Occupy Wall
Street protester, talks with police. (Andrew Burton/Getty Images/AFP)
Almost
5,000 people have been arrested during Occupy protests across the US since the
movement started on September 17 in New York. And as it is showing no signs of
slowing, even some police seem to be defecting to the other side.
Retired
Philadelphia police Captain Ray Lewis became the game changer on November
17. Arrested while demonstrating with
Occupy protesters on the streets of New York City, the 24-year veteran of the
force was held in police custody for 11 hours and received one comment from a
New York cop.
“Nobody
talked to me. This one individual later on told me that I had the testicles of
an elephant,” says Ray Lewis.
Occupy Wall
Street has become an undeniable American household name.
Police
crackdowns against the democratic movement have become something of the norm.
But what is not so normal is seeing one side endorse the other.
Although
all of America’s police force is part of the 99 per cent, Captain Lewis says
cops secretly supporting OWS face dire consequences by going public.
“A
tremendous fear of losing their job. Being disciplined, being fired and then
what do they do? Everybody in the 99 per
cent have that fear and police officers also. They have children, they have
wives. What would they do if they were fired? There are no jobs available,”
Lewis says.
The arrests
of dozens of journalists covering the story at the Zuccotti Park are among many
reasons Captain Lewis says he temporarily transplanted to Manhattan.
“That’s
close to a dictatorship. When you exclude the media, that’s what dictators from
all over the world do and that is very scary,” he says.
Despite his
arrest, Captain Lewis is back at Zuccotti Park, showing unwavering support for
the Occupy movement, standing nearby a group of New York City police officers.
They are here securing the area, but some are beginning to show a little
interest.
“For the
first time, I had an officer break ranks at the barricade line. A white officer
named Officer Murray. He introduced himself and he started asking me a few
questions and I asked ‘Do you know the risk you’re taking?’ He was so brave
that he said, ‘Hey this is still America and until a supervisor orders me back
to the line, I’m going to talk with you.’
"I
hope to get mainstream America involved, the police involved. Realizing we’re
all victims of corporate America and that corporate America has got to be
stopped,” Lewis says.
Oakland
police Officer Fred Shavies is the only active cop who has gone on record with
his support.
“I totally
agree with Occupy Wall Street. Even to an extent with Occupy Oakland. I am a
part of the 99 per cent. For the most part people are peaceful and they want to
see change,” Shavies says.
Brutal
scare tactics such as pepper spray, batons, and flash grenade canisters have
been used against Occupy camps throughout the US. Oakland, California,
resembled something of an urban war zone this fall, leaving a war veteran in
critical condition and the eyes of an 84-year-old burning from tear gas.
Many in the
US believe the biggest change, what the protesters across the country are
demanding, could come when or if law enforcement officials stop suppressing the
right to assemble and begin supporting it.
Meanwhile,
nearly 300 arrests have been made in Los Angeles as the police have cleared one
of the last and longest-standing Occupy camps, the Occupy LA City Hall Camp.
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