to support those with no papers and those with no means. RAC-LA came forward to aid the community in self-organizing such that with the help of each other we might make an inhuman way of living a bit more bearable while at same time acquiring the means to one day transform this system into an image of our own humanity.
Official Runs
The ABCF is a Federation of ABC chapters that span across the country and is holding two official Running Down the Walls runs. Both New York and Los Angeles will be holding official runs on the morning of July 31st. In Sync with each other and other solidarity runs, we will collectively pound the pavement with our feet and bike tires as we exhibit our strength and stamina as examples of our tireless effort to free our imprisoned comrades.
Solidarity Runs
Every year, prisoners and supporters of political prisoners organize solidarity runs with Running Down the Walls (Los Angeles). We have had runs throughout various cities and prisons, including but not limited to: Albuquerque (NM), Arcata (CA), Ashland, (OR), Bellefonte (PA), Boston (MA), Connecticut River (MA), Denver, (CO), Elmore (AL), Guelph, (Ontario), Inez (KY), Marion (IL), Mexico City, USP. Navosta (TX), New York (NY), Pelican Bay (CA), Phoenix (AZ), Tucson (AZ), and Toronto, Ontario. We raised just thousands of funds for various local organizations in these areas. This year we hope to expand the amount of runs in prisons and other cities, as well as, increase the amount of funds raised for community projects. This year we hope to have even more runs in cities, towns, and prisons all across North America.
Raising Funds
The Warchest program was created in November of 1994. Its purpose is to send monthly financial support to Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War (PP/POWs) who have been receiving insufficient, little, or no financial support during their imprisonment.
Support the Struggle
We must remember that many of those arrested in the past or present are not far from us. Many of them were and are community and labor activists, queer, and environmental activists; people who decided to speak out against various forms of oppression and paid the price of their freedom for their actions. We must remember that anyone of these people could have at one time stood beside us in a demonstration, at a speak-out, or even at an organizing meeting. At any given moment it could be us who finds ourselves in this situation, so it is imperative that we ensure that a strong enough community of support exists for these people as well as ourselves. The strength of our movement is determined by how much we support our fallen comrades. As the Anarchist POW Ojore Lutalo says it, "Any Movement that does not support its political internees, is a shame movement." So please help us, help them! Help us, help you!
We encourage people to participate in helping us raise funds for the Warchest, which can be done in the following ways:
Be a runner: We are asking people or groups who are running to collect as many sponsor for the run as possible. Remember the money received is going to help imprisoned comrades who need your help. The person who collects the most amount of funds will be given a prize for their involvement and dedication to helping our fallen comrades.
Sponsor a runner: This can be done through a flat donation to the runner of your choice. We ask from those who wish not to run to actively support those who are running in hopes of collecting as much for our comrades as possible.
Sponsor Running Down the Walls: Any amount helps. Contact the Los Angeles Anarchist Black Cross if you wish to simply donate money to the cause.
Donate to the Warchest: Send funds directly to the Los Angeles ABCF (PO Box 11223, Whittier, CA 90603) or to the Philadelphia ABCF (PO Box 42129, Philadelphia, PA 19101) Make checks or money orders out only to Tim Fasnacht.
Get involved in the planning of Running Down the Walls: We always need help with organizing the event and we encourage people to contact us if they would like to get involved. You can do this by contacting the LA Anarchist Black Cross, www.abcf.net/la, la@abcf.net
Pre-registration for the RDTW click here
Download 3-fold registration flier for Running Down the Walls
Running Down the Walls 2011
Sunday, July 31st, 2011, 10 am - 4 pm MacArthur Park, (south west corner), 2230 W. 6th St., Los Angeles, CA 90057
Registration fees: $12 preregistration; $15, the day of the run. (Make checks out to Tim Fasnacht)
For more information contact the Los Angeles Branch Group of the Anarchist Black Cross Federation
PO BOX 11223
Whitier, Ca 90603
www.abcf.net/la
la@abcf.net

Friday, May 04, 2012

National Call-in Day to Los Angeles District Attorney Drop the Charges Against Carlos Montes!

Stop the FBI frame up!
Call off the trial now!

Call L.A. District Attorney Steve Cooley at
213-974-3512

Sample text:
 "Hello, my name is _________ and I am calling from __________. I want
District Attorney Steve Cooley to drop all charges against Carlos
Montes. He is being framed by the FBI because of his political
activism for peace, justice, and equality. Drop the charges now!"

Be firm and insist that your message get to D.A. Cooley.
Contact us and let us know how your calls went: info@stopFBI.net
http://www.stopfbi.net/

More info:
 Carlos Montes is a long-time Chicano activist and a co-founder of the
Brown Berets in Los Angeles. Today Carlos Montes is a leader in the
anti-war & immigrant rights movements. He plays an important role in
the movement against Arizona's SB1070 and other anti-immigrant laws
in the U.S. Montes is the target of government repression and the
FBI's dirty tricks due to his activism. When the FBI raided several
Midwest homes and served subpoenas on September 24, 2010, Carlos
Montes' name was listed on the FBI search warrant for the Anti-War
Committee office in Minneapolis - the organizing center to protest
the 2008 Republican National Convention, where Carlos participated.

Eight months later, on May 17, 2011, the LA Sheriffs broke down
Carlos' door, arrested him, and ransacked his home. They took
political documents, a computer, cell phones and activist meeting
notes having nothing to do with the charges. The FBI attempted to
question Montes while he was handcuffed in a squad car, regarding the
case of the 23 Midwest anti-war and solidarity activists.

It is clear the FBI initiated the raid against Carlos, attempting to
frame him. Carlos Montes' trial starts on May 15, 2012 where he faces
four felony charges with the possibility of 12 years in prison due to
his political organizing. Carlos Montes case is part and parcel of
the FBI raids and political repression centered in the Midwest.

We need you to take action against this repression! Los Angeles
District Attorney Steve Cooley needs to hear from you and others who
care about justice and what is right.

Legal background: Carlos Montes is facing multiple felony charges because the FBI
claims he is a felon in violation of firearm codes. The FBI claim
stems from a 1969 student strike for Black, Chicano, and Women's
studies at East L.A. College, where police beat and arrested
demonstrators. Carlos was arrested on his way home from the protest,
accused of assaulting a sheriff's deputy (with an empty soda can).
This charge was sentenced as a misdemeanor according to a recent
court document. District Attorney Steve Cooley, under the guidance of
the FBI, is basing his case on this 42-year-old misdemeanor,
disguising it as a bogus felony. Without a past felony, all of the
charges Montes is facing, relating to his legally purchased firearms,
would be dismissed. Both sides agree that no prison time whatsoever
was served in the 1969 incident. The legal process is being driven by
something other than the facts of the case. It is political repression.

What else you can do:
1. Circulate the Call In Day information to your lists, community,
union, groups, friends, and family.

2. Organize a local protest at your Federal Building or elsewhere on
the opening day of Carlos Montes trial - Tuesday, May 15.

3. All Out for the Trial!
If you are in, or can make it to, the Los Angeles area please attend
all or part of the trial. It will go on for several days.
Rally outside the Los Angeles courthouse and pack the courtroom
Tuesday, May 15, 2012, at 8:00 AM.
Criminal Courts Building, 13th floor, Department 100
210 West Temple Avenue, Los Angeles, CA

4.Donate money to the defense of Carlos Montes - trials are expensive.
and circulate this fund raising letter

5. Sign the petition at
http://www.stopfbi.net/petition/national

Wednesday, April 04, 2012

The Black Rose Society Anarchist Historical Tour April 7

The Black Rose Society Anarchist Historical Tour
Saturday, April 7, 2012 10:30-12:30
430 North Main Street, LA (North of the Pico
House in the Los Angeles Plaza)

Fellow Travelers and Anarchists!

