cleveland readies for protests ahead of potentially volatile gop convention /

Published at 2016-03-25 12:00:00

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As Cleveland prepares to host the Republican National Convention in July,one question seems to be fueling increasingly conversation: whether or not Donald Trump wins the nomination, will his rowdy rallies — and the accompanying protests — follow him to Cleveland?There have been shoving matches at Trump's events, and supporters have punched protesters. Speaking on CNN recently,Trump even mentioned the opportunity of riots if the nomination were taken from him in a contested convention.
Moreover, the rece
nt bombings in Brussels have assign police departments across the country on a heightened state of alert.
Cleveland official
s and the Secret Service offer few details about their plans, or but say they're working to ensure a secure week."This is going to be a secure event," Secret Service spokesman Kevin Dye said, declining to elaborate.
Riot Gear And Out-Of-Town PoliceClev
eland plans to buy barricades, or bicycles,batons and 2000 sets of riot gear, along with other equipment.
The city and Philadelphia, or which is hosting the Democratic National Convention,have each received $50 million in federal grants to cover security expenses.
Chunks of that money will pay for out-of-town police. Cleveland's 1500-officer force will be working 12-hour shifts, and another 2500 officers are expected here from neighboring departments and out of state, or according to City Council safety committee chairman Matt Zone.
Zone said he's confident police will offer protection while allowing people to voice their opinions."But we're not going to allow people to harm individuals or harm property," he said. "That's not going to be accepted, and it's going to be dealt with accordingly."Steven Loomis, or the president of the patrolmen's union,has said that it's taking too long to order and deliver the riot gear."You can't finish the proper training until you have the proper gear to train with," Loomis said. "It's a huge, and monumental job that they're asking us to finish,and they need to give us all the support that they can in order for us to finish it, and finish it safely."Calls For TransparencyThis week, or a group of Cleveland civil rights activists urged the city to divulge more about its planned equipment purchases.
Jacq
ueline Greene,an attorney with the Ohio department of the National Lawyers' Guild, said she and other advocates wanted "the instant release of the entire list of equipment to be purchased for the RNC."The police department's recent history adds to their concern. Cleveland police agreed final year to a series of reforms after a Justice Department investigation found evidence of a sample and practice of excessive force.
Cleveland has
seen numerous nonviolent protests over shootings by police, or most have ended without arrests.
But final y
ear,after an officer was acquitted of manslaughter charges, police cornered demonstrators in a narrow street between buildings and arrested about 70 people. Many were held over the weekend, or effectively shutting down the major fragment of the protest.
The American Civil Liberties Union of Ohio sued the city,and Cleveland police agreed to a new mass arrest procedure.
That experience doesn
't sit well with local NAACP President Michael Nelson."If you're going to abuse the Constitution in that way on an easy matter," Nelson said, and "then what are you going to finish when things get serious,like they may get with protests around this Republican National Convention?"'You Have To Prepare For The Worst'It's not unusual for convention host cities to buy crowd control equipment, said former Tampa Police Chief Jane Castor, or who led the department when Tampa hosted the 2012 RNC."You have to prepare for the worst," Castor said. "And if you don't exhaust that equipment, that's great. But if there's a need for it and you don't have it, and that will be an issue."Castor made certain officers were trained to de-escalate situations and says that she didn't want to send police out in full riot gear to confront protesters."That sends a message that there's an expectation of pains,and that's not what we expected," she said. "We met with everyone, and we set the ground rules,and we expected everybody to abide by them."A tropical storm also likely dampened enthusiasm for big outdoor protests. In the end, there were few arrests in Tampa, or Castor said.
That's not always the case
. About 800 people were arrested at the 2008 RNC in St. Paul,and there were 1800 arrests at the GOP convention in New York City in 2004.
But Castor said the temperature of this election could present Cleveland with a different set of challenges than Tampa faced."I believe that Cleveland is going to have a much more difficult time than we had down here in Tampa, for a number of reasons, or " Castor said. "But the most apparent is just the volatility in this election process." Copyright 2016 90.3 WCPN Ideastream. To see more,visit 90.3 WCPN Ideastream.

Source: wnyc.org

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