Fresno Homeless Evictions Loom…on Valentine’s Day

http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/02/11/18731822.php

Fresno has no Heart – Will Evict the Homeless on Valentines Day
by Mike Rhodes ( editor [at] fresnoalliance.com )
Monday Feb 11th, 2013 5:43 PM

The photo below shows the north end of the Monterey and E street homeless encampment.

An eviction of a significant number of homeless people at a downtown encampment will probably take place on Thursday, February 14. According to residents of the homeless encampment, located near Monterey and E street, they were told by the owner of the property they are living on that they have until Thursday to “move on.” The owner was accompanied by several officers from the Fresno Police Department and a truck & crew from the Fire Department.

One homeless man told me this afternoon (Monday, February 11) that the owner of the property said he would be bulldozing the vacant lot on Thursday and everything would be destroyed. “He told me to get the fuck out of here,” he shared with me as he sorted through recycled items sitting in several shopping carts on the property. When I asked if he was sure it was the owner, he said “well, he had the police with him, so it looked pretty convincing to me.”

Unlike other evictions by the City of Fresno, there are no signs posted to notify the residents of the demolition that is to come. Julie (not her real name), said someone had posted an eviction notice about a month ago, but those were torn down within an hour or two. The owner told her that he did not have to post notices because it is his property.

There was an eviction that took place in the spring of 2012 at another homeless encampment, behind the grain silos near Palm and H street, that was similar. This was private property, the owner made numerous attempts to force the homeless to move, and eventually put a fence around the property to force the eviction. Many of the homeless people from that encampment moved about 200 feet south and occupied a different vacant lot. They have not been threatened with eviction again, as far as I know.

Most of the residents at the Monterey and E street homeless encampment who are being threatened with eviction said they were planning on moving, but I was told that not everyone would pack up and move. I was told that it is only the north end of the encampment that has been threatened with eviction. The dividing line is Monterey street. Everything north of Monterey street will likely be destroyed on Thursday. Everything south of Monterey street is said to be safe from the demolition.

Can the owner of a vacant lot take and immediately destroy homeless peoples property? Did the City of Fresno threaten the owner with legal action if he did not move against the homeless? Will FPD officers participate in the demolition or arrest anyone if they resist? Observers are needed starting early Thursday morning. If you can help, meet at the encampment starting at 7 a.m. on Thursday. Bring your video or still camera to document what takes place. If you can’t come until later, let me know so we can coordinate having someone there all day.

Demolitions of homeless encampments in October and November of 2011 resulted in over 30 lawsuits against the City of Fresno claiming that the city violated homeless peoples legal rights by taking and immediately destroying their property. Those cases are working their way through the court. Without this litigation it is likely that the city would have been more aggressive in their attacks on the homeless. A new strategy of forcing property owners to evict the homeless may be emerging as City Hall seeks to avoid additional lawsuits.

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Mike Rhodes is the editor of the Community Alliance newspaper. He can be reached by email at editor [at] fresnoalliance.com .

§Another view of the norht end of the encampment

by Mike Rhodes Monday Feb 11th, 2013 5:43 PM


§This shows the entire area impacted by the evictions

by Mike Rhodes Monday Feb 11th, 2013 5:43 PM


§Typical Shelter in the Area

by Mike Rhodes Monday Feb 11th, 2013 5:43 PM


§This is the center of the homeless encampment looking north

by Mike Rhodes Monday Feb 11th, 2013 5:43 PM

Venice program gives the homeless a place to keep belongings

 – latimes.com

By Martha Groves, Los Angeles Times

February 10, 2013, 8:25 p.m.
Bone-chilling fog swirled along Venice Beach one recent afternoon when Robert and Nani Valencia and Ana Maria Reyes stopped by the long, metal storage container beside the sand.
After they showed IDs and claim checks, a volunteer wheeled out two blue recycling bins in which the three recent arrivals from Texas had stashed their suitcases. They pulled out toiletries, sweaters and blankets and stuffed them into reusable grocery bags.
“It makes us feel a lot better to store our things here,” said Nani Valencia, 37. “When you have all your [suitcases] with you, people treat you like you have rabies.”
With bags in hand, she, her husband and his 64-year-old mother joined dozens of others waiting for a bus to take them to a shelter. The three would rest, eat dinner and have a shower that night at the West Los Angeles National Guard Armory on Federal Avenue; most of their meager possessions would remain locked up at the beach.
In the wake of court rulings that bar cities from randomly seizing and destroying homeless people’s property, communities such as Venice are seeking long-term storage options to keep their streets and alleys clean.
“We’re not going to let [homeless people] keep items on the beach anymore,” said Los Angeles Councilman Bill Rosendahl, who represents Venice. “We’re going to bag and tag [them]. We want to make it inconvenient but within the law.”
Contributing to the problem was a rule governing use of the city’s Westside winter shelter.
Homeless individuals who choose to sleep at the shelter are allowed to take with them only the items they can carry on their laps. And some were reluctant to leave their possessions for fear they would be stolen or seized. That meant many of the shelter’s 160 beds went unused.
Rosendahl and a local social services agency — Venice Community Housing Corp. — launched a pilot program late last month called Check-in Storage. The initiative allows individuals to store personal belongings in the container for a week at a time and retrieve them between 3 and 5 p.m. daily. (The program is slated to end March 1, when the shelter closes.)
To publicize the service, volunteers and social service agencies distributed bright orange fliers: “If your stuff will fit into a big trash can,” they read, “bring it to our storage container.” The flier noted that the program would not accept medicine, identification, weapons or “anything illegal.”
The storage option, said Steve Clare, executive director of Venice Community Housing, is modeled on successful programs in downtown L.A.’s skid row and cities including San Francisco, San Diego and Costa Mesa.
In September, a federal appeals court ruled in a lawsuit filed against the city of Los Angeles that seizing and destroying property left temporarily unattended on public sidewalks was unconstitutional. Personal possessions may be removed only if the items pose an immediate threat to public safety or health or constitute criminal evidence, a panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals found.
Even then, the city must notify owners where they can pick up their property.
On the afternoon the Valencias and Reyes retrieved some items, about half of the 25 bins were in use. Also there for safekeeping was a Schwinn bicycle. Its owner, Love Sha Un of Nigeria, came by to check on his $215 purchase and thank the volunteers. Without the storage option, he said, “it might have gone missing.”
Not everyone is pleased with the program.
Mark Ryavec, a Venice resident who lobbied against overnight parking by RV dwellers, said the city should have sought a permit from the California Coastal Commission before plopping a storage container at the beach. Marc Saltzberg, vice president of the Venice Neighborhood Council, said the program was implemented without a public process that would have enabled residents and other interested parties to weigh in.
Rosendahl said he hoped to notify street denizens of a new location by the end of February and have a new program up and running by March. He said he was working with the Los Angeles city attorney’s office to ensure that any seizures of items would be done legally.