Los Angeles has a rich anarchist history, but sadly most of that history has been forgotten or lost in the pages of time. Due to a disconnect of today’s anarchists with their past, combined with never ending redevelopment of the city’s landscape, anarchists in the city constantly walk past important landmarks for our community, unaware of their existence.

But all is not lost. The Los Angeles Anarchist Black Cross (with support from the Flores Magon I.W.W.) will be hosting the Black Rose Society Anarchist Historical Tour. The walking tour will take us around the Plaza and into Chinatown where will rediscover our movement’s history. We will visit the sites of anarchist riots and where several of our martyrs have fallen. We visit locations where Magonista and IWW
offices once stood. We will follow in the paths where some of the greatest and
most noble anarchists once traveled.

With 13 stops and 20 specific sites, we will reconnect with our roots and through the past we will begin to build a new anarchist movement. So please, join us and learn a little about our city’s great anarchist history.

When, Where and How Much?

We will gather on April 7th at 10:30 am on the south side of Los Angeles Plaza (near the Pico House and Sanchez Street.) The tour will take approximately 1 – 1 ½ hours. We are asking for a $5 donation, but no one will be turned away.

We are also looking for individuals interested in helping out with the event. This will involve publicly reading a statement about one or more of the locations we visit.

Please contact us at: la@abcf.net

Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Call for local protests March 2: "No FBI frame-up of Carlos Montes!"



Friday, March 2, 2012:
Montes Court Hearing to Uncover FBI Lies

Call to Organize Local Protests
at Federal Buildings or FBI Offices

Protest the FBI Frame-up of Carlos Montes!
Drop the Charges Now!


Organize a solidarity
protest on March 2!

Demand, “Drop the Charges!
No FBI Frame-up of Carlos Montes!”

Send your event announcement to info@StopFBI.net for posting.


The FBI is relentlessly persecuting Carlos Montes. At his next court hearing on March 2 in Los Angeles, Carlos Montes’ lawyer will make discovery motions on how FBI special agent Matt Weber worked with L.A. Sheriff Detective Don Lord and the Joint Terrorism Task Force in this frame-up attempt. Last May, the Los Angeles Sheriffs smashed down Carlos’ door at 5 a.m., waving automatic weapons, ransacking his home, and carting away his life’s work of notes and papers. A FBI agent attempted to question Carlos about the Freedom Road Socialist Organization while he was handcuffed in the back of a police cruiser.

Chicano leader and long-time activist Carlos Montes is one of 24 anti-war and international solidarity activists hit by FBI and grand jury repression since Sept. 24, 2010. Like others caught up in this witch hunt, Montes of Los Angeles was one of the organizers of the massive protests at the 2008 Republican National Convention (RNC) in St. Paul, Minnesota. When the FBI raided the Minnesota Anti-War Committee (AWC) office, Carlos Montes’ name appeared on the warrant for investigation. An undercover law enforcement officer “Karen Sullivan” lied about her identity and spied on the AWC, including Carlos Montes, for two years.

Repression of the ‘60s Is Back
Carlos Montes is well known as a co-founder of the Brown Berets and for leading the immigrant rights mega-marches in L.A. The FBI is trying to railroad Carlos for his political organizing.

Montes' defense is challenging the state’s claim that he has a felony record from his 1969 arrest for leading a student strike that demanded Chicano, Black and Women’s Studies at an East Los Angeles college. Also, the legal record does not support the claim of a past felony, thereby ruling out the District Attorney going ahead with this case. Nevertheless, the government is alleging it was a crime for Montes to buy several guns at a local sporting goods store over a ten-year period, because of the (nonexistent) felony record. The FBI are relentless in their frame-up.

The prosecution is basing their evidence on this 42-year-old incident, where, during the 1969 student strike and rally, the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department invaded the East Los Angeles college campus, beating and arresting student protesters. In the aftermath of the turmoil, Montes was arrested while driving home with a fellow activist and family. He was charged with assaulting a Sheriff’s Deputy. Just like today, the Sheriffs targeted Montes because of his politics - he was a leader of the La Vida Nueva on campus and the Brown Berets in the community.

Support Grows! Solidarity Will Bring Victory!
Support for Montes and the other activists under attack by the FBI and U.S. Federal grand jury is growing. Recently, Montes received a letter of support from the 350,000-member California Teachers Association and the 40,000 members at LAUSD United Teachers of Los Angeles and the UAW local at UCLA.


Facing up to 18 years of prison time, Carlos Montes is preparing to go on trial. Here is what you can do:

1. Organize a solidarity protest and demand, “Drop the Charges! No FBI Frame-Up of Carlos Montes!” on March 2, 2012. Send your announcement to info@StopFBI.net for posting.
2. Pass a resolution in solidarity with Carlos Montes or write a letter.
3. Sign the petition at http://www.stopfbi.net/petition/national
4. Sign the Pledge at http://www.stopfbi.net/get-involved/pledge-of-resistance
5. Donate to the Legal Defense http://www.stopfbi.net/donate

Friday, February 17, 2012

Jericho Amnesty Movement meetings Sat and Sunday at SCL

The Jericho Amnesty Movement to free all political prisoners will be
having its national meeting here in Los Angeles this weekend. There
are two major public activities associated with this, both held at
the Southern California Library for Social Studies and Research, 6120
S. Vermont Avenue between Slauson and Gage in south LA.

Saturday evening from 7-9:00 PM there is a cultural-political event
featuring Danza Cuauhtemoc, theater by Jihad Abdulmumit, national
co-chair of Jericho and a former political prisoner, Son Real
(afro-mexicano jarocho music), Puerto Rican slam poet Hector Rivera,
a former grand jury resister, and rap/hip-hop from Black Guerrilla
Nation and the Black Riders Liberation Party. There will also be a
tasty dinner for an additional donation. This is a fundraiser for
Jericho locally and nationally.

https://www.facebook.com/events/274514782622496/

Sunday, February 19 from 10:00 AM to 5:00 PM, also at the Southern CA
Library, 6120 S. Vermont, there is a regional gathering, with the
participation of national members of Jericho, focusing on building
California and West Coast campaigns to free political prisoners,
particularly those being held in this state and region, such as
Romaine "Chip" Fitzgerald of the Black Panther Party, Hugo "Yogi"
Pinell, one-time member of the San Quentin, an Afro-Nicaraguan held
in solitary for decades and recently part of the SHU prisoners'
hunger strike, General T.A.C.O. of the Black Riders, still forced to
wear a 21st century slave shackle (ankle GPS device) and facing
return to state prison at any point, Patrice Lumumba Ford, framed up
by Homeland Security, the new COINTELPRO, Joyanna Zachar, political
prisoner of the Green Scare repression of radical environmentalists,
and others. Nationally Jericho includes such important former
political prisoners as Ed Mead, a member of the George Jackson
Brigade and founder while in prison of Men Against Sexism to combat
prison rape; Ashanti Alston, "Anarchist Panther" and former BLA
political prisoner/POW; Ray Luc Levasseur of the Ohio 7, Laura
Whitehorn, one of the Resistance Conspiracy defendants who led
AIDS-education peer counseling while incarcerated, and many others.
Don't miss this important opportunity to engage with the key movement
uniting struggles to free particular individuals such as Mumia
Abu-Jamal, Leonard Peltier and others with the current day struggles
against the prison-industrial complex and for a new world.

https://www.facebook.com/events/163375793778209/


In addition, on Saturday, Feb. 18 at 4:00 PM, members of national
Jericho and the local chapter of Jericho Amnesty Movement will
participate in a Black History-themed General Assembly of Occupy Los
Angeles on the west steps of City Hall (Spring between First and
Temple). All are welcome. (That's the last GA on the west steps;
starting Monday 2/20, the General Assembly will move to Pershing
Square so that many of the occupiers who were arrested during the
eviction, and who have been restricted from getting near City Hall,
will be able to participate again.)

