Oh no! Peaceful protesters have invaded UC Davis to sit on the campus quad as part of the nationwide Occupy Wall Street protests. Clearly, there is only one response for such a “threat.” Pepper spray.
Our knowledge of police officer training is limited to the Police Academy movies - which probably aren’t accurate - so we’re not going to pretend to know what aspiring officers are told about breaking up a peaceful protest. We’re case law nerds: all we can tell you is that, according to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, pepper spraying peaceful protesters is probably a bad idea.
The case on point? Headwaters Forest Defense v. County of Humboldt.
The appellate court further noted that the use of pepper spray against peaceful protesters is only “reasonable as a general policy to bring an arrestee under control.”
If you haven’t seen the UC Davis pepper spray video footage depicting campus police officers “casually” dousing a row of seated protesters, check out the video below and decide for yourself whether the officers needed pepper spray to bring these protesters under control.
Related Resources:
- Ninth Circuit: Tasering Pregnant Woman is Excessive Force (FindLaw’s Ninth Circuit blog)
- Internal Affairs Report Irrelevant to Excessive Force Shooting (FindLaw’s DC Circuit blog)
- Occupy Protesters March Nationwide; Many Arrested (AP)
- Officer has Qualified Immunity from Search Warrant Suit (FindLaw’s Ninth Circuit blog)
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