Print

The "Occupy" movement spreads to Tucson, Arizona. Starting an event near you? Reader Supported News will help you spread the word.

A demonstrator holds a sign during an Occupy Wall Street protest in lower Manhattan. The protests moved into their third week on Monday. (photo: Reuters)
A demonstrator holds a sign during an Occupy Wall Street protest in lower Manhattan. The protests moved into their third week on Monday. (photo: Reuters)



Occupy Wall Street, Occupy Together, Occupy D.C., Occupy Oakland, Occupy Chicago, Occupy Boston, Occupy San Francisco , Occupy Los Angeles, Occupy Live Streams

Use this address: This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it



occupy: Tucson, Arizona

Website: Occupy Tucson

Facebook: Occupy Tucson

 

Occupy Tucson Evicted Yet Again. Many Arrests.

By Robert Alexander Dumas

02 March 12

The Tucson Police Department has evicted Occupy Tucson from third park as of noon today, that is if you don’t count the ill conceived poorly executed attempt at a previous location.

The police came to the De Anza Park yesterday morning with four officers at 09:30 and gave notice of a pending eviction saying that they had received numerous complaints. They were going to attempt trespassing charges this time is what I heard, but as yet we do not know how the approximately 20 protesters who were arrested between 10:00 and 12:00 are being charged.

Just following the ALEC/Shut Down the Corporations solidarity march late afternoon yesterday, two Occupy Tucson members who were attempting to leave after the event had ended were run up upon and roughly tackled by several TPD officers with no justifiable provocation then promptly arrested and hustled into a van and whisked away.

From the City of Tucson City statutes Code :

Sec. 11-36. Sitting and lying down on public sidewalks in downtown and neighborhood commercial zones.

Sec. 11-36.1. Purpose and intent. Pursuant to Chapter IV, Sections 1(19) and (21) of the Charter, mayor and council find as follows:

(a) Public sidewalks in business districts are created and maintained for the primary purpose of enabling pedestrians to safely and efficiently move about from place to place, facilitating deliveries of goods and services, and providing potential customers with convenient access to goods and services.

……Snip……

Section 11-36.2. Prohibited conduct; exceptions.

(4) Who is exercising First Amendment rights protected by the United States Constitution, including free exercise of religion, speech and assembly; provided, however, that the person sitting or lying on the public sidewalk remains at least eight (8) feet from any doorway or business entrance, leaves open a five (5) foot path and does not otherwise block or impede pedestrian traffic.

This Occupy encampment was actually located on an unused city owned easement whose perimeter was the same sidewalks which suround De Anza Park.

For your further consideration is the unlikely coincidence that Occupy Tucson has been awaiting a ruling on a Motion to Dismiss on First Amendment grounds hearing held two weeks ago tomorrow in City Court where the presiding magistrate, Judge Dingeldine had said he would render his decision sometime last week.

It is beginning to look like Occupy Tucson needs private land upon which to build it’s next protest hub/”new” community model and lucky for us, we have a couple of prospects in that direction that have come up at perhaps just the right time.

Stay Strong and Take Care of One Another.

 

Occupy Tucson

By Robert Alexander Dumas

28 February 12

we are in our 4th week of our 4th incarnation of an encampment. The exact location is De Anza Park at Stone Ave. & Speedway Blvd. in Tucson. There are presently 50 tents, equal numbers between homeless and Occupiers, and we are working on building it back into a protest hub as efficient as two of the three previous, and are planning on expansion. We are awaiting a ruling on a motion to dismiss on first amendment grounds hearing held 11 days ago.

 

Occupy Tucson & the Story of the Donut Hole Auction on the Court House Steps.

By Robert Alexander Dumas

23 February 12

No FireDogs, not the stupid little balls they call donut holes when they are for sale. The actual holes. The empty space you acquire in the middle of a donut when you purchase one.

Donut holes being symbolic of the empty space created in former homeowners lives once the travesty has played itself out to its preordained conclusion which path they stepped upon the minute they first talked to a mortgage rep to get prequalified for a loan.

READ MORE

 

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
Email This Page