Saturday, February 04, 2012

Judge refuses to dismiss charges against Carlos Montes

Outrageous court decision - trial looms ahead
January 29, 2012 Fight Back! News
Carlos Montes (on right) before Jan. 24 court appearance.
Carlos Montes (on right) before Jan. 24 court appearance. (Fight Back! News/Staff)

Los Angeles, CA - “In the interests of justice this case should be dismissed,” said attorney Jorge Gonzales, lawyer for veteran Chicano leader Carlos Montes, in Los Angeles Superior Court, Jan. 24. Minutes later, though, Judge Lomeli sided with the prosecution, refusing to dismiss the six trumped up felony charges against Montes, on the grounds of insufficient evidence, setting the stage for a trial later this year. The court room was filled with supporters of Montes who wanted to see the charges dropped.

"This proves what we believed all along," said Eric Gardner, a member of the LA Committee to Stop FBI Repression, “The government is going to use all means at its disposal to try and get Carlos - and other anti-war and solidarity activists around the country - behind bars."

Before Montes’ court appearance, activists gathered outside the court building demanding that the charges, which carry up to 18 years in prison, be dismissed. The protesters ranged from long time political activists to street vendors from Central America who Montes is working with to fight police harassment and racist discrimination.

The prosecution has told the press that they want Montes to spend at least five years in jail.

Speaking in front of the court house, Mick Kelly, a spokesperson the Committee to Stop FBI Repression, whose Minneapolis home was also raided by the FBI stated, “On May 17, 2011, the L.A. Sheriff Department - acting at the behest of the FBI - raided Montes’s home. The pretext was phony violations of the firearm code. These alleged violations have no basis in reality whatsoever. At issue in this case are the civil liberties of all us who are standing up against war and injustice.”

The May 17 raid, by the Los Angeles Sheriff's Department and members of the FBI, took place at 5:00 a.m. The L.A. County Sheriff’s SWAT team and Emergency Operations Bureau agents armed with automatic weapons broke down the door to Montes' home while he slept. They seized computers, cell phones, current and historical political documents and left Montes' home in shambles. Montes could have been killed.

Kelly continued, “Carlos Montes is one of the 24 anti-war and international solidarity activists who have been hit by FBI and grand jury repression since Sept. 24, 2010. Like many of the others who have been caught up in this witch hunt, Montes was one of the organizers of the massive protests at the 2008 Republican National Convention. And like the others, he has spoken out tirelessly against U.S intervention abroad and oppression here at home.

“Carlos Montes is a hero who has devoted his entire life to making this world a better place. In the 1960s he was a founder and leader of the Brown Berets, the historic East L.A. walkouts and the Chicano Moratorium. He is an important leader in the movement for immigrant rights and has worked to defend public education. Montes is an example of a community leader who serves the people and builds the people’s struggle for justice,” stated Kelly.

Outrageous decision

Montes' defense challenged the state’s claim that he has a felony record from his 1969 arrest for leading a student strike demanding Chicano Studies and Black Studies at East L.A. College. This is important. That the legal record does not support the claim of a past felony should rule out the District Attorney going ahead with this case. The government is alleging that it was a crime for Montes to buy several guns at a local sporting goods store, because of the nonexistent felony record.

The prosecution is basing their evidence on a 42 year old incident, where during this student strike and rally, the L.A. County Sheriff’s Department invaded the East L.A. college campus, beating and arresting student protesters. During the turmoil, Montes was arrested and charged with assaulting a sheriff’s deputy.

"This case is not about old records," says Charla Schlueter of the LA Committee to Stop FBI Repression, "The FBI is dredging up a case over four decades old because of Carlos' involvement in the anti-war, immigrant rights and international solidarity movements today. They don't like that he is part of a movement that challenges U.S. imperialism."

Next court appearance

The next court date is Feb. 8. Montes says his legal team will continue the discovery process on the sheriffs to get ready for trial.

“The government knows its case against Carlos Montes is weak,” said Mick Kelly. “So they have made up a lie that Montes admitted to a felony record while he was being held in squad car after the raid on his home.” The point of the discovery motion is to get to the bottom of this false allegation.

See the L.A. Committee’s web site at http://www.stopfbila.net/index.html for further details on time and location for an emergency meeting to defend Carlos Montes in Los Angeles on Saturday, Feb. 11.

Montes states that he is looking forward to a jury trial and that he is confident that a jury of his peers will find him not guilty.

Jericho Amnesty Movement national meeting in Los Angeles, Feb. 18-19

The national meeting of the Jericho Amnesty Movement to free all
political prisoners will take place in Los Angeles CA this year, on
the Sat. and Sunday of the presidents' day weekend, at the Southern
CA Library for Social Studies and Research, 6120 S. Vermont Ave. On
Saturday afternoon, Jericho will be presenting at the Occupy Los
Angeles General Assembly at a themed GA on Black History Month, at
4:00 PM on the west steps of City Hall, Spring St. between Temple
and First St. At 7 PM, there will be a political/cultural event at
the So Cal Library, featuring Danza Cuauhtemoc, theater by Jihad
Abdulmumit, music and hip-hop/spoken word. Dinner will be available
for an additional contribution. On Sunday from 10 Am-5 PM, there will
be a regional meeting at the Library, 6120 S. Vermont, focusing on
building support to free political prisoners held in CA and on the
west coast.

For more information, contact

jerichoamnestylosangeles@gmail.com or call 323-901-4269.

Sunday, November 06, 2011

The Black Rose Society Anarchist Historical Tour - Nov 12th

Fellow Anarchists and Fellow Travelers!

Los Angeles has a rich anarchist history, but sadly most of that history has
been forgotten or lost in the pages of time. Due to a disconnect of today’s
anarchists with their past, combined with never ending redevelopment of the
city’s landscape, anarchists in the city constantly walk past important
landmarks for our community, unaware of their existence.

But all is not lost. The Los Angeles Anarchist Black Cross (with support from the
Flores Magon I.W.W.) will be hosting the Black Rose Society Anarchist Historical Tour. The walking tour will take us around the Plaza and into Chinatown where will rediscover our movement’s history. We will visit the sites of anarchist riots and where several of our martyrs have fallen. We visit locations where Magonista and IWW offices once stood. We will follow in the paths where some of the greatest and most noble anarchists once traveled. With 13 stops and 20 specific sites, we will
reconnect with our roots and through the past we will begin to build a new
anarchist movement.

So please, join us and learn a little about our
city’s great anarchist history.

When, Where and How Much?
We will gather on November 12th at 11:00 am on the south side of Los Angeles Plaza (near the Pico House and Sanchez Street.) The tour will take approximately 1 – 1 ½ hours. We are asking for a $5 donation, but no one will be turned away.