Destruction of Local Homeless Survival Camps in Felton: Another Disgraceful Episode

Norse’s Notes:  Instead of ordering that the campsites be cleaned up, the real motivation of the vigilantes and sheriffs seems to be to drive away any and all homeless survival campers.
Too bad no one documented the three truckloads of “trash” with video.  When that was done in Fresno, the City lost a two million dollar lawsuit, and actually had to start at least giving token acknowledgment of state law regarding seized property.
More to the point would be establishing emergency campgrounds for folks who need to be outdoors (95% of whom have no legal shelter).  Even more addressing the underlying conditions that create this crisis.
If folks were serious about clean-up’s, the county would provide portapotties, dumpsters, trashbags, and legalization of clean camps.  If they were serious about ending unsafe needle disposal, they’d take local initiatives to end the insane Drug Prohibition war and at the very least expand (rather than contract) harm-reduction programs like needle exchange.
While it’s always encouraging to see community members getting together to clean-up areas that the city and county decline to address, that must not involve scapegoating a whole class of people.  T.J. Magallanes, who created The Clean Team website, has said and written this repeatedly.  But “Take Back Santa Cruz” type hardliners prefer to use the homeless as a political football here and blame them as a means of attacking a power structure (that deserves to be attacked, incidentally).
Screaming about “tolerance for drugs” and “illegal” homeless camps (when virtually all survival camping is illegal) is just blind bigotry and the kind of desperation that ensues when folks fail to identify the real enemies who run the show.
The KSBW news brief on this suggests the sweeps are “controversial” only in that they “aren’t effective” and folks seem to keep coming back.  Sort of reminds me of the homeless = vermin approach, used to describe insurgents, terrorists, 1930’s Jews, etc.  Dehumanizing people is a nice way of covering your fascist ass.
It’s also a pity that the “service providers” in the area didn’t speak out against this destruction of homeless survival camps.  Maintaining the illusion that there are shelter alternatives when there are not.  The sheriffs don’t even pretend there are.  And won’t be even if the pretty-pretty 180-180 program gets fully funded.
There are thousands of homeless in the county.  Is the plan to drive them all out into the rain and make them internal refugees?
I wrote more in the comments that follow this article, which is primarily window-dressing for the sheriffs and demonization of the campers, though as of yet those comments haven’t appeared (other than one brief sentence).  See http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/rss/ci_22545061?source=rss for more comments and to make your own.  Or comment on this article on the HUFF blog at http://huffsantacruz.org/wordpress/ .

Three truckloads of trash hauled from Felton campsites

By Stephen Baxter

Santa Cruz Sentinel

Posted:   02/07/2013 07:05:45 PM PST

 

FELTON — Three deputies and four Santa Cruz County Jail inmates hauled out three truckloads of trash from illegal campsites near Zayante Creek and the San Lorenzo River on Thursday.

Responding to some residents’ complaints and a pile of garbage and human waste at the Graham Hill Road Bridge over the San Lorenzo River, deputies posted notices to vacate the campsites in January.
Since then, much of the debris was removed or swept down the river with last month’s rain, sheriff’s Sgt. John Habermehl said.
Thursday, they hauled out dirty clothing, alcohol bottles, bicycle parts and a broken kayak, among other items.
“It’s not so much that somebody decided to pitch a tent,” Habermehl said. “We try to address the criminal behavior — the illegal dumping, the drug and alcohol issues, and the waste in our rivers.”
He added that the cleanups are a matter of maintenance rather than a long-term solution: “If we don’t do something about what’s out there, it’s just going to get worse.”
The action follows similar Sheriff’s Office sweeps near Highway 9 in September and by Santa Cruz police during the fall and summer of 2012.
No one was cited and no syringes or other drug paraphernalia were found on Thursday, deputies said. The inmates who participated volunteered from the Rountree Detention Center, a medium-security facility.

At a second cleanup site under the Conference Drive Bridge at Zayante Creek, deputies were


surprised to find a relatively clean area with several trash bags left by campers.

Light rain fell on the crew as it loaded food wrappers and dirty clothing into a Santa Cruz County flatbed pickup and a truck loaned by the Mount Hermon Christian Conference Center.

Don Cox, a homeless 53-year-old Air Force veteran, watched the crew work in the rain. He said he camped in the Felton area for years and noticed new people who came from Santa Cruz because of recent cleanups in that city.

“A bunch of them who’ve come down here are drug addicts and thieves,” Cox said.

Having been a mechanic and tow truck driver, he said he is trying to attend job-training classes at Cabrillo College and find a place to live with his veteran benefits.

“It’s not like I’ve chosen to be out here and be a bum,” he said. “I’m too old to be on the streets.”

“They’re really kind of picking on us,” he said of Thursday’s cleanup.

Another woman, Amanda Livingston, 22, saw the deputies and inmates work under the Graham Hill Bridge.

She said one of the men went to Santa Cruz to collect a check Thursday morning, so she scrambled to round up his gear and a bag of prescription drugs before it was removed.

“I’ve been telling him that they’re going to clear the camp,” she said. “He didn’t believe me.”

Originally from Michigan, Livingston said the bridge offered her some shelter during the rain storms earlier in the winter. She and others cooked, drank and tried to stay dry, she said.

