'Police riot' is the wrongful, disproportionate,
unlawful and
illegitimate use of force by a group of
police against a group of
civilians.
It often describes a situation where police, clad in
riot gear such as
armor,
helmets, padded knee and elbow protectors, and face shields, encounter a group of civilians, such as a
protest group, which is not engaged in violent behaviour, but is deemed by police or police supervisors to pose a threat to
public safety, and is attacked by police.
In an encounter such as this, violence often ensues. This violence, perpetrated or provoked by police or other military and security force personnel, may run the gamut from simple
assault,
battery,
assault with a deadly weapon,
mayhem, even
homicide. If the riot is caused by or
incited by police action, it can be labelled as a "police riot." This term is considered somewhat provocative, as most people consider the police and similar authorities to be ''keepers of the peace'', and not ''inciters of riots''.
Police, whose duty it is to enforce the
law and prevent violent conflict, are subject to the same
crowd psychology as any other group of armed men and women when in large confrontational groups, in encounters whose outcome is uncertain, and when in the grip of fear, anger, or other strong
emotion.
History
United States
Throughout the history of
labor union organizing, police violence has regularly been used in efforts to quell protesting workers. One notable incident took place in May
1884, when police killed four striking workers at the
McCormick Harvesting Machine Co. in
Chicago. The following day, a peaceful demonstration in Haymarket Square erupted in violence when a bomb was thrown, killing eight policemen — an event known as the
Haymarket Riot. Fifty years later, in July 1934, police in
San Francisco were involved in several encounters with striking
longshore workers. After
two picketers were killed, the other area unions joined together and called a
general strike of all workers (the "Big Strike"). Subsequent criticism of the police was probably where the term "police riot" was first coined.
[1]
During the
Vietnam War,
anti-war demonstrators were routinely attacked by police using
billy-clubs and
teargas. The most notorious of these assaults took place during the August
1968 Democratic National Convention in Chicago, which was the scene of massive
anti-war street protests. The actions of the police were later described as a "police riot", in the Walker Report to the
US National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence.
In August 1988, a
riot erupted in
Tompkins Square Park in
New York when police, some mounted on horseback, brutally attempted to enforce a newly-passed
curfew for the park. Bystanders, artists, residents, homeless people and political activists were caught up in the police action that took place during the night of August 6-7. In an editorial,
The New York Times dubbed the incident a "police riot",
[2] and it became known as the
Tompkins Square Park Police Riot.
It is worthwhile to note that there have also been cases, such as the 1857 clash between the
New York City Police Department and 300 police workers occupying
City Hall in a protest in which 52 police officers were injured, where a police riot involved ''only'' the police. This occurred while
Fernando Wood was mayor.
See also
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Black Act
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Demonstration
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Police
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Police brutality
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Black bloc
★
Hooliganism
★
Street fighting
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Stonewall riots
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WTO Protests
Riot weaponry
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"Less than lethal" weapons
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CS gas
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Taser guns
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Water cannon
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Flexible baton rounds
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Batons and night sticks
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Plastic bullet
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Rubber bullet
External links
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account of a police riot
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Cedar Avenue Valentines Police Riot
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Riot Video from around the World
References
1. , , Samuel, Walker, Lexington Books, , ISBN 978-0669012927
2. "Yes, a Police Riot," editorial of The New York Times, August 26, 1988, Section A; Page 30, Column 1; Editorial Desk