What I Did All Day: 3PM

I didn’t get much chance to blog my activities at and around the RNC yesterday – so I’m going to try to catch up now.

Around 2:15, my boss called us all into a meeting to tell us the City had told the company to send all employees home at 3PM, anticipating trouble with the 4PM “anti-war” rally.

Score“, I thought, despairing that I’d ever  get to cover a genuine protest at this convention.

I headed out on the street, and called Marty Owings, host of Radio Free Nation over on Blog Talk Radio and started chasing leads.

And chasing.

And chasing.

We started by running to Harriet Island – where Colleen Rowley’s party had pretty well broken up.

So it was down to Mears Park, where the anarkids had massed on a couple of previous nights.  Zilch.

I figured we should just hang around the entrance on 6th and Market, which had seen so much of the action earlier in the week.

As we were crossing Wabasha, we saw a couple of “street medics” – anarkids with red crosses taped on their clothes, carrying Holly Hobby Junior First Aid kits – walking toward the Capitol, chattering on their walkie-talkies.

Score“, again.  We followed them to the Capitol, where the 4PM “Anti-War” rally, the one we talked about in July, was about to get underway. A terrible rap/jazz band was trying to channel Rage Against The Machine, playing to a crowd that was (someone call Molly Priesmeyer) about 99.5% white.  No, I’m not kidding; I counted.  I saw exactly two Afro-Americans in the crowd, and two more later.

The “band” was trying to whip the crowd into a frenzy with their tributes to (I’m not making this up) Hugo Chavez and Eugene Debs.

There was no need to caricature them.  And given the amount of pot smoke I smelled, I don’t think there was much chance of “Frenzy”, at least not yet.

I moved up on the hill next to the stage, and watched the crowd – and the little knots of cops massing down on Ireland and Cedar.

Suddenly – around 4;30 – a group of a dozen Saint Paul bike cops rolled up the Mall through the middle of the crowd.  Thirty yards from the stage, they veered stage-right into the crowd, and apparently grabbed a couple of protesters (sources say they’d been followed after committing some act of vandalism or criminality downtown).  The entire crowd – probably 4-500 at this point – raced over around the dozen cops, who formed a circle around their quarry.

I turned around; two groups of riot cops (20-30 each) poured out of the capitol in full gear, and raced down the steps, pushing a path through the crowd and formed another circle around the bike cops.  Off to stage left, a group of mounted cops charged across the grounds, leading another group of riot cops on foot.  They formed a double cordon around the bike cops – one facing in, the other facing out, and escorted them over toward John Ireland, where a couple of Saint Paul black and whites came to take the suspects away.

I went down on the capitol grounds as the crowd went back to “enjoying” the shrill, hectoring speeches.  The cops disenagaged with a lot of synchronize shouting and banging of gear, in an almost-tribal display of macho that, I won’t lie, made me proud to be an American.  They pulled back to the top of the capitols steps, behind the stage.

I met Kevin Ecker and Leo Pusateri, about the time word came to us that their permit to use the capitol grounds was going to expire at 5PM.

As a loudspeaker truck went onto the capitol grounds to inform the crowd, the whole mass started moving south toward Constitution Avenue with almost terrifying (at the moment) speed.

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