Above the bridge, some employees at nearby businesses said they appreciated the cleanup.

“I think it’s definitely necessary but it’s pretty lame that it has to be done in the first place,” said 21-year-old Adam Pomianowski, who works at Budget Truck Rental at 6440 Graham Hill Road. “This is a river running through our little town. I’m glad someone’s paying attention.”

MORE COMMENTS at:  http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/rss/ci_22545061?source=rss

Armed Bigots on the March in Felton

Norse Note:   What drugs?  What “illegal behavior”?  What provision for alternative shelter is being made?  Isn’t what’s really going on here destruction of people’s survival campsites without warrant or specific justification?     Why bother to ask–when you can just scowl “drug-infested” and “clear” people and their possessions like so much garbage?

Drug-Infested Camps to Be Cleared Thursday

Illegal campsites filled with criminal activity will be eliminated in Felton from 8 a.m. until 1 p.m. on Thursday.
Photos (2)
A series of illegal campsites, known to be full of drugs and other criminal behavior, will be disposed of Thursday morning and early afternoon, the Santa Cruz County Sheriff’s Office announced.

The Felton camps, along the Mt. Hermon Road and Gram Hill Road corridor, were identified by community members and are hotbeds of “ongoing criminal activity in the area,” Sergeant John Habermehl said in a press release.

From 8 a.m. until 1 p.m., the camps, which are located under county bridges and touch private property, will be cleaned up with assistance of minimum security community corrections inames under the supervision of sheriff’s deputies.

Over the past few weeks, the sheriff’s office has posted signs at each camp asking people to vacate.

“The goal of the Sheriff’s Office will be to remove the refuse and eliminate criminal activities caused by these campsites,” Habermehl said. “Roaring Camp has graciously donated the use of their dumpsters for disposal of debris removed from the targeted areas.”

What Your $100,000+ is paying for: Transcript of the Santa Cruz 11 Preliminary Hearing 1-7

by (posted by Norse) S.C.Court
Wednesday Feb 6th, 2013 3:35 PM

On Monday January 7th and Tuesday January 8th, D.A. Bob Lee, through his underling Rebekah Young, dragged the Santa Cruz Eleven [SC-11] into yet another round in court. Actually only seven defendants were there for the Preliminary Hearing, the other four had already been cleared of all charge. This is a proceeding where the prosecution is supposed to present enough evidence to convince the judge there is probable cause to forward the cases to (a second) arraignment and thence to trial. The record is an important one–for it’s supposed to reveal a significant portion of the prosecution’s case.

The hearing ended up freeing three of the seven, with the remaining four sent to trial on a tangled and twisted “aiding and abetting” theory. Accused of “felony vandalism” and “misdemeanor trespass” (failure to leave private property after having been warned by the owner or owner’s agent), the four face little if no actual testimony that they were warned. There is no evidence at all that any of them committed, advised, or even witnessed vandalism. Rather, claims D.A. Young, their having “trespassed” makes them responsible for any other vandalism created by parties unknown. This, of course, defies common sense and justice.

Not to mention that the context of the case was a massive peaceful protest against Wells Fargo Bank, a criminal of a much taller order than any of those (unnamed and unknown) who left graffiti in the building and damaged some of the furniture.

I have written about this extensively. Most recently at “Laurendeau Arraigned Yet Again As D.A.’s Merry-Go-Round Twirls On” at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/01/31/18731105.php?show_comments=1#18731256 .

I posted Judge Burdick’s order fining the D.A.’s office Rebekah Young’s repeated failure to follow court orders to release evidence to the defense (and then lying about it–though Burdick far too charitably found she was “in good faith”) at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/01/23/18730704.php (“Another Ridiculous Round of Arraignments”).

Analyst, photographer, and (former) SC-11 defendant Alex Darocy has a good article on the Preliminary Hearing which had quite a supportive turnout (“Santa Cruz Eleven Down to Four and Conspiracy Charges Dismissed at Preliminary Hearing ” at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/01/10/18729819.php). My comments and those of others follows his visually rich story.

Posted here in all its 200+ page splendor is the transcript of the Preliminary Hearing for the 7th held in January.

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by (posted by Norse) S.C.Court Wednesday Feb 6th, 2013 3:35 PM


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by (posted by Norse) S.C.Court Wednesday Feb 6th, 2013 3:35 PM

Fanning the Flames: More Drug War Hysteria in the Santa Cruz Sentinel

http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/01/29/18730942.php?show_comments=1#18731099

by Robert Norse

Thursday Jan 31st, 2013 1:18 PM

REPULSIVE SENTINEL EDITORIAL
A noxious Sentinel editorial today endorses an ignorant and prejudiced position on needle exchange at http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/opinion/ci_22484641/editorial-step-forward-needle-exchanges . The noxious and futile moralizing of the editorial and subsequent comments recalls the propaganda of the Anti-Saloon League in its drive to create Alcohol Prohibition in the early years of the 20th Century. That it has taken on an anti-homeless color also makes it particularly off-base and fascistic.

Pretty sad, of course, and recalls the right-wing solutions to abortion and unwanted pregnancy: “abstinence”. Why not call out the cops to go after moms and doctors? Oh, wait, isn’t that now the law in some states?

COMMANDER STEVE CLARK ON STEROIDS
Deputy-Chief Clark’s “more cops and crackdowns” and “ramp up the war on drugs” approach is a proven failure. His “cut off the needles and they’ll go away” nonsense feeds and feeds off a widespread form of magical thinking in the community that blames “excessive Santa Cruz tolerance.” Looking at the Drug War racket that funds cops, courts, jails, and prisons (and, of course attorneys) it’s been clear for years that Prohibition is the real problem. One doesn’t even have to be “compassionate” to understand the common sense that a black market will always find profiteers and customers. And create new criminals, even as the old ones, are stuffed into overcrowded pens. Pretty crazy stuff.

