AP/ November 21, 2011, 3:26 PM

Police chief on leave after UC pepper spraying

Updated at 3:26 p.m. ET

SAN FRANCISCO - The University of California, Davis said Monday that it has placed its police chief on administrative leave amid outrage over widely circulated videos of officers dousing pepper spray on student Occupy protesters.

In a news release, campus officials said it was necessary to place police Chief Annette Spicuzza on leave to restore trust and calm tensions following Friday's crackdown on the "Occupy UC Davis" encampment, which resulted in 10 arrests.

The school has also placed two officers on administrative leave.

Special Section: Occupy Wall Street Protests
Officers in pepper spray incident put on leave
Outrage over police pepper-spraying students

Videos posted online clearly show one riot-gear clad officer spraying a line of protesters as they sit passively with their arms intertwined. Spicuzza told the AP that the second officer was identified during an intense review of several videos.

On Sunday, UC President Mark Yudof said he was "appalled" by images of protesters being pepper-sprayed and plans an assessment of law enforcement procedures on all 10 campuses.

"Free speech is part of the DNA of this university, and non-violent protest has long been central to our history," said Yudof, who heads the 10-campus UC system. "It is a value we must protect with vigilance."

Yudof said it was not his intention to "micromanage our campus police forces," but he said all 10 chancellors would convene soon for a discussion "about how to ensure proportional law enforcement response to non-violent protest."

Protesters from Occupy Sacramento planned to travel to nearby Davis on Monday for a noon rally in solidarity with the students, the group said in a statement.

UC Davis officials refused to identify the two officers who were place on administrative leave but one was a veteran of many years on the force and the other "fairly new" to the department, Spicuzza earlier told The Associated Press.

She would not elaborate further because of the pending probe.

"We really wanted to be diligent in our research, and during our viewing of multiple videos we discovered the second officer," Spicuzza said. "This is the right thing to do."

Both officers were trained in the use of pepper spray as department policy dictates, and both had been sprayed with it themselves during training, the chief noted.

David Buscho, a UC Davis senior from San Rafael, said he and his girlfriend were pepper-sprayed Friday.

"I had my arms around my girlfriend. I just kissed her on the forehead and then he sprayed us. Immediately we were blinded," Buscho told The AP. "So I was sitting their blind, suffocating. My girlfriend was writhing in pain. I wanted to touch her but my hands were covered in pepper spray."

"He just sprayed us again and again and we were completely powerless to do anything," Buscho said. "This was my first protest. I've never seen any police brutality in person like that."

Meanwhile, UC Davis Chancellor Linda Katehi said she asked the Yolo County District Attorney's Office to investigate the department's use of force. She said she's been inundated with reaction from alumni, students and faculty and also would speed up an investigation that was to have taken three months.

"I spoke with students this weekend and I feel their outrage," Katehi said in a statement Sunday.

Katehi also set a 30-day deadline for her school's task force investigating the incident to issue its report. The task force, comprised of students, staff and faculty, will be chosen this week. She earlier had set a 90-day timetable. She also plans to meet with demonstrators Monday at their general assembly, said her spokeswoman, Claudia Morain.

The UC Davis faculty association called for Katehi's resignation, saying in a Saturday letter there had been a "gross failure of leadership." Katehi has resisted calls for her to quit.

"I am deeply saddened that this happened on our campus, and as chancellor, I take full responsibility for the incident," Katehi said Sunday. "However, I pledge to take the actions needed to ensure that this does not happen again. I feel very sorry for the harm our students were subjected to and I vow to work tirelessly to make the campus a more welcoming and safe place."

The incident reverberated well beyond the university, with condemnations and defenses of police from elected officials and from the wider public on Facebook and Twitter.

"On its face, this is an outrageous action for police to methodically pepper spray passive demonstrators who were exercising their right to peacefully protest at UC Davis," Senate President Pro Tem Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento, said in a statement Sunday. "Chancellor Katehi needs to immediately investigate, publically explain how this could happen and ensure that those responsible are held accountable."

