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By JIM GENARO
About 50 environmental protestors, many of them dressed like canaries and polar bears, converged on the Bank of America on Patton Avenue downtown last Monday afternoon, forcing the bank to close for about two hours.
Police in riot gear responded to the demonstration and a section of Patton Avenue was closed for about 30 minutes.
Organizers of the protest, who had been participating in the Southeast
Convergence for Climate Action last week in Brevard, said they wanted
to draw attention to the Bank of Americaís investments in companies
such as Massey Energy and Arch Coal, which practice mountaintop-removal
coal mining.
Several activists locked themselves to fixtures in the lobby while others blockaded the entrance to the bank.
Most of the protesters moved out of the bank and walked across the
street to Pritchard Park shortly after about 25 crowd-control officers
arrived in riot gear, along with canines. Five of them were arrested on
charges of trespassing and resisting arrest, Capt. Tim Splain, a
spokesman for the Asheville Police Department, said.
However, he noted that most of the protesters conducted themselves in an orderly manner.
Prompted by unspecific information about the planned protest, police
had speculated earlier that day that the planned demonstration would
take place at Progress Energyís Lake Julian power plant.
A traffic checkpoint was set up about a half a mile from the coal-fueld
plant. Officers checked several vehicles entering the road leading into
the plant, including a FedEx delivery truck, but found no suspicious
activity. Activities at the power plant were not disrupted.
Regan Richmond, a media spokesperson for the group, said that no protest had been planned at Lake Julian.
A statement from the group listed 10 demands, including that the Bank
of America cease investments in the coal industry, a 90 percent global
reduction of greenhouse gas emissions by 2050, an end to mountaintop
removal coal mining and an immediate end to all new nuclear and coal
power plants.
The protesters complained in a press release after the event that the
APD ìresponded by repeatedly using high voltage electric shock devices,
known as tasers, on the defenseless protesters.î
However, Splain, in a phone interview with the Daily Planet last Tuesday, denied that tasers were used.
He said that a bank supervisor had requested that police use tasers,
but that ìnone were used and weíre getting the video tape from the
bankî to verify this.
About 20 officers were inside the bank at the time, Splain said, as
well as the crowd control officers, who did not get directly involved,
but served as a deterrent.
He said that while the protesters had indicated that they wanted to
protest at a coal plant, he was not surprised that they moved it, given
the strong police presence near the facility.
ìThere was a lot done in between Transylvania County ... and
Asheville,î Splain noted. ìThey knew we had air surveillance. It was
relatively overt on our part.î
Despite the arrests, Splain said that the protesters were generally
repectful.No property damage was done during the protest and no on was
injured, Splain said. ìThere was no destruction or anything that takes
away from their message ... nothing that puts us truly at odds.î
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