A RESPONSE FROM PLEICH?
I’ve asked Steve Pleich–a long-time needle exchange volunteer to write an informed response and also to speak about the issue on tonight’s Free Radio Santa Cruz show between 6 and 8 PM (streams at http://tunein.com/radio/FRSC-s47254/ , broadcasts at 101.3 FM, archives at http://www.radiolibre.org/brb/brb130131.mp3).

SENTINEL “CORRECTION”
Today front-page story on the shutting down of the Lower Ocean Needle Exchange “corrects” the Sentinel story the day before that I refer to in the previous update. That Sentinel story claimed it was a unanimous secret vote at the Closed Session of City Council to authorize the City Attorney to threaten and initiate “cease and desist” actions against the landlord allowing needle exchange in his parking lot. Today’s Sentinel comes out with a different tale:

“Barisone said he had not heard about the exchange before this week but said a majority of council members — not a unanimous number as initially reported by the Sentinel — approved beginning code enforcement activity after Lower Ocean neighbors raised concerns about the needle exchange.”

The full Sentinel story (though what the truth is, I don’t know) can be found at http://www.santacruzsentinel.com/localnews/ci_22485020/city-attorney-santa-cruz-property-owner-called-end .

MEANWHILE BACK IN THE REAL WORLD…
To find real solutions, you’ve first got to abandon the hype and hysteria and look closely at the effectiveness (or not) of medical approaches in other countries like Injection Rooms, Inhalation Rooms, for hard-drug users.

Unless they choose to hold a special session, there’ll be no City Council meeting until the second Tuesday in February (the 12th).
Sane folks better get ready to deal with a tide of Drug War Insanity.

FULL STORY AT   http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/01/29/18730942.php?show_comments=1#18731099

Santa Cruz Way Behind Madison in Civil Rights for Homeless Vision, but in State with Highest Violence Against Homeless Rate

Madison civil rights panel looks at making homelessness a protected class

The Occupy Madison encampment on East Washington Avenue shown here on Oct. 29 has been removed, but the sign’s question,”No legal place to go?” is still highly relevant for Madison’s homeless population as winter approaches.

Email
Should homelessness be a protected trait — like sex, race, age and many others — in the city of Madison?

The city’s advisory Equal Opportunities Commission is beginning to look into adding homelessness to the list of characteristics which may not be considered in housing, employment and public accommodation under Madison’s Equal Opportunities Ordinance.

Interest in exploring whether homeless people should be designated a protected class to ensure their civil rights goes back to a controversy early this year about efforts to dissuade the homeless from hanging out in the lobby of the City-County Building, committee Chairman Brian Benford told me.

“It’s been on our radar,” he said.

Concern among committee members was renewed this fall, after an incident in which the gear of a half-dozen homeless people was confiscated from a plaza at the top of State Street and disposed of by city employees, Benford said.

“People felt discriminated against,” Benford said, adding that that recent incident was among a number that seemed to “make it criminal to be homeless in Madison.”

Homeless people increasingly are lodging that complaint against local officials. When an encampment of homeless people returned last month to the vacant lot on East Washington Avenue from which they were evicted last spring, for example, they raised a banner asking “No legal place to go?”

The group has since been evicted twice from sites where camping is not permitted, although Dane County officials are making an exception to rules to allow the group to stay the winter at Token Creek Park north of the city. And Madison Police Chief Noble Wray — without acknowledging wrongdoing by his department — apologized to the homeless people whose property was confiscated on State Street.

The city’s Equal Opportunities Ordinance already specifies a long list of characteristics that may not be considered in considering someone for housing, employment, public accommodations or the use of city-owned facilities: sex, race, religion, color, national origin or ancestry, citizenship status, age, handicap/disability, marital status, source of income, arrest record, conviction record, less-than-honorable discharge, physical appearance, sexual orientation, gender identity, genetic identity, political beliefs, familial status, student status, domestic partnership status, and status as a victim of domestic abuse, sexual assault or stalking.

Anyone who has been found to have discriminated against a class of people specifically protected in the Madison Equal Opportunities ordinance may be liable for damages, said Lucia Nunez, director of the city’s Department of Civil Rights. That might include reimbursement of out-of-pocket expenses, back pay, and other economic and non-economic losses, including emotional injury, according to the city’s ordinance.

Nunez said Civil Rights staff had just begun to research the possibility of adding homelessness to the list of protected classes and that “public accommodations” seems like an area in which protections for the homeless might make sense. That would include access to motels, restaurants, taverns, and other services open to the public.

In response to a spike in violence against homeless people, some states are adding a “hate crime” enhancer to sentences for such crimes, Nunez said, adding that she has not heard of many local incidents of physical violence against homeless people.

A study of hate crimes against the homeless released by the National Coalition for the Homeless early this year reported three such crimes in Wisconsin between 1999 and 2010, compared to 213 in California and 177 in Florida.

But one state — Rhode Island — earlier this year passed a law to prevent the kind of discrimination that Benford says Equal Opportunities commissioners here are concerned about. Rhode Island’s homeless “bill of rights,” declares that homeless people have an equal right to jobs, housing, services and public space, guaranteeing the right to use public sidewalks, buildings, parks and transportation without discrimination based on housing status — as well as a reasonable expectation to privacy with respect to their personal belongings.

The law has attracted a lot of attention among advocates for the homeless, and some municipal leaders too. The town of Fairfax, Calif., this fall urged that state’s legislature to add a similar bill of rights to its fair housing and employment act.

These efforts to protect homeless people’s rights come as many cities have moved to criminalize homelessness by banning “urban camping,” (Denver); restricting where food can be distributed to the homeless (Dallas); and outlawing sitting on the sidewalk (defeated by voters in Berkeley, Calif., in the November election).

MORE COMMENTS AT:  http://host.madison.com/news/local/grassroots/madison-civil-rights-panel-looks-at-making-homelessness-a-protected/article_5cd788a8-381f-11e2-b33b-0019bb2963f4.html#ixzz2Jq3BTTyK

Homeless violence more common in California than other states

Hayley Fox | December 28th, 2012, 1:01pm
Los Angeles To Allow Homeless To Sleep On Sidewalks

David McNew/Getty Images

California is ranked number one in the country for acts of violence against homeless people.