We are also looking for individuals interested in helping out with the event. This will involve publicly reading a statement about one or more of the locations we visit. Please contact us at: la@abcf.net

When: Saturday, November 12 · 11:00am - 12:30pm

Where: 430 North Main Street, LA (North of
the Pico House in the Los Angeles Plaza)

Friday, November 04, 2011

LAPD'S SPECIAL ORDER 11 TRAMPLES CIVIL RIGHTS

Oct. 13, 2011 by Larry Aubry, Los Angeles Sentinel

Over the past several years, anti-poor, economic, and anti-immigrant pressures have reached an alarming high in Los Angeles. Through the criminalization of poverty, homelessness and migration, those at the furthest margins of society are increasingly displaced and incarcerated. Los Angeles has also been the center of the U.S. government's "anti-terrorism" effort and has served as a staging ground for "national security" programs that threaten human rights and civil liberties.

The Los Angeles Police Department's Special Order 11 (SO 11) is the lead model of the National Suspicious Activity Reporting (SAR) initiative launched in 2008. SO 11 trains and authorizes LAPD officers to gather street level intelligence and information based entirely on "observed behavior." Such purely, and/or largely subjective and arbitrary police action signals a "surveillance industrial/governmental complex" at the local level. Through SO 11, LAPD and the Department of Homeland Security have established a vague and ambiguous reporting system combined with vague and virtually unlimited authority. SO 11 solidifies a system that normalizes racial profiling and places the brunt of repressive policies on Blacks, other communities of color and immigrants.

SO 11's fundamental premise is that each and every person is a suspect, hence, a threat to national security. It codifies "suspicious activities" through a LAPD, Suspicious Activities Report (SAR) that documents "any reported or observed activity or criminal act, or attempted criminal act which an officer "believes may reveal a nexus to foreign or domestic terrorism," which is downright scary.

Here are excerpts from LAPD Special Order on SAR, APPENDIX B: "Information reported in a SAR may be the result of observations or investigations by police officers, or may be reported to them by private parties. Incidents (over 40 listed) which shall be reported on a SAR include the following: "Engages in suspected pre-operational surveillance (used binoculars or cameras, takes measurements, draws diagrams, etc.); appears to engage in counter-surveillance efforts (doubles back, changes appearance, evasive driving, etc.); engages security personnel in questions focusing on sensitive subjects (security information, hours of operation, shift changes, what security cameras film, etc.);

"Takes measurements (counts footsteps, measures building entrances or perimeters, distances between security locations, distances between cameras, etc.; takes pictures of video footage (with no apparent aesthetic value, i.e., camera angles, security equipment, security personnel, traffic lights, building entrances, etc.); in possession of, or solicits, sensitive event schedules (i. e., Staples, Convention Center) " , etc., etc......." God forbid!

SO 11 also strengthens the development Fusion Centers-hubs which tie local collectors and users of intelligence data into a national information-sharing network. Seventy-two Fusion Centers had become fully operational as of spring 2010. Various groups, including the ACLU, have researched the negative impact of this policy and found Fusion Centers have the effect of "deputizing every state and local enforcement officer to be an intelligence collector for the intelligence community."

By criminalizing innocent behavior, SO-11 eviscerates individual rights and privacy. The reach of LA's manifestation of the national SAR initiative extends well beyond the communities typically perceived to be affected by misplaced fears about "terrorism," ( i.e., South Asians, Muslims, Arabs). It has great potential for negatively impacting and further criminalizing various marginalized communities, including Blacks, other communities of color, immigrants, homeless and low-income individuals. Furthermore, SO-11 reverses the premise of innocent until proven guilty by reporting and documenting innocent activity based on "reasonable indication" rather than "reasonable suspicion."

The best way to combat the ongoing expansion of domestic surveillance and criminalization of innocent people is a multi-pronged approach, highlighting the issue, thereby igniting action by impacted communities. An effective campaign will include rigorous research, community education and coalition-building on the scope and impact of SO-11 and ultimately, organizing and advocacy to rescind SO-11. This means deconstructing and dismantling the dangerous idea that safety can come at the expense of constitutional guarantees, human rights and human dignity. The research should trace SO-11's legal basis as w ell as funding streams and collaborate with others around the country working on this issue. SO 11 can be overturned through education, community organizing, political activity and directly engaging community members who have been detained, harassed, searched, jailed or imprisoned for simply looking a certain way or engaging in legal activities and behaviors.

This is not the first time LAPD has engaged in high suspect intelligence gathering and surveillance activities. Strongly reminiscent of LAPD's "Red Squad" and its prominent role in the infamous COINTELPRO, SO-11 not only has the potential to disrupt and criminalize daily activities, but sets new standards in policing that significantly erodes civil liberties, individual rights and transparency in government. It uses anti-terrorism funding and pervasive fear to justify the criminalization of normal human behavior, including taking photos of public buildings and other benign and legal activities.

SO 11 is yet another deeply insidious tool in a trend towards a virtual police state under the mantle of public safety and "anti-terrorism."

This is an edited version of information submitted by Hamid Khan: e-mail: hamidk@cangress.org

Larry Aubry can be contacted at e-mail l.aubry@att.net

Monday, August 22, 2011

LA Jericho Black August program, 8-27, 6 PM

The Jericho Amnesty Movement to free all political prisoners will be
holding a Black August commemoration on Saturday, August 27 from
6-9:00 PM at the Southern California Library for Social Studies and
Research, 6120 S. Vermont Ave., Los Angeles (between Slauson and Gage).

The event will feature conscious entertainment and spoken word, and a
presentation by Comrade LaaLaa of the Black Riders Liberation Party,
who is the National Youth Coordinator for the Jericho Amnesty
Movement, on the recent founding conference in Washington DC, called
by Jericho, of a National Confederation to Free Political Prisoners
and the Unjustly Incarcerated. The conference was held this past
weekend and brought together many groups and organizations that have
been involved in efforts to free political prisoners and
defense/support committees around particular cases, to create a
structure of accountability and concerted action.

The Black August event is free, but a nutritious meal will be
available for a donation, and people will have the opportunity to
write to the political prisoners. A collection will also be taken to
support the ongoing work of the Jericho Amnesty Movement Los Angeles
chapter, which is developing a Family Transport to Prisoners program
for this area, in the spirit of the survival programs of the Black
Panther Party for Self Defense applied to 21st century conditions of
oppression and mass incarceration.

Black August is a month of fasting, study, physical training and
collective development dedicated to martyrs of the struggle and high
points of the resistance in the Black freedom struggle, particularly
behind the walls. There will also be a report on the prison chapters
that are being built which were involved in the recent, and possibly
continuing, hunger strike against isolation torture. There will also
be a report from the state-wide mobilization this week to Sacramento
on behalf of the prisoners' demands. People can also learn about the
upcoming visit of Puerto Rican former political prisoner Carlos
Alberto Torres, who will be in L.A. in October as part of a national tour.

Tuesday, August 09, 2011

Support Carlos Montes as he goes to court Friday, August 12

Call President Barak Obama at 202-456-1111

Attorney General Eric Holder at 202-514-2001

Sample call: "My name is ________ and I am calling from [city,
state]. I'm calling about Carlos Montes of Los Angeles. He is one of
the anti-war activists being targeted by the FBI. I want you to tell
Attorney General Holder [or President Obama]:
1. Drop the charges against Carlos Montes!

2. Stop the FBI and the Grand Jury repression of the other 23
anti-war and international solidarity activists.

3. Return all property to Carlos Montes and the other activists
raided by the FBI.
The U.S. government should not be prosecuting us when we exercise
our rights to freedom of speech and dissent."

On Friday, August 12, Carlos Montes will appear in a Los Angeles
court again, for a preliminary hearing. At
his http://stopfbi.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=8b7315d854bc40ca9fa6dd227&id=e982b2785b&e=b7378561ef

last court date on July 6, Carlos pled "Not guilty!" to six charges,
including a felony charge each for a firearm and ammunition, and four
related to the permits' paperwork. Like millions of Americans, Carlos
has for many years held legal permits. So why is it that all of a
sudden the government is saying there is a problem? These charges are
a pretext to attack Carlos for his years of activism.