The protest Friday was held in support of the overall Occupy Wall Street movement and in solidarity with protesters at the University of California, Berkeley who were jabbed by police with batons on Nov. 9.

Nine students hit by pepper spray were treated at the scene, two were taken to hospitals and later released, university officials said.

Meanwhile Sunday, police in San Francisco, about 80 miles west of Davis, arrested six anti-Wall Street protesters and cleared about 12 tents erected in front of the Federal Reserve Bank.

Across the bay in Oakland, police cleared out the city's two remaining Occupy encampments on Sunday and Monday. Authorities say protesters at both locations left peacefully and no arrests were made.

© 2011 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
55 Comments Add a Comment
linkicon reporticon emailicon
noloyalisti says:
Seriously, what have we let these Banksters and the other Top 1% do to America. I fully blame them for all of what is wrong now. They have been working on this for over 30 years since Reagan and now we have to clean up and fix this mess.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
OrangPuteh says:
The chief and cops are on leave!? Send them to the UNemployment lines.

Those jack booted thugs can find work in Syria where a tyrant will welcome their help and they can use machine guns there. You know they want to.
reply
noloyalisti replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
They should make sure that no one on the police force is a reactionary right winger. You never know when they might flip out.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
merlgrey says:
who exactly are campus cops supposed to be protecting?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
sandiegopete says:
More drivel from al-glob. If al was around in the 1700's he or she would have demanded those anarchists who threw tea into Boston Harbor be hanged for violating the King's law.

If al was around Birmingham, Ala. in 1963 he or she would have praised Bull Connor for setting the dogs on those childern who dared to parade in violation of Connor's orders.

Sounds like al-glob shoul change the handle to al ghraib.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
sandiegopete says:
These 1%ers continue with the same outlandish comments. Look at the drivel posted by legalbutnotjust. That person thinks sitins are illegal and justify any amount of police force. It is so reminiscent of the blathering that went on in the South during another civil rights movement. The law said Rosa Parks could not sit in the front of the bus. She did and was arrested. People like legalbutnotjust applauded the police for arresting the lawbreaker. In Birmingham, Ala the police commissioner told civil rights demonstrators they could not parade in the street. They did anyway. People like legalbutjust applauded the Birmingham police and Commissioner Bull Connor for beating, tear gasing and setting dogs on the lawbreakers.

What we need to contemplate is why the rulers of our country feel that brutal force to crush any oppostion is good policy in the long run. How can they be that stupid? History illustrates that tactic to be a failure each and every time. Why do they think it will work now?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
involved_indi says:
it's a new cottage industry in California. Get wizzed on by OWS patriotic protestors (AKA vagrants) and then let them sell you a dirty towel to wipe your face with. If you don't like it the liberal mayor of one of these bastions of free speech will throw you in jail because while THEY have rights, YOU certainly don't.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
texbelle123 says:
the cops were 'cut off'
What? They can't lift their legs and step over???
reply
Jaylah54 replies:
linkicon reporticon emailicon
No kidding.

And, actually, if you look at the full video, the cop that did the majority of the pepper spraying was *behind* the sitting students and stepped over them before shaking his can of pepper spray and then spraying them all in the face point-blank.
linkicon reporticon emailicon
talkin2u says:
I hope those officers who did this are sitting at home with regret. I hope they are ashamed of themselves. They don't deserve jobs after what they did. I'll bet though they don't even realize or care what a PR mess they created....and what a cruel act they committed regardless of what their training told them. Common sense once again does not seem to prevail. Idiots.
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
noloyalisti says:
This is what we have allowed the brainless and useless and obsolete Republicon Party of Fear and Death to do to America. It is time we marginalized and ridiculed and run out of town these reactionary wackos.

Got Police State?
reply
linkicon reporticon emailicon
lami987 says:
Clearly a number of police chiefs and their supporters all across the country are trying to convert America into a communist country where violence against their citizens are common. Regardless of ones political association violence against non-violent Americans must be stopped at all cost. Perpetrators must be charged with treason.
reply
See all 55 Comments