1 Comments

Over the past two weeks in Los Angeles County, two different homeless people have been set on fire while they slept.

A 67-year-old homeless woman remains in critical condition after being doused in a flammable liquid and set on fire early Thursday morning in Van Nuys; a 55-year-old homeless man was severly injured after being burned outside a donut shop in Norwalk.

But how common are acts of violence against homeless?

According to the National Coaition for the Homeless, between 1999 and 2010 there were 1,184 acts of violence committed against homeless people in the U.S. resulting in 312 homeless deaths. In 2010, the coalition ranked California number one for the most number of “hate crimes against the homeless,” with 225 incidents occuring throughout these 12 years. Florida follows at number two with 198 incidents.

According to a report from the coalition, these states may have the most frequent attacks because of their warm temperatures make it easier to live outside. But living out in the open can make the homeless easier targets for hate crimes.

And according to the “State of Homeless in America 2012” by the National Alliance to End Homelessness,  California has more than 130,000 homeless people; compared to New York’s approximately 63,000 and Florida’s less than 57,000 homeless.

Attacks on homeless include beatings, rapes, assaults with a deadly weapon, shootings, exploitation and harassment. In 2010, one percent of these acts of violence involved a homeless person being set on fire. Most attacks are “motivated by the perpetrators’ bias against homeless individuals or their ability to target homeless people with relative ease.”

According to the coalition, most of this violence is committed by men under the age of 30.

This seems to ring true with Thursday’s attack in Van Nuys, in which police have arrested 24-year-old Dennis Petillo and booked him for investigation of attempted murder. LAPD said the incident occurred at about 1 a.m. outside a Walgreens drug store near Van Nuys Boulevard and Sherman Way.

“I’ve seen arson deaths before, and it’s very vicious,” LAPD Lt. Walt Teague told NBC. “We’re hoping for the best.”

These outdoor acts of violence come on the heels of a seasonal housing program announced by the L.A. Homeless Services Authority, which aims to provide additional shelter for homeless people during the coldest months of the year. This “Winter Shelter Program” is funded by the City of Los Angeles and County of Los Angeles and provides 1,500 additional beds as well as meals and supportive services for L.A. homeless.

Most of these housing sites – from Lancaster to Pomona, Glendale, Long Beach, Bell, Downtown L.A. and others – opened in the first few weeks of December and will remain in service to March.

Last week on Skid Row, L.A.’s densest homeless population, LAPD Officer Deon Joseph walked the streets handing out pamphlets to homeless and encouraging them to take advantage of this winter housing program. Joseph is the Senior Lead Officer and has worked Skid Row for 14 years. He said that although people being set on fire is fairly rare, violence against the homeless is not.

“As long as they’re sleeping on the sidewalk they’re always going to be susceptible to robberies and things like that,” he added.

Joseph said people have shot paintballs at the homeless, beaten them over the head with 2 x 4’s, and even tried to rape women as they slept.

“There’s a whole lot of things that I can not erase from my mind,” he said.

A Vindictive and Oblivious Prosecution Enters Its Second Year: Cameron Laurendeau of the S.C. 11 Arraigned (Again)

http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/01/31/18731105.php?show_comments=1#18731256

by Robert Norse

Saturday Feb 2nd, 2013 10:39 PM

Visiting Judge Sillman presided in Courtroom 6 as the last of the SC-11 defendants Cameron Laurendeau pleaded not guilty to felony vandalism and misdemeanor trespass in the Now-entering-its-second-year Crush-the-Occupy-Movement sideshow orchestrated (rather badly) by D.A. Bob Lee and his fumbling deputy Rebekah Young.

Laurendeau’s attorney Alex Briggs advised the court they would be filing a 995 Motion (Motion to Dismiss) slated for a hearing March 11 1:30 PM in Department 6. A similar motion resulted in the dismissal of charges against Alex Darocy and Bradley Stuart last year. Charges were initially dismissed against Laurendeau and Angel Alcantara at a earlier Preliminary Hearing, but Young insisted on refiling them. I went into some of the details in “Another Ridiculous Round of Arraignments” at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/01/23/18730704.php/

I hope to post Brigg’s motion some days before the hearing. I’ll be playing an interview with Briggs on Sunday February 2 at 11 AM at 101.3 FM (or http://tunein.com/radio/FRSC-s47254/).

Young suggested the trial of Laurendeau and three others would take a week; Briggs suggested it would take several. Previously Young had suggested the Preliminary Hearing would take hours–when it ended up taking several days in all cases.

Trial readiness will be 9 AM on May 9th; jury trial to begin on May 13th for Laurendeau, Alcantara, Ripplyphipps, and Adams. Unless the D.A. responds to public pressure (or private wisdom) and drops the charges.

I have a copy of the last Preliminary Hearing–on the basis of which, Laurendeau and the three others were forwarded for further court and D.A. harassment if anyone wants to see it. Perhaps I’ll post a hard copy in the Public Library (it’s about 250 pages). The same Preliminary Hearing resulted in myself, Becky Johnson, and Desiree Foster having all charges dismissed.

It’s not clear if or to whom the D.A.’s office will appeal the unusual (and token) finding that Young violated court orders in denying 11 defendants important evidence. If they do appeal, as Lee has said he will in the Sentinel, then he and Judge Burdick may fight it out in some higher court (though we’re talking about the slightest slap on the wrist here).

We are all of course innocent of an violent or arguably any illegal behavior, as I’ve detailed in past posts. See http://www.santacruzeleven,org for the thoughts of others. For my analysis simply search on this website for “Norse”.

An Overlooked Court Decision That Might Provide Hope for Artists, Musicians, and the Poor

Note from Norse:  Santa Cruz police have not only given out citations for “selling artwork” on Pacific Avenue, but some cops have violated city laws by insisting that performing or displaying art work is “panhandling” and forbidden or highly restricted under the “hide the homeless” Downtown Ordinances.  In point of fact, an artist named Robin tells me he brought this court decision (White v. City of Sparks) to City Attorney Barisone and secured an understanding that putting pricetags on one’s own artwork (written or painted) was constitutionally protected, could have prices attached, and did not require a permit.