Please join us in calling U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder and
President Obama, demanding a stop to the prosecution of Carlos
Montes. We need to stop the persecution of political activists like
Carlos, like the 23 Midwest anti-war and international solidarity
activists, people like you and me.

Make no mistake; the U.S. government's trial of Carlos Montes is an
attack on the immigrants' rights and anti-war movements. So please
call today and let Holder and Obama know we are building a movement
that will not bow down to dirty tricks and political repression.

In addition, the http://stopfbi.us2.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=8b7315d854bc40ca9fa6dd227&id=d7c11d4f12&e=b7378561ef

Los Angeles Committee to Stop FBI Repression is mobilizing to
pack the courtroom on the morning of Friday, August 12, in
Department 100 at the Criminal Courts Building, 210 W. Temple Street,
Los Angeles, when Carlos Montes appears.

About Carlos Montes:
Carlos Montes is a veteran Chicano activist known for his
leadership of the 1968 East Los Angeles education reform movement
(see film http://stopfbi.us2.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=8b7315d854bc40ca9fa6dd227&id=ad628edd6e&e=b7378561ef Walkout),

the historic Chicano Moratorium against the U.S. war in Vietnam, and
the recent immigrants' rights mega-marches of 2006. Carlos Montes was
a co-founder of the Brown Berets, a Chicano youth organization that
stood for justice, equality, and self-determination.
With the 2003 Bush administration war and occupation of
Iraq, Montes helped form and lead L.A. Latinos Against War. In recent
years, Carlos helped initiate and organize the Southern California
Immigration Coalition, to fight against Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE) and police repression.
About this case:
Now Montes himself is the target of government repression
and the FBI's dirty tricks. When the FBI raided several Midwest homes
and served subpoenas on September 24, 2010, Carlos Montes' name was
listed on the FBI search warrant for the
http://stopfbi.us2.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=8b7315d854bc40ca9fa6dd227&id=d1995aacde&e=b7378561ef Anti-War

Committee office in Minneapolis--the organizing center for the 2008
Republican National Convention protests, where Carlos participated.
Then on May 17, 2011, the LA Sheriffs broke down Carlos' door,
arrested him, and ransacked his home. They took political documents,
a computer, cell phones and meeting notes having nothing to do with
the charges. The FBI attempted to question Montes while he was
handcuffed in a squad car, regarding the case of the 23 Midwest
anti-war and solidarity activists.
On June 16, 2011, Carlos appeared in court and obtained the
arrest documents showing the FBI initiated the raid. A reporter
interviewing a
http://stopfbi.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=8b7315d854bc40ca9fa6dd227&id=91926fa7d4&e=b7378561ef Los

Angeles Sheriff sergeant confirmed that the FBI was in charge. Carlos
Montes is facing six felony charges with the possibility of 18 years
in prison due to his political organizing. Carlos Montes case is part
and parcel of the FBI raids and political repression centered in the
Midwest. We need you to take action against this repression.

----------
You can also invite Carlos Montes to speak using a live Internet
video call. It is easy to do and works well. More details on the
video calls coming next week.

----------

Please
http://stopfbi.us2.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=8b7315d854bc40ca9fa6dd227&id=adcd159357&e=b7378561ef sign

the petition for Carlos Montes on the http://stopfbi.us2.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=8b7315d854bc40ca9fa6dd227&id=41cc41e21c&e=b7378561ef

International Action Center website.

Visit
http://stopfbi.us2.list-manage1.com/track/click?u=8b7315d854bc40ca9fa6dd227&id=c12f8e465c&e=b7378561ef

or write mailto:StopFBI@gmail.com or call 612-379-3585.

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Remember To Run This weekend

RUNNING DOWN THE WALLS:
WHEN:

Sunday, July 31st, 2011, 10 am - 4
pm

WHERE:

MacArthur Park, (south west corner), 2230 W. 6th St., Los Angeles, CA 90057

On Sunday, July 31st, 2011 at 10 a.m., the Los Angeles Anarchist Black
Cross will host a 5k run / walk / jog / bike at MacArthur Park, in
downtown Los Angeles, CA. This event is designed to raise much-needed
funds for the ABCF Warchest and Revolutionary Autonomous Communities
(RAC)


RAISING FUNDS:

Our goal for this year's run is $3,500. Funds will be divided between the following:
The Warchest Program was created in November of
1994. Through the program, The ABCF sends monthly financial support to
Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War (PP/POWs) who have received
insufficient, little, or no financial support during their imprisonment.
Funds from the Warchest are distributed through monthly stipends to the
political prisoners in need. Prisoners use this money to cover the
basic necessities of everyday living. Since its inception, the ABCF has
raised over $60,000 through the Warchest program.

Revolutionary Autonomous Communities (RAC): was
created in the aftermath of the May Day 2007 police riot targeting
migrant workers who dared stand up for our human rights. Members of the
MacArthur Park area and others joined together to support those with no
papers and those with no means. RAC-LA came forward to aid the
community in self-organizing such that with the help of each other we
might make an inhuman way of living a bit more bearable while at same
time acquiring the means to one day transform this system into an image
of our own humanity.


SUPPORT THE STRUGGLE:

Remember that many of those arrested in the past or present are not far
from us. Many of them were and are community and labor activists, queer
and environmental activists, people who decided to speak out against
various forms of oppression and paid the price of freedom for their
actions. Anyone of these people could have at one time stood beside us
in a demonstration, at a speak-out or even a organizing meeting. At any
moment it could be us who finds ourselves in this situation, so it is
imperative that we ensure that a strong community of support exists for
these people as well as ourselves. The strength of our movement is
determined by how much we support our fallen comrades.

GET INVOLVED:

People can participate in the following ways:
Be a runner:

We are asking people or groups who are running to
collect as many sponsors for the run as possible. Remember the money
received is going to help imprisoned comrades and local groups who need
help.

Sponsor a runner:

This can be done through a flat donation to the runner of your choice.
Sponsor Running Down the Walls:

Any amount helps. Contact the Los Angeles Anarchist Black Cross if you wish
to simply donate money.

Organizations who donate more than $35 will be added to list of sponsor
organizations on the website and all fliers/posters.

Donate to the Warchest:

For the Warchest send funds to the Philadelphia ABC, indicating your desire
for those funds to go to the Warchest. Please make checks and money orders
to Tim Fasnacht.

(Philadelphia ABCF P.O. Box 42129 Philadelphia, PA 19101).
Organize a Running Down the Walls in your location:
We wish to expand the solidarity runs in more cities and prisons.

In past years we had runs in: Albuquerque (NM), Arcata (CA), Ashland, (OR),
Bellefonte(PA), Boston (MA), Denver, (CO), Detroit (MI), Elmore (AL), Inez (KY),
Marion (IL), Mexico City, New York (NY), USP. Navosta (TX), Pelican Bay
(CA), Phoenix (AZ), Sandstone (MN), Tucson (AZ), Toronto, and Ontario.

For more information contact us at: la@abcf.net

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Jericho Amnesty Movement LA chapter seeks financial support for delegation to DC

The date is fast approaching for the founding meeting in Washington
DC of a National Confederation to Free Unjustly Incarcerated and
Political Prisoners. The Los Angeles chapter of the Jericho Amnesty
Movement is seeking financial support to help send a delegation from
our area to this important national gathering, which is seeking to
unite all forces involved in the struggle over political prisoners
and for justice in a principled united national formation with an
accountable work plan and timetable.

