Posted on 01/26/2006 10:19:11 AM PST by MillerCreek
"Whether posing as protesters or cutting off speeches, OC police clamp down on immigrant-rights activists"
Coyotl Tezcalipoca wanted to wrap up his speech with a dramatic flourish, and a police chokehold helped him get there more quickly.
On Jan. 3, Tezcalipoca, a 25-year-old from Santa Ana, stood before the Costa Mesa City Council and berated them for approving a motion that would allow the city's police to check on anyone's immigration status. Proponents and other opponents of the ordinance also spoke that night. Most used the full three minutes Mayor Allan Mansoor allowed for public comments.
But just a little over two minutes into Tezcalipocas speech, Mansoor cut him off. "Im not finished," Tezcalipoca protested. Three officers quickly surrounded the podium; Tezcalipoca turned to leave but stopped short when one of the officers grabbed his arm. "Dont touch me!" Tezcalipoca told the officers. The stand-off lasted briefly, until Costa Mesa Police Chief John Hensley, dressed in something like a baby blue Hollywood Suit Broker ensemble, leaned into the little circle and said something to his men. The three officers suddenly, forcefully grabbed Tezcalipoca and removed him from the council chambers. KABC-TV video shows they placed him in a chokehold and dragged him into the Costa Mesa Jail (conveniently located next door) as an officer kneeled on Tezcalipocas back (see video of the incident here; link courtesy of immigrationwatchdog.com). Officers booked him on suspicion of disturbing an assembly, interfering with a council meeting and resisting an officer.
Tezcalipoca faces a Feb. 3 court date in Orange County Superior Court. That same day, Los Angeles resident Hugo Sarmiento will appear for a trial-setting hearing. Hes charged with three felonies and a misdemeanor for allegedly throwing a full Shasta Cola can at police officers during a May 25 protest in Garden Grove following a speech by Minuteman founder Jim Gilchrist.
Local activists and the Orange County chapter of the ACLU are monitoring both cases closely. They fear that a conviction in either will chill the growing number of young Latinos who counterprotest anti-immigrant groups like the Minuteman Project across Southern California. But it may be too late: as the stories of both Sarmiento and Tezcalipoca show, law-enforcement officials are already working hard to squash the movement before it blooms.
The evidence that such an effort is under way includes police statements. On Dec. 12, Garden Grove police officer Charles Loffler appeared in Orange County Superior Court for his deposition. He was there to testify against Sarmiento as the district attorney's sole witness.
Under oath, Loffler told the court he "watched [Sarmiento] and stayed with him" throughout the protest. "I was his shadow," he boasted. Loffler even ran alongside Sarmiento when police officers chased protesters.
How did the six-year veteran cop escape the notice of the protesters? He was masquerading as one of them that night.
"I was in the crowd dressed in plainclothes along with several demonstrators that were there that day," Loffler told Deputy District Attorney Marc Lebreche. Five to 10 other Garden Grove officers were also undercover, according to Loffler. Loffler justified his department's actions by noting his department was briefed on a May 14 demonstration in Baldwin Park where someone allegedly threw a water bottle at an elderly white woman.
Under cross-examination, Sarmiento's lawyer, Tom Stanley, asked Loffler if he engaged in any protest activities -- if he chanted, for instance, or raised his fist in the air or held signs. Deputy DA Lebreche objected. Judge Nho Trong Nguyen overruled. Stanley asked Loffler again. Lebreche objected. Judge Nguyen overruled.
"I think if the officer tried to enrage the crowd and entice the crowd to participate in what the officer did as a demonstrator," Judge Nguyen told Lebreche, "that is entrapment."
Stanley asked Loffler again.
"I believe at one point [protesters] were chanting or saying 'No justice, no peace,' and I think I did actually say that in my role in an undercover capacity," Loffler admitted.
"How did you speak?" Stanley asked Loffler. "Did you speak with the same tone of voice as the demonstrators?"
"As everybody else," Loffler replied.
"As everybody else?"
"Yes."
And the same words and same conduct, basically?"
"Correct."
It's believed to be the first time an Orange County police department has admitted to its officers posing as activists, a revelation that doesn't surprise Duane Roberts.
Roberts, a longtime county activist, helped organize the May 25 protest and acted as a liaison between demonstrators and the police. He's used to dealing with undercover cops at rallies. "In a lot of demonstrations that Ive organized, we've been able to root out individuals on clothing, appearance and behavior that we've determined to be police officers," says Roberts. "I think in many respects the police overreact and they tend to go overboard and they have these illusions and fantasies that people involved in these demonstrations are terrorists."
Roberts was also the liaison between activists and police officers at the Jan. 3 Costa Mesa City Council meeting. The police response still has him shaken. "During the past decade, I've been to more than 200 meetings of city councils, school boards and other public bodies, and I have never seen anybody so forcibly removed," he says. "Never. It's clear to me that Mayor Mansoor felt threatened by Coyotl's presence. I get the impression that Mansoor doesn't like if people oppose the policies that he put forth. He took personal offense at this."
Tezcalipoca declined comment, citing his pending court date. Mansoor returned a call but refused to say whether he agreed with the actions of the Costa Mesa Police Department. Mansoor did say he couldn't remember "off the top of my head" if he knew any other speaker being accosted by cops during a council meeting.
But Jan. 3 wasn't the first time Mansoor stopped Tezcalipoca from speaking. On Dec. 7, when the Costa Mesa City Council approved the police-immigrant ordinance, Mansoor ended the public comments section after Tezcalipoca called him a "f**ing racist pig." Tezcalipoca was about halfway through his three minutes.