                      SCPD, in their emboldened crackdown on counterculture street life and first amendment-protected survival activity on Pacific Avenue, is now ignoring that agreement as well as “reinterpreting” other laws.  Authoritarian pressure from the Bryant City Council and right-wing pressure groups like the DTA (Downtown Association), Take Back Santa Cruz Santa Cruz Neighbors, and the City Manager Martin Bernal’s City Staff have distorted and expanded application of the Sitting Ban, the Sleeping Ban, and the Tabling Ban restrictions as a pretext to harass homeless or homeless-looking people at the whim of a passing bigot or an authority-happy cop.

                      However sidelined and ignored, the Constitution is still the Constitution.  The actual wording of the Downtown Ordinances exempted artistic performances and displays from “panhandling” punishment and exempts from the Sitting Ban those watching  such legal behavior.   The assertion that “that musician is bothering me” does not constitute probable cause for the automatic imposition of Unreasonably Disturbing Noise citations.

                  And police tickets for “having a price tag” on one’s artwork violates the decision described  below, which should provide a financial court settlement and legal  fees  for  some worthy lawyer who wants to take a false arrest case if the SCPD, its “Hostile-pitality” Squad workers, or the First Alarm goons roaming the area choose to haul artists or performers (or those listening to them) off to jail.

Ninth Circuit Finds Sale of Paintings Protected by First Amendment

In a published decision, the Ninth Circuit today found that the sale of a painter’s original works are protected by the First Amendment.

In White v. City of Sparks, painter Steven White challenged the constitutionality of a Nevada city ordinance that ostensibly required him to obtain a permit before selling his paintings in public parks. The Ninth Circuit sided with the artist, finding: “So long as it is an artist’s self-expression, a painting will be protected under the First Amendment, because it expresses the artist’s perspective.” The court rejected the city’s argument that the sale of the paintings removes them from the ambit of protected expression. In so finding, the Ninth Circuit joined the Second and Sixth Circuits, which have reached similar conclusions.

This has significant trademark ramifications. In ETW Corp. v. Jireh Publishing, Inc., for example, the Sixth Circuit found the First Amendment entitled sports artist Rick Rush to sell paintings of Tiger Woods without Mr. Woods’ authorization. In that case, which the Ninth Circuit cited, the Sixth Circuit found the painter’s speech was entitled to full First Amendment protection and not the more limited protection afforded commercial speech “even though it is carried in a form that is sold for profit.”

The Sixth Circuit further found the Lanham Act should be applied to artistic works only where the public interest in avoiding confusion outweighs the public interest in free expression. Applied to Mr. Rush’s paintings, the court found the First Amendment trumped the Lanham Act. Even if some members of the public would draw the incorrect inference that Mr. Woods had some connection with Rush’s print, the court decided, the risk of misunderstanding “is so outweighed by the interest in artistic expression as to preclude application of the [Lanham] Act.”

The Sixth Circuit likewise resolved the tension between Mr. Woods’ right of publicity and the First Amendment in favor of free speech: “After balancing the societal and personal interests embodied in the First Amendment against Woods’s  property rights, we conclude that the effect of limiting Woods’s right of publicity in this case is negligible and significantly outweighed by society’s interest in freedom of artistic expression.”

The White decision can only increase the likelihood that the Ninth Circuit will apply similar analysis when it gets the chance.

The case cite is White v. City of Sparks, __ F.3d __, No. 05-15585 (9th Cir. 2007).

Posted on August 29, 2007 by Registered CommenterMichael Atkins in First Amendment |

Reader Comments (1

Steven C. White
Artist / Artist Advocate
winning rulings in;
White v Reno, Nv. 2002, U.S. District Court
White v Sparks, Nv. 2007, 9th Circuit Court

Yes, its me.

I would like to thank the Seattle Trade Mark Layer(s) and the Washington Lawyers for the Arts for posting this important information. If Citizens don’t know what their rights are, they have none.

Such is the case with the Arts and Artists in America today. I have traveled as an Artist for over 40 years all over this country, painting and selling my pictures along the way. Sadly, in those 40 years I have witnessed the commercialization of the Arts in America.

Many years ago if the public went to an Art show, chances are it was held by a community Art Guild or Society. The members of such a group would just go down to the parks a couple of times a year and have shows. They didn’t need a permit!

These shows helped our Art Societies gain new members as well as offered opportunities for local Artists to be showcased with their self created fine art in the public parks. It allowed them to also make a little money to buy art supplies to keep being Artists. The great thing was that ANYONE could join the art society and participate. It opened opportunities for artists of all ages and skill levels to come together and learn from each other and be showcased in their communities.

Sadly, take a good look at all of our public parks today. Filled with sports facilities but NOT ONE ARTIST to be found. NOT ONE! Why? I can tell you that I have a letter from a major City in AZ. that tells me that if I put up and easel in their parks, I must have a million dollar insurance policy. If I paint a painting and hand someone a business card, they tell me I have crossed some “commercial” line and become a “transient merchant”…which isn’t allowed in their City….so I could be arrested, fined, imprisoned and have my Art confiscated! Yep, and I’m the one that just won that ruling from the 9th. Don’t be too amazed because this kind of thing is going on all over America in the Arts today.

It is illegal to be an Artist in most public parks across America. You can play ball but not paint a picture! “Commercialization of Artists”!

I watched over the years as our Art Societies dropped by the way side as Special Interest Groups started getting permits from City Governments to hold “Art Festivals” on public property. In these festivals the promoters are interested in making money for their cause, what ever great cause it might be. So, the promoters of these “Art” festivals started letting anything and everything into the shows in order to sell the most amount of spaces for the most amount of money, to raise as much money as possible for their cause.

Now I don’t want you to think I’m against Art Festivals. I’m not! Well, kinda. As long as they operate without violating Artists Rights.