Comrade Laalaa of the Black Riders Liberation Party, a member of the
local Jericho Amnesty Movement chapter, is the national youth
coordinator of Jericho and it is vital to ensure her participation at
the National Confederation meeting. We would also like to send
another member of the BRLP, along with Lawrence Reyes of the Puerto
Rican Alliance, Guillermo Suarez of the Movimiento de Liberacion
Nacional Mexicano, and Michael Novick of Anti-Racist Action
(ARA-LA/PART) to the founding meeting in DC. But to do so, we
urgently need financial contributions (or possibly the donation of
frequent flyer to cover one or more tickets. Air fare is
approximately $400 per person round trip. Transportation and frugal
accommodations in the DC area for the 3 day gathering will be
provided by the hosts.

If you can help in any way with a donation toward this cause, please
get in touch ASAP via email, or call 310-890-7104. This conference is
an opportunity to bring significant national momentum to bear on the
cases of political prisoners here in CA, including Ruchell Magee,
Hugo Pinell and Romaine Chip Fitzgerald, some of the longest held
political prisoners in the world, Gerardo Hernandez of the Cuban 5,
Comrade Noor and General T.A.C.O. of the Black Riders (Noor was sent
back to state prison after resisting police abuse outside the trial
of killer cop Johannes Mehserle; T.A.C.O. is still forced to wear an
electronic GPS ankle monitor [21st Century slave shackle] off a
frame-up conviction). Numerous of the prisoners involved in the
hunger strikes at Pelican Bay, Corcoran, Tehachapi and other CA
prisons have been in communication (before and since) with LA Jericho
and its constituent groups, particularly the BRLP. Please help us
bring their message of unity, solidarity and struggle to the National
Confederation founding meeting in D.C. Aug 19-21 by making a generous
financial contribution today. We know that all grassroots peoples'
organizations are strapped for funds these days, but we believe this
significant initiative for justice and liberation merits your
support! Thanks in advance.

Michael Novick for Jericho Amnesty Movement to free all political
prisoners, LA chapter

Saturday, July 16, 2011

2011 Running Down The Walls

RUNNING DOWN THE WALLS:

WHEN:

Sunday, July 31st, 2011, 10 am - 4
pm

WHERE:

MacArthur Park, (south west corner), 2230 W. 6th St., Los Angeles, CA 90057

On Sunday, July 31st, 2011 at 10 a.m., the Los Angeles Anarchist Black
Cross will host a 5k run / walk / jog / bike at MacArthur Park, in
downtown Los Angeles, CA. This event is designed to raise much-needed
funds for the ABCF Warchest and Revolutionary Autonomous Communities
(RAC)

RAISING FUNDS:

Our goal for this year's run is $3,500. Funds will be divided between the following:
The Warchest Program was created in November of
1994. Through the program, The ABCF sends monthly financial support to
Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War (PP/POWs) who have received
insufficient, little, or no financial support during their imprisonment.
Funds from the Warchest are distributed through monthly stipends to the
political prisoners in need. Prisoners use this money to cover the
basic necessities of everyday living. Since its inception, the ABCF has
raised over $60,000 through the Warchest program.

Revolutionary Autonomous Communities (RAC): was
created in the aftermath of the May Day 2007 police riot targeting
migrant workers who dared stand up for our human rights. Members of the
MacArthur Park area and others joined together to support those with no
papers and those with no means. RAC-LA came forward to aid the
community in self-organizing such that with the help of each other we
might make an inhuman way of living a bit more bearable while at same
time acquiring the means to one day transform this system into an image
of our own humanity.


SUPPORT THE STRUGGLE:

Remember that many of those arrested in the past or present are not far
from us. Many of them were and are community and labor activists, queer
and environmental activists, people who decided to speak out against
various forms of oppression and paid the price of freedom for their
actions. Anyone of these people could have at one time stood beside us
in a demonstration, at a speak-out or even a organizing meeting. At any
moment it could be us who finds ourselves in this situation, so it is
imperative that we ensure that a strong community of support exists for
these people as well as ourselves. The strength of our movement is
determined by how much we support our fallen comrades.

GET INVOLVED:

People can participate in the following ways:
Be a runner:
We are asking people or groups who are running to
collect as many sponsors for the run as possible. Remember the money
received is going to help imprisoned comrades and local groups who need
help.
Sponsor a runner:
This can be done through a flat donation to the runner of your choice.
Sponsor Running Down the Walls:
Any amount helps. Contact the Los
Angeles Anarchist Black Cross if you wish to simply donate money.
Organizations who donate more than $35 will be added to list of sponsor
organizations on the website and all fliers/posters.
Donate to the Warchest:
For the Warchest send funds to the
Philadelphia ABC, indicating your desire for those funds to go to the
Warchest. Please make checks and money orders to Tim Fasnacht.
(Philadelphia ABCF P.O. Box 42129 Philadelphia, PA 19101).
Organize a Running Down the Walls in your location:
We wish to
expand the solidarity runs in more cities and prisons. In past years we
had runs in: Albuquerque (NM), Arcata (CA), Ashland, (OR), Bellefonte
(PA), Boston (MA), Denver, (CO), Detroit (MI), Elmore (AL), Inez (KY),
Marion (IL), Mexico City, New York (NY), USP. Navosta (TX), Pelican Bay
(CA), Phoenix (AZ), Sandstone (MN), Tucson (AZ), Toronto, and Ontario.

For more information contact us at: la@abcf.net

Tuesday, July 12, 2011

Running Down the Walls - Los Angeles

RUNNING DOWN THE WALLS:


WHEN:
Sunday, July 31st, 2011, 10 am - 4
pm
WHERE:
MacArthur Park, (south west corner),2230 W. 6th St., Los Angeles, CA 90057
On Sunday, July 31st, 2011 at 10 a.m., the Los Angeles Anarchist Black
Cross will host a 5k run / walk / jog / bike at MacArthur Park, in
downtown Los Angeles, CA. This event is designed to raise much-needed
funds for the ABCF Warchest and Revolutionary Autonomous Communities
(RAC)

RAISING FUNDS:
Our goal for this year's run is $3,500. Funds will be divided between the following:
The Warchest Program was created in November of
1994. Through the program, The ABCF sends monthly financial support to
Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War (PP/POWs) who have received
insufficient, little, or no financial support during their imprisonment. Funds from
the Warchest are distributed through monthly stipends to the political prisoners in
need. Prisoners use this money to cover the
basic necessities of everyday living. Since its inception, the ABCF has
raised over $60,000 through the Warchest program.

Revolutionary Autonomous Communities (RAC): was
created in the aftermath of the May Day 2007 police riot targeting
migrant workers who dared stand up for our human rights. Members of the MacArthur
Park area and others joined together to support those with no papers and those with
no means. RAC-LA came forward to aid the
community in self-organizing such that with the help of each other we
might make an inhuman way of living a bit more bearable while at same
time acquiring the means to one day transform this system into an image
of our own humanity.

SUPPORT THE STRUGGLE:
Remember that many of those arrested in the past or present are not far
from us. Many of them were and are community and labor activists, queer
and environmental activists, people who decided to speak out against
various forms of oppression and paid the price of freedom for their
actions. Anyone of these people could have at one time stood beside us
in a demonstration, at a speak-out or even a organizing meeting. At any
moment it could be us who finds ourselves in this situation, so it is
imperative that we ensure that a strong community of support exists for
these people as well as ourselves. The strength of our movement is
determined by how much we support our fallen comrades.

