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    The Road to Tyranny by Don Jans

    Seattle Police Clear Autonomous Zone After Mayor Declares Unlawful Assembly

    BY ZACHARY STIEBER

     

    Seattle officials are finally clearing the so-called autonomous zone after weeks of refusing to use force to do so.

    Police officers equipped with protective gear began clearing tents and barricades at the zone in the Capitol Hill neighborhood early Wednesday, arresting at least 23 people for failure to disperse, obstruction, resisting arrest, and assault.

    They were enforcing an edict from Mayor Jenny Durkan.

    Durkan, a Democrat, declared the occupation of the area an “unlawful assembly.”

    “The City’s obligations under the First Amendment do not require the City to provide limitless sanctuary to occupy City property, damage City and private property, obstruct the right of way, or foster dangerous conditions,” an executive order made public on Wednesday stated. See the full order at the bottom of the article.

    Officers arrived on the scene around 5 a.m. and told occupiers they had to leave within eight minutes, the Seattle Police Department said in a statement.

    Seattle officials are finally clearing the so-called autonomous zone after weeks of refusing to use force to do so.

    Police officers equipped with protective gear began clearing tents and barricades at the zone in the Capitol Hill neighborhood early Wednesday, arresting at least 23 people for failure to disperse, obstruction, resisting arrest, and assault.

    They were enforcing an edict from Mayor Jenny Durkan.

    Durkan, a Democrat, declared the occupation of the area an “unlawful assembly.”

    “The City’s obligations under the First Amendment do not require the City to provide limitless sanctuary to occupy City property, damage City and private property, obstruct the right of way, or foster dangerous conditions,” an executive order made public on Wednesday stated. See the full order at the bottom of the article.

    Officers arrived on the scene around 5 a.m. and told occupiers they had to leave within eight minutes, the Seattle Police Department said in a statement.

     

    According to statistics from the department, 65 criminal incidents took place and were reported to authorities in the area from June 8 to June 30. That was an increase from 37 in the previous year.

    Response times to crime reports in the area, which is also known as the Capitol Hill Organized Protest (CHOP), soared in recent weeks because occupiers repeatedly blocked police officers from entering.

    Some of the officers responding to the zone, which encompasses an abandoned police precinct, were equipped with a higher level of protective gear, Best said. Photographs and video footage showed officers in riot gear clearing the area.

    “This equipment not meant to be a preemptive show of force. Police are utilizing this equipment because individuals associated with the CHOP area are known to be armed and dangerous, and who may be associated with active shootings, homicides, robberies, assaults, and other violent crimes,” Best said.

    Epoch Times Photo

     

    The abandoned police precinct at the Capitol Hill Organized Protest (CHOP) in Seattle, Wash., on June 25, 2020. (Echo Liu/The Epoch Times)

    Some of the occupiers left the zone in recent days but dozens refused to depart, insisting the city would need to meet their numerous demands first.

    Protesters blocked workers on June 26 from removing barriers. City Department of Transportation workers returned on June 30 and were able to remove around 10 concrete barriers before leaving because of the swelling crowd, the department said in a statement.

    Seattle Parks and Recreation workers started cleaning Cal Anderson Park later Tuesday, temporarily closing it to “assess damage and clean up areas that have seen significant waste collection,” the agency said.

    The community garden and art installed by occupiers wouldn’t be touched, the city said.

    A spokesman for Durkan told The Epoch Times in a statement the day before the area was cleared that most people participating in the occupation have been peaceful but their message “has been undermined by the violence in the area.”

    “The area has increasingly attracted more individuals bent on division and violence, and it is risking the lives of individuals. There has been unacceptable behavior by individuals who are preventing city employees from doing their job,” the spokesman said.

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