I just want to point out to everyone the obvious. These are not “Art” festivals at all!

They are market places where First Amendment protected Artistic Self Expression is being sold right along side of “Commercial Merchandise” which is lacking in full protection. As this has happened over these past 40 years people have lost the understanding of the important difference between fine Art and commercial merchandise.

As that has happened Artists have lost their First Amendment protections and have been turned into “commercial vendors” by Cities across America.

When Artists are labeled as “Commercial Vendors” they are placed under countless layers Governmental Red tape, Licensing requirements, fees, finger prints, sales taxes, police background checks and even out right denial of First and Fourteenth Amendment Rights. Who do these restrictions hurt the most? Kids who are under age and can’t get licenses, Senior Citizens who censor themselves rather than deal with all the red tape hurdles, and Minority people who are often reluctant to get involved with the countless piles of red tape involved with getting licenses. That is exactly what has happened to the Arts in America today.

So, what is the difference between “commercial” merchandise and “Art” which is protected?

Does anyone remember what fine art is? There sure are a lot of City Attorneys that don’t seem to know the dif.. Do you?

The High Courts have been defining these important points dealing with the Arts and the questions of “commercial” verses “non-commercial” merchandise offered for sale.

The question is; Where is the line drawn, between “Art” which is fully protected by the First Amendment and therefore limiting government control…..and “commercial merchandise” where government can exert a lot of control?

Key words, “Utilitarian” and or “Functional”

The courts held that my Art was fully protected by the First Amendment because of a couple of very important factors. One, it was MY SELF CREATION, my Self expression…not that of another, such as works RE-sold in galleries.

Second, my paintings have NO value beyond the message they convey. You can’t wear my paintings, eat them, ride on them or saddle a mule with them. All you can do is look at them and absorb their expression. They are purely expressive with no other value…utilitarian, functional or otherwise. As a matter of fact I have ruined the commercial value of the paint, the canvas, and even the stretcher have lost all commercial value. Paints dry, canvas cut up, and stretcher shot full of staples.

While that painting is in the original creating artists hands it has no value beyond the message it conveys. It is pure expression and entitled to the FULL protection of the First Amendment, just as much as your spoken or written words.

“Commercial merchandise” however does have a value beyond the message it conveys. So this is where the Courts have drawn the line that defines commercial merchandise from self expressive art with regards to full protection under the First Amendment. In a recent 2006 ruling by the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals, Mastrovinzenso v City of New York, they clarified this important point that was touched on in the Bery v N.Y.C. ruling of 1996. In this ruling the New York City licensing scheme was upheld to be constitutional as applied to a couple of original artist. Why? Because though the Artist were indeed doing one of a kind works of art and offering them for sale…the works of art were being done on T-Shirts and Hats. The Second Circuit Held that because these items had a dual purpose, both Artistic and functional/utilitarian, the works were not “purely” expressive and therefore did not rise to the FULL Protection of the First Amendment. As functional merchandise that contained artistic self expression its sale required a N.Y.C. business license because it was not purely expressive.

Now in an interesting twist to this Second Circuit ruling, I believe it was the 7th Circuit that was cited in my 9th Circuit ruling, the high Court granted full protection of the First Amendment to a person(s) making stained glass windows. Obviously functional, right?

The high court ruled that because the Artist was not selling the stained glass as a functional window, but as “Art for Art’s sake”, the Artists was entitled to the full protection of the First Amendment.

So, now you know. This is all about education, education, education..if we will ever save the Arts from commercialization in America. This kind of education must take place in the Federal Courts. I encourage my fellow Artists to stand up for your Constitutional Rights and remember that men and women have given and are giving their lives for these freedoms every single day.

As a Veteran of 3 years of military service to our country, I now choose to stand up for Artists so that they can bring a little more understanding and beauty into this troubled world.

A lot of people think I got into this for personal reasons. I got into this business of challenging horrible governmental policies that are commercializing and exploiting artists because I was a witness to the terrible shooting at Columbine High School. I’m fighting not for myself but to deliver a gift to the Children of America. The gift of Art, from the Children of Columbine.

Thanks again for the space to respond,

July 5, 2008 | Unregistered CommenterSteven C. White  

Food Not Bombs Back In Spite of Police & Postal Harassment

Title: Food Not Bombs Back In Spite of Police & Postal Harassment
START DATE: Saturday February 02
TIME: 4:00 PM – 6:00 PM
Location Details:
On the sidewalk next to the Main Post Office at the intersection of Pacific, Front, Mission, N. River, and Soquel Streets.
Event Type: Protest
Contact Name Food Not Bombs
Email Address foodnotbombs-sc [at] riseup.net
Phone Number
Address
FOOD NOT BOMBS RETURNS
Santa Cruz Food Not Bombs continues its weekly public feeding in front of the Main Post Office.

Last week it was driven by police and postal officials from the spot it had served at for the previous month–under the eavs of the Post Office.

At that spot it did not block traffic, was protected from the wind and rain, and operated without difficulties–except that postal employees objected for unspecified reasons (anonymous complaints).

Last week under threat of arrest, FNB was forced to the sidewalk to serve.

More on this at http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/01/19/18730563.php?show_comments=1#18730857 and the main story to which this comment is attached.

THE BROADER THREAT
Allowing bureaucrats and cops to deny the community the right to assemble is a dangerous precedent. Two and a half years ago City Hall and the Library were made curfew zones at night to stop peaceful protest.

Last year, Chief Administrative Officer Susan Mauriello decreed a 7 PM to 7 AM curfew at the courthosue and county building against Occupy Santa Cruz. This curfew is still in force–as though we were under martial law.

CONTACT INFORMATION
The e-mail address and website for for Santa Cruz Food Not Bombs are foodnotbombs-sc [at] riseup.net & http://www.scfnb.org .
They also have a facebook page. The best way to reach them is to come to the Saturday 4 PM meal and volunteer.