GET INVOLVED:
People can participate in the following ways:
Be a runner: We are asking people or groups who are running to
collect as many sponsors for the run as possible. Remember the money
received is going to help imprisoned comrades and local groups who need
help.
Sponsor a runner: This can be done through a flat donation to the runner of your
choice.
Sponsor Running Down the Walls: Any amount helps. Contact the Los Angeles Anarchist
Black Cross if you wish to simply donate money.
Organizations who donate more than $35 will be added to list of sponsor
organizations on the website and all fliers/posters.
Donate to the Warchest: For the Warchest send funds to the
Philadelphia ABC, indicating your desire for those funds to go to the
Warchest. Please make checks and money orders to Tim Fasnacht.
(Philadelphia ABCF P.O. Box 42129 Philadelphia, PA 19101).
Organize a Running Down the Walls in your location: We wish to
expand the solidarity runs in more cities and prisons. In past years we
had runs in: Albuquerque (NM), Arcata (CA), Ashland, (OR), Bellefonte
(PA), Boston (MA), Denver, (CO), Detroit (MI), Elmore (AL), Inez (KY),
Marion (IL), Mexico City, New York (NY), USP. Navosta (TX), Pelican Bay
(CA), Phoenix (AZ), Sandstone (MN), Tucson (AZ), Toronto, and Ontario.


For more information contact us at: la@abcf.net

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

GROUPS MARCH AND RALLY ACROSS THE STATE TO END MASS INCARCERATION AND 40 YEAR WAR ON DRUGS

For Immediate Release

June 14th, 2011

GROUPS MARCH AND RALLY ACROSS THE STATE TO END
MASS INCARCERATION AND 40 YEAR WAR ON DRUGS

Contact: Emily Harris
Statewide Coordinator, Californians United for a Responsible Budget
Cell: 510-435-1176

San Francisco: June 17th, 12:00pm press
conference at San Francisco's City Hall, followed
by a march featuring music from the Brass
Liberation Orchestra, large puppets and other
art, as well as a community speak out

Fresno: June 17th, 11:00am rally at the State Building

Bakersfield: June 17th, 4:00pm rally at the Courthouse at Chester and Parkston

Madera, June 17th, 5:00pm rally at 200 Ford St. across from Courthouse

Visalia, June 18th, 2:00pm rally at Mooney and Caldwell

Los Angeles: June 18th, 1pm at the Chuc's
Justice Center, featuring two panels of community
leaders, a press conference at 4pm, live music and a candlelight vigil.


California - Beginning on Friday June 17th, the
40th anniversary of the "war on drugs," hundreds
will come together to hold "Communities Rising"
actions and rallies in communities across
California. Over 40 organizations working with
the Californians United for a Responsible Budget,
or "CURB," alliance will send a strong message
from different parts of the state to Governor
Brown and the state legislature, calling for the
State to take active steps to end its
participation in the 40-year-old "war on drugs",
and to prioritize vital social services over prison spending.

"Spending on prisons has grown from five percent
to ten percent of our General Fund spending,
doubling in the past decade," said Lisa Marie
Alatorre of Critical Resistance, a CURB member
organization. "Locking up too many people for too
long does not contribute to public safety and is
draining essential resources from education and
health care " programs that make a real
difference to Californians." California remains billions of dollars in debt.

In response to the Supreme Court's decision to
uphold a lower court rulings in Brown v. Plata,
California has been ordered to reduce its
lethally crowded prison system in the next two
years. The Governor's plan is to shift tens of
thousands of prisoners to county jails, building
tens of thousands more jail cells and thousands
more high-security prison cells. "It looks like
Governor Brown wants to do nothing but repeat the
mistakes of the last 30 years," said Debbie Reyes
of California Prison Moratorium Project, another
CURB member organization. "We built 23 massive
prisons and that didn't solve overcrowding. Now
he wants to extend that failed effort by
expanding county jail systems. Like the Supreme
Court said, you can't build your way out of this problem."

Organizations and residents across the state are
frustrated by the impacts of the State's economic
and social priorities. "For years we've been
cutting back on state programs that save lives
and build decent futures for the next
generation," said Amanda Vela of Madera Citizens
for Better Community and Schools, "Now Gov. Brown
is asking voters to raise state revenues to pay
for more jail cells? We have to stop the cuts and
re-channel funds away from prisons and jails and
back into programs that make a difference for us and our kids."

The various rallies, marches, speak-outs, and
other actions across the state fall on the forty
year anniversary of President Richard Nixon's
declaration of a "war on drugs", a policy that
many experts have shown to wreak havoc in low
income communities and communities of color. "The
Plata decision is a real opportunity for our
state to reverse decades of racist
"tough-on-crime" policies," says Rodrigo "Froggy"
Vasquez of Students for Sensible Drug Policy. "We
are tired of being politically ignored. We need
leadership in Sacramento with the guts to get
smart, end the war on drugs, and decriminalize drug possession."

Texas, New York, and Michigan, among other states
have successfully reduced their prison budgets
and populations while increasing public safety.
CURB argues California could do the same by
implementing parole and sentencing reforms such
as amending or repealing three strikes laws.

Communities Rising Actions include:
* San Francisco: June 17th, 12:00pm press
conference at San Francisco's City Hall, followed
by a march featuring music from the Brass
Liberation Orchestra, large puppets and other
art, as well as a community speak out
* Fresno: June 17th, 11:00am rally at the State Building
* Bakersfield: June 17th, 4:00pm rally at the
Courthouse at Chester and Parkston
* Madera, June 17th, 5:00pm rally at 200 Ford St. across from Courthouse
* Visalia, June 18th, 2:00pm rally at Mooney and Caldwell
* Los Angeles: June 18th, 1pm at the Chuco's
Justice Center, featuring two panels of community
leaders, a press conference at 4pm, live music and a candlelight vigil.


Sponsoring organizations across the State
include: A New Path - LA, A New Way of Life, All
of Us or None, American Civil Liberties Union of
Northern California, American Civil Liberties
Union of Southern California, American Friends
Service Committee, Berkeley Needle Exchange
Emergency Distribution, Blacksmith Records Inc.,
California Coalition for Women Prisoners,
California Partnership, California Prison
Moratorium Project, Californians United for a
Responsible Budget, Center for Non-Violence,
Community Justice Network for Youth, Cop Watch -
LA, Critical Resistance, Dolores Huerta
Foundation, Drug Policy Alliance, Enlace,
Families to Amend California's Three Strikes,
Fresno Brown Berets, Harm Reduction Coalition,
Hip Hop Not Bombs, Homies Unidos, Justice by
Uniting Creative Energy, Justice Now, Law
Enforcement Against Prohibition, Leadership
through Empowerment Action and Dialogue, Legal
Services for Prisoners with Children, Madera
Citizens for Better Community and Schools,
October 22nd Coalition - LA, Oasis Clinic, Pico
Youth and Family Center, SF Drug Users Union,
Students for Sensible Drug Policy, TGI-Justice
Project, These Cuts Won't Heal, United for Drug
Policy Reform and Youth Justice Coalition.

More information about actions, prisons, the
budget crisis and realignment can be found at:
http://www.curbprisonspending.org/

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Black Rose Anarchist History Tour

Fellow Anarchists!

