The pro-Palestinian encampment at UCLA last week became the latest campus tinderbox to erupt. As the police response unfurled before our eyes, I watched, not as a layman, but from the perspective of someone who has worn the boots that stand between calm and chaos.

I retired as a lieutenant after 30 years with the Los Angeles Police Department and oversaw the officers that dispersed protesters and extracted lawbreakers from hostile crowds during the 2000 Democratic National Convention in Los Angeles. I have seen instances of legitimate police brutality and excessive force in the handling of demonstrations, and I have also had a hand in combating it.

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(1) comment

Terence Y

Mr. Wenninger, you say, “Admittingly, I do not know what the officer articulated as the rationale for his actions, but I have trouble reconciling the lack of evidence of any threat to life or serious bodily injury to anyone. And if there was, where was the effort to arrest someone, making this application of force permissible under the new law?” If that’s the case, shouldn’t we first understand what the rationale was? Your letter is a bit behind current events, as there have been numerous arrests. The bigger question is why school administrators allowed the massive protests in the first place, knowing that inevitably, there will be altercations. As usual, police will be blamed, because they’re the easy target. It’s even worse when other police, retired or not, blame the police also.

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