Berkley Police Arrest More Than 150 Who Protest Police Killings

Police officers with the Berkeley Police Department clash with protesters during a march against the New York City grand jury decision to not indict in the death of Eric Garner in Berkeley, California December 8, 2014. REUTERS/Stephen Lam
Police offi­cers with the Berkeley Police Department clash with pro­test­ers dur­ing a march against the New York City grand jury deci­sion to not indict in the death of Eric Garner in Berkeley, California December 8, 2014. REUTERS/​Stephen Lam

BERKELEY, Calif./NEW YORK (Reuters) — More than 150 pro­test­ers were arrest­ed in California overnight after shut­ting down a major free­way in anoth­er out­break of nation­wide demon­stra­tions against police use of dead­ly force on minorities.

Across the oth­er side of the coun­try late on Monday, bas­ket­ball stars in New York includ­ing Cleveland Cavaliers for­ward LeBron James joined the protests by wear­ing shirts embla­zoned with “I can’t breathe” — the last words of Eric Garner, a black man who died after a police chokehold.

Large crowds have demon­strat­ed dai­ly in sev­er­al U.S. cities since a grand jury decid­ed last week not to bring crim­i­nal charges against a white police offi­cer over the death of Garner, an unarmed father of six, in July.

The death of Garner and the police shoot­ing of Michael Brown, an unarmed black teen in Ferguson, Missouri in August, have high­light­ed strained rela­tions between police and black Americans and rekin­dled a nation­al debate over race relations.

Several hun­dred peo­ple stormed onto Interstate 80 in the col­lege town of Berkeley near San Francisco on Monday night snarling traf­fic in both directions.

Protesters threw rocks and oth­er objects at offi­cers, California Highway Patrol spokesman Daniel Hill said. More than 150 peo­ple were arrest­ed, most­ly for resist­ing or obstruct­ing an offi­cer, he added.

Earlier, dozens of pro­test­ers stopped an Amtrak train in the town by lying on the tracks or sit­ting on a sofa placed across the line.

Outside the Barclays Center in Brooklyn, a group of about 300 pro­test­ers blocked streets and chant­ed, “I can’t breathe,” in mem­o­ry of Garner, and “Hands up, don’t shoot,” a ref­er­ence to Brown’s death.

In down­town Phoenix, about 200 pro­test­ers marched to police head­quar­ters over the killing of anoth­er unarmed black man by a white offi­cer in what author­i­ties described as a strug­gle last week. Protesters demand­ed that police release the name of the offi­cer involved in the fatal shoot­ing of 34-year-old Rumain Brisbon, a man police sus­pect­ed of sell­ing drugs.

New York State Attorney General Eric Schneiderman on Monday said he was seek­ing the pow­er to inves­ti­gate all police killings of

Demonstrators sit on a railroad track in front of an Amtrak train during a march against the New York City grand jury decision to not indict in the death of Eric Garner in Berkeley, California December 8, 2014. REUTERS/Stephen Lam
Demonstrators sit on a rail­road track in front of an Amtrak train dur­ing a march against the New York City grand jury deci­sion to not indict in the death of Eric Garner in Berkeley, California December 8, 2014. REUTERS/​Stephen Lam

unarmed civil­ians in the state.

It remained unclear whether New York Governor Andrew Cuomo would grant Schneiderman such pow­ers. Like the Democratic may­or of New York, Cuomo has tried to walk a fine line — express­ing con­cern about the grand jury’s deci­sion not to charge an offi­cer in Garner’s death while not alien­at­ing the police.

On Monday U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder, whose office is inves­ti­gat­ing the Garner case, announced changes to fed­er­al law enforce­ment guide­lines intend­ed to set an exam­ple for local police, accord­ing to a Justice Department official.

In Cleveland, Samaria Rice, the moth­er of a 12-year-old African-American boy shot dead by police in November, told reporters she was seek­ing a conviction.

Her son, Tamir Rice, was shot near a recre­ation cen­ter while car­ry­ing a pel­let gun that was a repli­ca of a real gun. The boy’s fam­i­ly has filed a fed­er­al civ­il rights law­suit against the city and the two offi­cers involved, one who shot Rice on Nov. 22 and one who was dri­ving the police car.

Tamir was a bright child, he had a promis­ing future and he was very tal­ent­ed in all sports: soc­cer, bas­ket­ball, foot­ball,” Rice said. “He was my baby.”

(Additional report­ing by Kim Palmer in Cleveland, Sebastien Malo in Brooklyn, Sharon Bernstein in Sacramento, Curtis Skinner in Oakland, and David Schwartz in Phoenix; Writing by Sharon Bernstein and Curtis Skinner; Editing by Gareth Jones and Andrew Heavens) http://​news​.yahoo​.com/​n​b​a​-​p​l​a​y​e​r​s​-​y​o​r​k​-​a​d​d​-​v​o​i​c​e​s​-​p​r​o​t​e​s​t​s​-​o​v​e​r​-​p​o​l​i​c​e​-​0​2​5​9​0​8​5​3​6​.​h​tml