Los Angeles has a rich anarchist history, but sadly most of that history has
been forgotten or lost in the pages of time. Due to a disconnect of today’s
anarchists with their past, combined with never ending redevelopment of the
city’s landscape, anarchists in the city constantly walk past important
landmarks for our community, unaware of their existence.
But all is not lost. The Los Angeles Anarchist Black Cross will be hosting the
Black Rose Society Anarchist Historical Tour. The walking tour will take us
around the Plaza and into Chinatown where will rediscover our movement’s
history. We will visit the sites of anarchist riots and where several of our
martyrs have fallen. We visit locations where Magonista and IWW offices once
stood. We will follow in the paths where some of the greatest and most noble
anarchists once traveled.
With 13 stops and 20 specifics site, we will reconnect with our roots and
through the past we will begin to build a new anarchist movement.
So please, join us and learn a little about our city’s great anarchist history.

When, Where and How Much?
We will gather on June 19th at 11:00 am on the south side of Los Angeles Plaza
(near the Pico House and Sanchez Street.) The tour will take approximately 1 – 1
½ hours. We are asking for a $5 donation, but no one will be turned away.

We are also looking for individuals interested in helping out with the event.
This will involve publicly reading a statement about one or more of the
locations we visit. Please contact us at: la@abcf.net

Saturday, May 14, 2011

Day 2 of Peoples Justice Conference at Los Angeles Trade Tech College, Sun 5-15, 10am-4pm

If you came to Day 1, you know what terrific workshops on community
control over police, juvenile justice, social reintegration and civil
rights for formerly incarcerated people, FBI-grand jury repression of
human rights, labor and solidarity activists, and self-defense were
held. If you missed it, you don't know what you're missing. Come on
out for Day 2, Sunday May 15 from 10 AM to 4 PM at LA Trade Tech
College, 400 W. Washington Blvd. corner Grand Ave in downtown LA, in
the cafeteria and adjacent classrooms. You'll be glad if you do --
for more workshops on police-ICE attacks on migrants, a People's
Trial of the state for human rights violations against political
prisoners, stopping homeless sweeps and the Safer Cities Initiative,
exposing corruption and abuse in the probate courts, Know Your
Rights, how to sue the police and win, and the Stop Car Confiscation
(vehicle impounds) Campaign, and a wrap-up plenary on on-going
actions and alliance building around issues related to the criminal
"justice" system, the cop, courts and lockups, the prison-industrial
complex. Come and bring a few friends for a powerful day of
analyzing, strategizing, and unity building for effective ongoing action!

After you get motivated and inspired at the conference, head on down
to KPFK to volunteer on the fund drive. KPFK is the media sponsor of
the Peoples Justice Conference -- something no other station in LA
would dream of -- and GrassrootsKPFK, an alliance of human rights,
labor, anti-racist and peace activists who want to make sure KPFK and
Pacifica remain true to the mission and air grassroots voices of
communities in struggle for survival and a better world, played a key
role in initiating the conference, which has brought together a
diverse coalition of Black, Brown, Asian, indigenous, and
European-descent people committed to solidarity in the common
struggle for justice and an end to oppression. See at Trade Tech, at
KPFK, and in the trenches!

--Michael Novick

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Close L.A. County Jail!

Charles William Wright III – Photo: Robert Antal Photography
March 12, 2011 SF Bay View
by Charles William Wright III

I’m a Chicago native. On Sept, 7, 2010, I was thrown in what Los Angeles County sheriffs called a cell in the Century Regional Detention Facility, 11703 Alameda on the Mona Boulevard side. There was no toilet in the room. Instead of receiving a citation, I was handcuffed though not arrested – not read my rights – for not paying $1.50 train fare.

Sgt. Mario Rodarte waited until I was handcuffed in the car to pull out a Taser and spark it, trying to intimidate me. I responded by cursing and ended up at Century Regional an hour later, near 8:30 p.m. Arrested at Seventh and Metro on the Figueroa side, I was taken over 10 train stops away and thrown behind bars, although I remained silent, never showing ID.

I was booked under the fake name “Charles White” and booking number 2469541 although I hadn’t been asked to fingerprint. The next night, Sept. 8, I was asked to print and exercised my right to refuse. Two uniformed men forced my prints while others videotaped. After the illegal printing, I was taken to Men’s Central Jail.

I spent Sept. 8-9 on a bench handcuffed as if I was Hannibal Lecter (“Silence of the Lambs”). I was in excruciating pain. Then I was tossed in 172B Pod 12 on the seventh floor of TTCF (Twin Towers Correctional Facility) but never knew which tower and no one answered my questions. My right arm was cuffed outside the pod through a food drawer and attached to the door handle with my body inside.

On Sept. 10 or 11 – it’s hard to remember – three plain-clothed Hispanic men came up to the pod in the middle of the night and yanked the chain with cuffs attached, causing me to be cut and bloody. I refused medical treatment and asked to be released because no charges were pending against me. I was laughed at and demanded a phone call. I was denied. I asked the nurse and psychiatrist – LACSD called me a mental patient – to get me a phone call to ACLU. It never happened.

I remained under “handcuffed observation” until Sept. 20 and went to court at 210 W. Temple St., where I was barefoot and handcuffed behind my back in court. I remained silent and was thrown back into 172B Pod 12 without cuffs until Oct. 1, when Sgt. Geary, a white female, came up to the pod with a court order to release me because Judge Craig Richman knew there were no charges against me.

The jail sheriffs ignored the order, put me on a bus and forced me into court. I remained silent and was thrown back into the pod. On Oct. 22, the sheriffs got a hearing for me to appear at 1150 San Fernando Rd. for a “mental competence hearing.” I was deemed competent.

On Nov. 5, Commissioner Kristi Lousteau gave me time served for 422 P.C., which my public defender, Brandon J. Henderson, said was a misdemeanor. They overlooked the fact that the complaint was unsigned by the alleged victim and committing magistrate. On Nov. 9 I went to get a copy of the case file, BA375709, from the clerk’s office and some employee had forged the victim’s signature. Fortunately I had already obtained the original file from Henderson.

I was in jail for 61 days with no charges, no shower, no phone, no brushing teeth etc. Sheriffs turned water off in the pod for 20 days and I was naked in the pod until Nov. 5 after court. If you would like to help me sue and/or close the jail, call me at (213) 784-5135 or email close.la_countyjail@yahoo.com.
L.A. County Jail statistics

Deaths reported as suicides in the Los Angeles County Jail:

• October 2010: One supposed “suicide” each day. Oct. 2-5: Three “suicides” in four days.

• August 2009: Two supposed “suicides.” A mental patient murders a transient who was in jail for vandalism. Why is a mental patient in population?

• 2009: Eight supposed “suicides.”

• 2000-2007: Los Angeles rated 10th of the top 50 counties for inmate deaths in California, with 17 percent of inmate deaths for top 50 counties in Southern California.

Not all these deaths are suicides. An attempt was made on my life while I was there, and it was set up to be a phony “suicide.” I know a Black family whose female relative was murdered in her single cell. The body was held from the family for 30 days and the autopsy was held longer. Cause of death was “inconclusive.”

According to a 2010 report, the Los Angeles jail system held over 20,000 detainees and is the largest jail on earth, costing nearly $1 billion a year to operate.

This is the 21st century, yet the conditions in the Los Angeles County Jail are similar to slaves packed tightly on a ship during the Middle Passage. Men’s Central Jail is so overcrowded that each three-man cell houses six men.
This is the 21st century, yet the conditions in the Los Angeles County Jail are similar to slaves packed tightly on a ship during the Middle Passage.

What percentage of these inmates are Black? How many are charged only with misdemeanors and could be released on their own recognizance? How many refused fingerprinting like I did? How many have zero bail and a zero bail hold like I had? Why aren’t bails reduced more often since jail is so grossly overcrowded?

Charles William Wright III can be reached at close.la_countyjail@yahoo.com. This story first appeared in the People’s Tribune.