Robert Norse of HUFF (Homeless United for Friendship & Freedom) is posting this event. At our weekly meeting we voted to support FNB and encourage others in the community to cook and serve. We also urge folks to come witness and be in solidarity with FNB servers as they rightfully use the public space to both feed and raise important social and political questions.

THE BROADER PICTURE
The attack on Food Not Bombs may be part of a broader agenda by groups downtown (the Downtown Association, Santa Cruz Neighbors, SCPD, City Council) to remove visible poverty from sight and “make Santa Cruz a less welcoming place for the Undesirable”.

Attacks on food servers has been done in the past in Santa Cruz and other cities and only stopped when FNB and other feeding groups refused to stop feeding, even in the face of threats of arrest.

A HISTORICAL LOOK BACK
For an account of my jailtime and its impact in helping to stopp the harassment of Food Not Bombs in San Francisco two decades ago see:

http://www.huffsantacruz.org/StreetSpiritSantaCruz/001.SoupCrime%20In%20San%20Francisco=8-96.pdf &

http://www.huffsantacruz.org/StreetSpiritSantaCruz/002.SoupCrime%20In%20S.F.%28cont.%29=8-96.pdf

UPCOMING ATTACKS ON THE HOMELESS
City Council with its right-wing majority is likely to pass the anti-homeless recommendations of the Public Safety [sic] Committee, perhaps as early as next Tuesday. See
“New Attack on Homeless Slated in City Council’s “Public Safety” Committee Meeting http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2013/01/29/18730942.php .

I hope that our local FNB will continue the work of its predecessors in taking direct stands to dramatize the abuses of the anti-homeless groups (and phony povertypimps).

Those who have aided and abetted the anti-homeless sweeps of the last year using “needle hysteria” to scapegoat already vulnerable poor people need to be confronted and exposed.

DISCLAIMER
These are my opinions, though I think many in HUFF share them (even some in FNB). I do not speak for FNB (nor for the homeless community), but only for myself.

Please get in touch with FNB and sign up to cook and serve. And show up with cameras, video and audio devices, and friends to witness and support.

The only thing that illegitimate power understands is the power of the community aroused.

Added to the calendar on Wednesday Jan 30th, 2013 10:23 PM

iCal Import this event into your personal calendar.

§To Be Perfectly Clear…

by Robert Norse Wednesday Jan 30th, 2013 11:21 PM
…I wrote and posted the calendar event above. Food Not Bombs is the contact for those who want to volunteer. The story is my perspective. It may be ambiguous or unclear from the fact that I wrote in Food Not Bombs as the contact.

Comments  (Hide Comments)

by Close Critic

Thursday Jan 31st, 2013 10:34 AM

It is my understanding that FNB makes decisions by consensus. They have yet to conduct their meeting for the week. I find it problematic that Norse is creating a calendar item for them without respect for their process.

It seems that he is trying to provoke a conflict with authorities (and his allies) by telling the community what he wants to see happen, which could create confusion–enough so that he has already felt the need to clarify himself. It also seems that he sees himself as an “expert” on the history of FNB whose opinion should be taken with greater weight than others’ (a behavior which he pointedly decried last week on his radio show.)

by Northbay solidarity

Friday Feb 1st, 2013 12:28 AM

The effort of the Santa Cruz FNB to serve the people is an inspiration to us out here in the Northbay.
Advocating for and feeding the homeless is about Human Rights, which Santa Cruz seems to not recognize, placing their plutocracy in the realm of fascist regimes in Latin America with their treatment of lower-class folks.
Thank you to Robert, the author of this posting, for diligently posting updates about this struggle. Without him, our Northbay Uprising radio show wouldn’t know what is happening, let alone report on it to our audience.
And much support to the HUFF for their endorsement of the Santa Cruz FNB campaign.

by Robert Norse

Saturday Feb 2nd, 2013 12:34 PM

I consulted with several FNB activists before posting the calendar event. They advised me that they’d be at the Post Office today. I hope you will too.

by Robert Norse

Sunday Feb 3rd, 2013 9:59 PM

The meal was served on the sidewalk–peanut-sauce laden tofu, salad, peace pie, snacks, and other goodies. The turnout was lower than last week–perhaps because it was the beginning of the month and folks had more money to get food independently. Perhaps because there was less “excitement” in terms of visible police harassment.

I didn’t see any cops. HUFF set up a table and made available literature about the proposed Homeless Bill of Rights as well as last month’s Street Spirit.

It was a mellow scene.

Occupy Santa Cruz voted to move its next General Assembly to Saturday at 5 PM during and after the Food Not Bombs meal at the post office.

Food Not Bombs activists attended the Sunday Occupy meeting today and sounded happy.

See you next week most likely.

by Robert Norse

Monday Feb 11th, 2013 1:45 PM

While I wasn’t there, reports I got the next day for my radio show from two who were there noted that the meal proceeded successfully on the sidewalk–a bit closer to the Front & Mission intersection (to provide more room on a broader area of the sidewalk). The turnout was reportedly smaller, and I got no reports of police or postal inspectors interfering.

Additionally Occupy Santa Cruz met on the post office steps at its new weekly meeting time of 5 PM each Saturday–with no reported interference.

As long as the weather is sunny and warm (and not rainy and/or cold), the sidewalk area may actually be better by being more visible. However, the principle of outdoor public areas being accessible to both charitable and political activity is an important one that was blatantly violated here, with the collusion of the Santa Cruz Police Department.

Just as parks, the City Hall complex, the library, the levee, and the County Courthouse complex are now “forbidden” zones at night (even for completely lawful political assembly), so now the federal post office is now a “no go”.

Prior food servings have also been targeted downtown (Dennis Adams of The Potters Hand meal across the street at the Town Clock was driven away by SCPD harassment after being harried all around town; Ronee Curry faced disapproval from Mayor Coonerty and her clients police harassment within the last few years on several occasions; Father Joel Miller faced a relentless campaign from Councilmember Cynthia Matthews for his Monday Calvary Episcopal meal–see http://www.indybay.org/newsitems/2010/12/24/18667496.php).

The determination of the community to support continued access to public spaces is really the only safeguard we have.