Tezcalipoca isn't alone in thinking Mansoor, whose day job is deputy sheriff for the county, is a bigot. In 2002, the Orange County Human Relations Commission criticized Mansoor for posting anti-gay articles on a Costa Mesa Internet chat room whose main contributor was Martin Millard, a columnist whose favorite conspiracy theories include Mexico's takeover of the American Southwest and the dangers of intermarriage, which he has said will lead to a universal genotype, "The Tan Man." ([BARF ALERT] See Nick Schou's "Mr. Clean," Oct. 10, 2002.)
"I think the people in power are feeling a bit threatened by the movement thats emerging in Orange County
Protests by and on behalf of illegal aliens, including groups who identify themselves as "immigrant watch dog" efforts (the ACLU, "immigrationwatchdog.com" as mentioned in this article, not to overlook LaRaza itself) are emerging in the area. And, among those protests, as the comments and perspectives in this article reveal, there are racial animosities to and about conservative -- and "white" -- members of local government.
LaRaza means, literally, in Spanish, "for the race."
That image warms my heart.
Bwhahahahaha!
READ, "MR. CLEAN" article by Nick Schou, OC Weekly, October 10, 2002 as referred to in above.
I wrote above, "BARF ALERT" about that link but not about Mr. Mansoor, who is the subject of that article (who is, literally, "Mr. Clean" of reference there) but about what is written about Mr. Mansoor in both articles. The man's "white" and he's conservative and is being wrongly maligned as being "racist and homophobic" (read the two articles) because he has posted online, "...articles from right-wing groups like the Family Research Council claiming, among other things, that "homosexual men commit acts of sexual child molestation at a disproportionate rate."
So, what is this so-called racial tension all about? Seems to be far more to it than mere immigrant status, although it is good to see that our laws are at least being examined and considered for enforcement in Costa Mesa, CA.
Viva La Raza! Viva ACLU! not.
Haha, yeah, I got a good laugh out of that, too, and for probably the same reasons you did. Ha, "coyotl..."
I think this is a joke.
Tezcalipoca: The Jaguar god of the Aztecs. His name meant "The smoking mirror". He was known for blood rituals and lying.
Well, actually, those are NOT the "indiginous people" of North America. I hate to burst their bubble but I doubt, at this point, that any of them are even reading reason about this if reading at all, given their ongoing persistence in nonsense about these issues.
They should read up on archaeological discoveries. The Australian Aborigine and "tall, red haired" people are currently the going "indiginous people" of North America. Also of other areas, but, the Spanish -- from the look of these in these images, they have Spanish ancestors -- arrived a long time afterward, as did those from Southern Asia and the South Pacific.
Well, then, the REAL name explains it! Interesting that the ACLU and people "protesting" this guy's racist taunts (makes fun of people who call him and his "terrorists") never seem to be quite HONEST or revealing in their statements. OCWeekly needs to take note at being reeled in.
The illegal crime wave is enormous.
A little more Goggling netted this:
Coyotl Tezcalipoca aka Benito Acosta
can be reached at matlazinka@hotmail.com
Well, actually, those are NOT the "indiginous people" of North America. I hate to burst their bubble but I doubt, at this point, that any of them are even reading reason about this if reading at all, given their ongoing persistence in nonsense about these issues.
They should read up on archaeological discoveries. The Australian Aborigine and "tall, red haired" people are currently the going "indiginous people" of North America. Also of other areas, but, the Spanish -- from the look of these in these images, they have Spanish ancestors -- arrived a long time afterward, as did those from Southern Asia and the South Pacific.
All "La Raza" is is the product of a Conquistador having his way with an Indian maiden.
bookmark
ping
Looks like some people who need flown for a HANO drop back to their homes.
Mayor Mansoor is the child of legal immigrants from Sweden and Egypt.
And the "Indian Maiden" was a mixture of a Spaniard having his way with a Spaniard or an Asian.
But, actually, the whole "we were here first" line of argument completely misses or avoids the point (probably both), and that is that the U.S. is a nation, a nation of laws and that the border separates one nation from another or others.
These LaRaza people are just ranting about their racist dislike of anyone who isn't of thier racial type. "Indiginous" literally is not real in the sense that all humans migrated from somewhere else and in the case of the two Americas, have done so many times over. But the VERY FIRST migrations, as in the very oldest skeletons found and known to modern science (which are very, very old, far predating the "native american" population, who arrived much later) are those remains of people who were lighter, taller and more fair than what and who the 'native american' of both north and south are known today to be.
Thus, "LaRaza" is just nuttiness based upon insisting on elevating one type of human in modern times to some status of ownership of all that is in the Americas, that they be non accountable to nations and laws of those nations, and that they somehow merit this status because of their present day appearances and ancestry.
Problem is nonsense because they are not even of ancestry that was, literally, "here first," but far later than several other migrations of humans. There isn't even any sense to their claims beyond them beating their chests over nonsense.
I respect all human civilizations. I don't demean the many who have come and gone in the Americas. But for people who are largely Spanish by ancestry and Asian by even longer past ancestry to think they have ownership to an entire two continents is nonsense, pure nonsense. It's just...nonsense.
It's also proof that they themselves are, in fact, "European."
Thus, if we were to even take their argument seriously, that the Americas "are not Europe," they PROVE THAT IT IS BY THEIR VERY PRESENCE: to those who think that way, that their statement (America is not European) is credible, it's proven uncredible by the very ancestry of those who make that claim.
You speak much truth. Of course, the left would rather ignore their own prejudices. The stuff that has been written about the mayor can get pretty creepy.
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