A crowd of more than 200 people swarmed the streets of Southside early Friday morning in a riot involving six law enforcement agencies,
runaway dumpsters, flaming trash cans, shattered windows and violent
clashes between rioters and police.
What began as a dance party on Upper Sproul Plaza led to an occupation of Durant Hall at around 11:15 p.m. Thursday to raise
support for the March 4 statewide protest in support of public
education.
UCPD Captain Margo Bennett said the occupiers "cut a lock to get into the construction area and then cut a lock to get into the
building" before vandalizing the area.
"There were windows broken, there was spray painting and graffiti on the interior, there was construction equipment that was
tossed around," she said.
The occupation evolved into a riot as it moved onto streets south of campus, where a protester broke several windows of the Subway
at Bancroft Way and Telegraph Avenue at about 1:41 a.m.
Bennett said the occupiers were able to leave Durant Hall without police confrontation because UCPD did not have adequate
staffing and the Berkeley Police Department had not responded to the
scene per UCPD request before the occupiers left.
She added that UCPD believes many of the occupiers were not UC Berkeley students.
"Because of their manner of dress and their behavior, they did not resemble the students that we have become accustomed to dealing
with over the past six months," she said.
After moving off campus, the group grew and settled at Durant and Telegraph avenues.
Officers from UCPD, Oakland, BART and the California Highway Patrol, in addition to all but four Berkeley Police Department officers
on duty that night, responded to the scene, according to Berkeley
police Dispatcher Rayna Johnson.
"It's a little hectic," Johnson said.
Berkeley and UCPD officers stood shoulder-to-shoulder in a line on Telegraph Ave. facing the dancing crowd, which had formed around a
stereo system blaring music from a shopping cart.
The tone of the gathering changed at about 1:55 a.m. when a dumpster was pushed into the center of the intersection and set on fire
by members of the crowd. The Berkeley Fire Department responded as
people danced on top of the dumpster and shouted, "Whose street? Our
street!"
Employees of the Blakes on Telegraph bar and restaurant brought out buckets of water and fire extinguishers to douse the flames.
Officers physically pushed the crowd back so that Berkeley fire personnel could extinguish the flames. Sporadic fights broke out within
the crowd, causing police to advance their line on the growing mob and
use batons to push it back.
Members of the crowd hurled glass bottles, plastic buckets, pizza and other objects at the police line. The crowd's size and
intensity fluctuated as the police and protesters clashed and multiple
members of the crowd were detained by police.
Marika Goodrich, 28, a UC Berkeley senior, was arrested at the intersection of Durant and Telegraph avenues and booked for assault on
a police officer, inciting a riot and resisting arrest, according to
Berkeley police Officer Andrew Frankel. Zachary Miller, 26, a UC
Berkeley alumnus and an organizer for the "Rolling University," was
also arrested at the intersection and was booked for inciting a riot,
resisting arrest and obstructing a police officer.
Goodrich is being held on $32,500 bail and Miller is being held on $22,500 bail. Both are being held at the Berkeley City Jail and
are scheduled to be arraigned March 1, according to Alameda County
records.
No arrests were made on campus, according to Bennett.
At about 2:43 a.m., the mob accompanied the shopping cart as it traveled east on Durant.
As the crowd moved, a white Dodge Charger turned onto the street and people ran alongside the car as it advanced, a practice commonly
referred to as "ghost riding the whip."
Around 2:55 a.m., the crowd settled on College Ave. outside the Unit 1 residence halls, where some members propelled a dumpster down
Durant Ave. toward police.
About 15 minutes later, after the crowd launched a second dumpster down Durant Avenue, a line of police vehicles charged through
the streets, scattering the crowd in all directions.
Police ended the riot at approximately 3:15 a.m.
When the crowd had left Durant Hall earlier in the night, UCPD Chief Mitch Celaya said the main concern for police was to assess the
damage thus far and monitor the crowd as it proceeded down Telegraph
Avenue.
"We're going to hopefully secure the exterior," he said. "We're going to take a look to see what, if any, kind of damage has been
caused. We're concerned about the group as they march around, that they
don't commit any acts of vandalism, not just to our property but to the
city."
Although the occupation had been planned, the decision to move off campus could not be attributed to any one person, according to
Callie Maidhof, a representative for the occupiers.
"If you get all these people here, what they decide to do is what matters," Maidhof said. "It's not whoever may or may not have
planned it, that's irrelevant at a certain point."
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