NYPD Remote Recover Wall Demonstrators, Camp Street

New York City police in riot gear swept away in a park in Lower Manhattan earlier today to remove hundreds of protesters gather Wall Street camped there for more than eight weeks in protest against income inequality.
The action moves such as closing the fields in Oakland, California, and Portland, Oregon. New York, police and park owners, said protesters at 1 am local time, delete items, including tents and sleeping bags, after which the municipal workers removed the remaining property, Mayor Michael Bloomberg, said. The park will remain closed until the city can consider the order of a judge seeking to allow the demonstrators to return to their property, the mayor said.
"First Amendment protects speech," the mayor said at a press conference at City Hall. "They do not protect against the use of tents and sleeping bags to take over public space."
Protesters return without tents, sleeping bags, or tarps, and must conform to the rules of the park, he said.
New York police to avoid confrontation of demonstrators camped in a public park, which is private property near the World Trade Center as the owner has delayed compensation for cleaning parts in mid-October. In cities across the country, crime, combined with poor sanitation and complaints for the loss of local businesses have weakened fields can tolerate expressions of freedom of speech.
Protesters outside the Cathedral of St. Paul's in London held a press conference today to express their support to recover from Wall Street and called for a demonstration outside the American Embassy.

Hundreds of protesters have slept in tents and under tarpaulins from 17 September to Zuccotti Park, which was both the birthplace of the protests and physical symbol of movement, which encouraged the protests in different parts of the world. The park is a State public real estate company, Brookfield Office Properties Inc.
The police operation came after organizers announced that marks the anniversary of the movement of two months this week with plans to "close Wall Street" and "take the subway."
"Some politicians can get away from the physical public space - our space," the activists said in a statement released to the 2:25 local time "you can not evict an idea whose time has come.".
About 200 people were in the park when the police used loudspeakers told the demonstrators to leave or arrest, said Chris Porter, 26, a welder from Iowa who joined the protest in the Park about a month ago.

Police broke tents, and "destroyed everything," while forcibly removing the protesters who had locked his arms, he said. The Associated Press said about 70 people were arrested, citing Paul Browne, a police spokesman.
"I have become increasingly concerned - as was the park owner, Brookfield Properties - the occupation has come to constitute a danger to health and fire safety for the demonstrators and the surrounding community," said the mayor in the statement.
"We were in constant contact with Brookfield yesterday and asked the city to contribute to the realization of not sleeping and camping in the park rules," said Bloomberg. "But make no mistake - take a final decision was mine."
The mayor is founder and principal owner of Bloomberg News parent Bloomberg LP.

The single square block area organized a medical tent kitchen, serving three meals a day, a library, a table to change the distribution of underwear, sweaters, pants, blankets and charts to become aware and media legal advice.
Zuccotti protesters not to pay the expulsion and the encounter with the police in New York before. Thousands of people gathered in the early morning of 14 October, Brookfield to postpone the program for cleaning.
Hundreds of demonstrators were arrested last month during a demonstration at the Brooklyn Bridge is scheduled to begin to appear in court today, facing charges of misconduct.
More than 900 people have been charged in connection with the events since mid-September, about 700 arrested during the demonstration in October a bridge, police said.
Protesters concern themselves about the signs and slogans such as "99 percent", a reference to study the Nobel laureate Joseph Stiglitz that shows the richest 1 percent control 40 percent of American wealth.

Oakland police cleared a camp in downtown yesterday after a murder on 10 November. Portland Police evicted campers square Chapman and Lownsdale November 13 after two people suffered a drug overdose. Salt Lake City has banned the protesters spent the night at Pioneer Park, November 11 after a person was found dead in the field this morning.
"The people who originally set up camps are either no longer exist or no longer in control," Oakland Mayor Jean Quan said yesterday in a telephone interview. "Partially offsetting the field, we moved a lot of homeless people - were about half of the residents."
Death, sexual assault, drug trafficking and theft in the tent cities threatens public safety, officials said. The camps have towed the homeless, street youth and a criminal element, some officials said.
"In those days, the balance has shifted," Portland Mayor Sam Adams said in a statement Nov. 10. "We had two very serious overdose cases where people need immediate resuscitation in the field."

When protesters began to camp in Portland on October 6, "groups that day people were involved in the movement," said Sergeant Pete Simpson, spokesman for the Portland Police Bureau, yesterday in a telephone interview. "Then these people started coming out and the homeless and street youth began to move"
The camps have sprung up in cities across the country to protest against economic inequality. The protesters condemned the seizure and unemployment that plague average Americans, while big bonuses were issued by U.S. banks, after they have accepted a bailout funded by taxpayers.
Philadelphia Mayor Michael Nutter said, November 13th, the city "has been re-evaluated," Managing relations with the Philly, after several reports of thefts and assaults of the tent of the Group of Dilworth Plaza outside of City Hall. From October 6, the primary care services have made 15 runs in the field and the woman reported the rape on November 12, said the press conference. Nutter said he asked the police for the area more.
Many of the leaders from the city faced since then has left, and the group is broken, Nutter said. The mayor said he wants to avoid a clash of business, and supports those things, such as unemployment, poverty and bank loans.
"We are now at a critical point where we need to reevaluate our relationship with all of this group changed much," said

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