Occupy Oakland protesters clash with police

clashes with police left an Iraq war veteran critically injured.
The demonstration was in stark contrast to Tuesday night, when riot police fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of anti-Wall Street protesters in downtown Oakland, outside San Francisco.
Officers also fired bean bags but denied using rubber bullets to quell the protests on Tuesday, which erupted after a two-week old camp.

On Wednesday hundreds of people again gathered outside City Hall in the evening to discuss plans for a general strike, but there was no reported unrest as midnight approached.
Oakland’s independent police review body will examine the clashes between riot officers and protesters that left a protester in a critical condition.
Police battled protesters following an Occupy Oakland march to demonstrate against the closing of two occupations in the city in the early hours of Tuesday morning. More than 100 people have been arrested in Oakland since police cleared a camp in Frank Ogawa plaza.

Scott Olsen (24) suffered a fractured skull and brain swelling after he was allegedly hit in the head by a police projectile during the clashes on Tuesday.
A spokesperson for Highland hospital in east Oakland confirmed he was critically ill after being admitted on Tuesday night.
A source at the Oakland citizen’s police review board said it had not yet received a formal complaint, but would be “looking into” the circumstances surrounding Olsen’s injuries.

The board will decide whether to launch an official investigation over the next couple of days.
Jay Finneburgh, an activist photographer who was at the protest, published pictures of Olsen lying bloodied on the ground, while video footage appeared to show police throwing a “flash bang” explosive close to fellow protesters trying to provide aid.

“(Olsen) stood behind me,” Finneburgh told the Guardian.
“I looked to my left and he hit the ground, and he hit it hard. A woman went to look down at him, and he was bleeding from the head.

“She started screaming,” he said.
Video footage posted to YouTube shows Olsen lying motionless in front of a police line after apparently having been hit.

A group of up to 10 protesters gather around him, but a police officer can be seen throwing a device close to the group which then explodes with a bright flash and loud bang, scattering the protesters.

The video then cuts to footage of protesters carrying Olsen away as he bleeds from the head. Olsen was taken to Highland hospital by protesters.
Adele Carpenter, who knows Olsen through his involvement with anti-war groups, said she arrived at the hospital at 11pm on Tuesday night.
Carpenter said she was told by a doctor at the hospital that Olsen had a skull fracture and was in a “serious but stable” condition.

She said he had been sedated and was unconscious.
“I’m just absolutely devastated that someone who did two tours of Iraq and came home safely is now lying in a US hospital because of the domestic police force,” Carpenter told the Guardian.

Olsen, originally from Wisconsin, had only moved to Oakland in July, and met Carpenter through his membership of Veterans for Peace and Iraq Veterans Against the War.
Keith Shannon, who shares an apartment with Olsen and served with him in Iraq, said a neurosurgeon was due to assess him to determine whether he required surgery.

“It’s really hard,” Shannon said.
“I really wish I had gone out with him instead of staying home last night.”
Shannon, who is also 24, said he had seen the video footage showing Olsen lying on the floor as a police officer throws an explosive device near him.

“It’s terrible to go over to Iraq twice and come back injured, and then get injured by the police that are supposed to be protecting us,” he said.
“Police in the majority of cities are acting with restraint and humanity towards the encampments, but Veterans For Peace will not be deterred by police who choose to use brutal tactics,” the organisation said in a statement.

Oakland police confirmed at a press conference that they used tear gas and baton rounds, but said they did not use flash bang grenades.

Police could not be reached for comment, but Finneburgh, who said he had been “present in many protests” where flash bang grenades had been used, said they had been deployed.

The controversial projectile, a small fabric pillow filled with around 40 grammes of lead shot, is one of the most commonly used projectiles in US policing, though it was withdrawn for 18 years after a fatal incident in 1971. – AFP/guardian.co.uk.

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