I'd assume that the police had one or more paddy wagons on the scene. What would have been wrong with ferrying the nazis out using those? The vehicles would have to have been returned to their home base in any case. They could easily have driven the WP loonies to the cop shop and let them out there. It's not like they don't know their way home from there.
25 March 2011 at 07:52
Anonymous said...
Is the WP march one of your guys favourite things to post about? You went pretty far into detail haha.
Anonymous 2: Yep, especially when they utterly fail.
25 March 2011 at 11:40
Anonymous said...
@Nos200: Meh, it seemed to be a peaceful demonstration, so atleast that's a good thing.
26 March 2011 at 07:12
We were aware of the efforts to convince private bus companies in the city of Calgary to deny boneheads planning on marching this past weekend. It appears that the efforts may have been successful:
[Image]
However, the flip side of this is that they may have ended up getting free transportation.
There has been a lot of concern, justifiably so, about the boneheads being provided with transportation from the location of the march on Saturday on a city bus:
Calgary police defend giving white supremacists bus transportationBy Richard Cuthbertson, Calgary Herald March 22, 2011City police are defending the decision to use a city bus to ferry a dozen white supremacists out of downtown after their march Saturday, saying it avoided a violent battle with anti-racism demonstrators.
On Monday, police faced criticism for using city services to transport the white supremacists, but say the transit vehicle was never a "courtesy bus" for a group called Blood and Honour.
Rather, police say it was a prearranged contingency tactic to evacuate anybody, be they protesters from either side or members of the public caught up in the demonstration.
Police spokesman Kevin Brookwell said officers loaded them onto the bus to avoid a violent confrontation with antiracist activists, who chased the vehicle down the road.
"If we had not extracted them when we did, we would have had a violent face to face, which would have defeated the whole purpose of what we had done up to that point," Brookwell said.
The explanation is of some consolation to Ald. John Mar, who raised his concerns over the use of the bus during a council meeting Monday. Still, the downtown alderman said he doesn't like how it played out from a moral standpoint.
"I'm still disappointed that we provided this transportation, but I understand the rationale as to why it was done," he said.
Others, however, aren't happy. One of the anti-racism leaders, Bonnie Devine, said the two groups were kept apart by police and safety wasn't necessarily an issue.
She said anti-racism demonstrators were there to be confrontational, but non-violent.
It is police prerogative to assess the situation, but she thinks their resources, and not a transit bus, should have been used to take the white supremacists away.
"I don't like that (the) city used any resources to help facilitate neo-Nazis in marching in our streets," Devine said.
Mar said the white supremacist group had originally chartered its own bus, but those plans fell apart when the company learned the identity of the people it was to drive around.
Police say there was some thought given to the police service chartering a bus from a private company, but that was ultimately turned down because of the cost to taxpayers.
Blood and Honour did not pay for the transit bus, according to Brookwell.
He said it is not uncommon in major events like this to use buses as contingencies: "We did not know the numbers that would arise until they actually amassed downtown."
The bus was operated by a transit peace officer, and Calgary police were not charged for the use.
"We sided on the side of safety, regardless of the group," said Brian Whitelaw, the head of transit security. "If there was a confrontation, we'd probably have ended up in the situation we were in several years ago where you've got the risk of property damage, and you've certainly got the risk of physical injury."
Whitelaw said without the bus, the white supremacists would likely have used regular modes of public transit to leave the downtown. This could have created serious problems as confrontation between two groups could have migrated onto the LRT and regulars buses, he said.
5 Comments
Close this window Jump to comment formHow many buses did the city have on standby? Enough to ferry 200 anti-racist protesters?
24 March 2011 at 22:59
I'd assume that the police had one or more paddy wagons on the scene. What would have been wrong with ferrying the nazis out using those? The vehicles would have to have been returned to their home base in any case. They could easily have driven the WP loonies to the cop shop and let them out there. It's not like they don't know their way home from there.
25 March 2011 at 07:52
Is the WP march one of your guys favourite things to post about? You went pretty far into detail haha.
25 March 2011 at 09:10
Anonymous 2: Yep, especially when they utterly fail.
25 March 2011 at 11:40
@Nos200: Meh, it seemed to be a peaceful demonstration, so atleast that's a good thing.
26 March 2011 at 07:12