ACLU Sues Baton Rouge Police for Violating Rights at Alton Sterling Protests
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.
“Seeing the way the police were manhandling folks caused me to hide, scream out of fear, and finally flee for my safety. I had to run.”
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Baton Rouge police showed excessive force when they arrived at this 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 police response] made me afraid to protest. Seeing the way the police were manhandling folks caused me to hide, scream out of fear, and finally flee for my safety. I had to run. A peaceful demonstration should never be like that,” said Crystal Williams, local resident and organizer with North Baton Rouge Matters. “I feel like speech is my most powerful tool to ensure my community and my family are safe. But now I feel totally silenced.”
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:
Another video showed police swarming a private residence in riot gear and making multiple arrests:
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