Evicted but defiant, Occupy LA faces crisis moment
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| Los Angeles
As听nearly 300 arrested Occupy Los Angeles protesters await a bail appeal, the movement itself is facing the larger question of what comes next for what was the largest remaining听Occupy movement encampment in the nation.
The occupation, which swelled to nearly 500 tents at its height, was cleared early Wednesday by a force of 1,400 law-enforcement officers.
City sanitation workers are already clearing what truck driver Leo Ramirez told local reporters was 鈥減robably 25 or 30 tons of debris,鈥 including sleeping bags, tents, food, clothing, and a random assortment of what one worker dubbed, 鈥渂iohazards.鈥澨
But activists say their movement is not about their gear 鈥 and their message will remain.
"The entire city is now aware of what we are trying to say,鈥 says Lisa Clapier, a member of the Occupy LA media team. 鈥淲e are ready to move into the neighborhoods and the rest of the city. This hasn鈥檛 stopped us at all.鈥
Dozens of protesters have decamped to a nearby church, La Placita, where she says Father Richard Estrada has given them 鈥渋ndefinite sanctuary.鈥
The group plans to hold a general assembly Wednesday afternoon and already has plans to locate another park in the financial district to occupy. Beyond that, the group has scheduled further actions, Ms. Clapier notes. On Friday, it will occupy Los Angeles's Norwalk Courthouse, which will hold foreclosure property auctions.
鈥淲e are asking for a moratorium on these foreclosures,鈥 says Clapier.
At the morning press conference held by听fellow activists, speakers confirmed their commitment to maintain a visible occupation inside Los Angeles. 鈥淲e will occupy your bank lobbies,鈥 one protester said, adding that Occupy LA would pursue the city elite, occupying country clubs and golf courses, if necessary.
Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and Los Angeles Police Chief Charlie Beck acknowledged in their own press conference that the Occupy L.A. movement will not be going away any time soon.听
鈥淚 expect other protests听as Occupy LA works to expand its movement,鈥 said the mayor.
He said he did not believe the movement should be limited to 鈥渄efending a patch of city park and grass,鈥 but rather spreading its core messages of economic听inequalities and what should be done to address them.
But he cautioned the protestors about the future of their actions, noting that they would only be tolerated if they were completely nonviolent. He also warned against further property听damage, noting that the cleanup and restoration of the downtown park area could cost the city as much as $1 million.
But Clapier responds that the Occupy LA team had offered a volunteer landscape architect to handle the restoration, but the city turned this offer down.
鈥淭hey were not maintaining that听area in a sustainable manner, and we offered to upgrade and repair it, but we were turned down.鈥