'Peaceful protestors were
violently attacked and arrested, assault weapons pointed at them with fingers
on the triggers, some dragged across the cement, their clothes ripped off of
them'
A photograph of riot police arresting a nurse protesting peacefully in Baton Rouge on Saturday garnered international attention. (Photo: Jonathan Bachman/Reuters) |
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) of Louisiana and other
local civil rights groups filed suit against the Baton Rouge police department
on Wednesday for violating the first amendment rights of demonstrators
protesting the recent fatal police shooting of Alton
Sterling.
Baton Rouge police showed excessive force when they arrived at last weekend's Black Lives Matter demonstration in riot gear and bearing machine guns, the lawsuit (pdf) alleges.
The officers also
violated protesters' First Amendment rights when they used "physical and
verbal abuse and wrongful arrests to disperse protestors who were gathered
peacefully to speak out against the police killing of Alton Sterling," the
ACLU wrote.
The
harsh police response in Baton Rouge was well-documented.
Multiple journalists were arrested, several demonstrators reported the police
pointing machine guns directly at them, and at one point the Baton Rouge police
department even used an armored military vehicle to physically push protesters
back:
Swat car literally pushing crowd back pic.twitter.com/Z4GM5lEJpU
— Rebekah Allen
(@rebekahallen) July 10, 2016
Another video showed police swarming a private residence in riot
gear and making multiple arrests. Around 200
people were
ultimately arrested.
"I witnessed firsthand as peaceful protestors were
violently attacked and arrested, assault weapons pointed at them with fingers
on the triggers, some dragged across the cement, their clothes ripped off of
them," said Alison Renee McCrary, president of
the Louisiana chapter of the National Lawyers Guild and a Catholic nun.
"What
I saw happening was an immediate threat to life," McCrary said. "My
and other demonstrators' speech was chilled because of this event."
Lawyers
for the rights groups filed a temporary restraining order against the police
"to prevent them from interfering with people’s constitutionally protected
right to gather peacefully moving forward," the ACLU reports.
ACLU
of Louisiana executive director Marjorie Esman argued: "The police didn't
do their job in Baton Rouge, again. They are bound to protect us from harm, to
keep us safe, to do everything possible before throwing someone to the ground
or pulling the trigger. Yet Alton Sterling is on the long list of Black people
killed needlessly by our nation's police, and protests in his honor have turned
into circuses of violence where the First Amendment is tossed aside."
"We
can't bring Alton Sterling back but at minimum, the police can stop blocking
our right to protest in his name," Esman said.