CBS/AP/ October 16, 2011, 4:30 PM

175 arrested in Occupy Chicago protest

Chicago police carry away a protester at the Global Day of Occupation-Chicago March to Michigan and Congress, early Sunday, Oct. 16, 2011, in Chicago. Police arrested 175 members of a group protesting corporate greed early Sunday after they refused to take down their tents and leave a city park when it closed.

Chicago police carry away a protester at the Global Day of Occupation-Chicago March to Michigan and Congress, early Sunday, Oct. 16, 2011, in Chicago. Police arrested 175 members of a group protesting corporate greed early Sunday after they refused to take down their tents and leave a city park when it closed. / AP Photo/Chicago Sun-Times, Scott Stewart

Last Updated 4:19 p.m. ET

CHICAGO - The early morning arrests of 175 members of a group demonstrating against corporate greed signified a new phase of civil disobedience for Chicago's wing of the movement, organizers said Sunday.

The arrests came after hundreds of members of Occupy Chicago refused to take down tents and leave Grant Park near the city's lakefront when it closed at 11 p.m. Saturday. Organizers did not seek a permit to be in the park after hours, saying they stayed because they need a home base for the growing movement.

"It was very much a choice and calculated," said Randy Powell, a 27-year-old student at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago who was arrested. "I feel like I had to."

Those arrested were cited with violating municipal code — being in the park after hours — and will have future court dates, police said. Several released from jail rested at a downtown church Sunday morning, taking a few moments to sleep or drink hot tea before heading back to a protest in the city's financial district.

Similar groups nationwide have set up bases in city parks with officials often working to accommodate them.

Throughout the U.S. — from several dozen people in Jackson, Mississippi, to some 2,000 each in Pittsburgh and Chicago — the protest movement has gained momentum.

In addition to the arrests in Chicago, 46 people in Phoenix were arrested for misdemeanor criminal trespass after refusing to leave a park, Phoenix police spokesman Sgt. Trent Crump said. And police said some protesters were arrested after they remained in a Tucson, Arizona, park past the 10:30 p.m. closing time. An exact number wasn't available Sunday.

In Colorado, at least two dozen people were arrested for refusing to move out of the street at a rally that attracted about 1,000 to downtown Denver, police said.

In Sacramento, Calif., noted anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan was among those arrested.

Nearly 1,500 gathered for a march past banks in downtown Orlando, Florida. Hundreds marched on a Key Bank branch in Anchorage, Alaska, and declared it should be foreclosed.

Rallies drew young and old, laborers and retirees. In Pittsburgh, marchers included parents with children in strollers. The peaceful crowd stretched for two or three blocks.

"I see our members losing jobs. People are angry," said Janet Hill, 49, who works for the United Steelworkers labor union, which she said hosted a sign-making event before the march.

Retired teacher Albert Siemsen said at a demonstration in Milwaukee that he'd grown angry watching school funding get cut at the same time banks and corporations gained more influence in government. The 81-year-old wants to see tighter Wall Street regulation.

Around him, protesters held signs reading: "Keep your corporate hands off my government," and "Mr. Obama, Tear Down That Wall Street."

In Canada, demonstrators gathered in cities across the country from Halifax, Nova Scotia, to Vancouver, British Columbia, with hundreds of people protesting in the heart of Toronto's financial district. Some protesters spent the night at parks in Toronto and several other cities.

Overseas, tens of thousands nicknamed "the indignant" marched in cities across Europe, as the protests that began in New York linked up with long-running demonstrations against government cost-cutting and failed financial policies in Europe. Protesters also turned out in Australia, Asia and South Africa.

Elsewhere in the United States this weekend, Des Moines police said an assault at an Occupy Iowa camp-out was a random act unrelated to the nationwide protest movement.

Sgt. Jeff Phillips said three or four young men saw the group gathered at Stuart Square Park early Sunday morning and decided to cause trouble. The men reportedly entered the camp about 2:30 a.m. and started a fight, punching two protesters and asking for money.

Police confirmed that two people suffered minor injuries. No arrests were made.

In Minneapolis Sheriff's deputies tore down several tents erected by Occupy Minnesota demonstrators on the plaza of the Hennepin County Government Center, but there were no arrests.

Occupy Iowa members reached a deal with Des Moines' mayor Friday to move from the state Capitol to a city park, avoiding arrests. Plans to temporarily evict New York protesters from a park so the grounds could be power-washed were postponed at the request of political leaders.

But Chicago protesters said they've had no such luck with Chicago officials. Some organizers said they haven't had encouraging conversations with city officials, but they haven't applied for permits either.

"We believe we have the right as an international movement to secure a space where we can interact with the public and grow our occupation," organizer Rachael Perrotta said Sunday.

A message left for Chicago Mayor Rahm Emanuel's office wasn't immediately returned

Occupy Chicago began its protest more than 20 days ago as a spinoff of the Occupy Wall Street protests in New York City. The group started small, with about 20 to 25 people a day holding homemade signs outside the U.S. Federal Bank building.

The group has since grown steadily, with about 100 to 150 people attending the group's daily general assembly meetings, and protesters say thousands attended some of the larger rallies. A website informs members about upcoming meetings, marches and other events. It has a Facebook page with more than 23,000 likes, and a Twitter handle with more than 14,000 followers.

The group's sudden growth has made volunteers revamp their organization in recent days. They have committees that handle issues ranging from dwindling supplies to housing concerns.

"If we're going to continue this we need to stake out a home base," said protester Karen Looney, 26.

The movement has spread to other parts of Illinois. Demonstrations were held Saturday in Peoria and Springfield, where hundreds chanted and marched through downtown streets. The mostly liberal Peoria group included some supporters of Texas Republican and presidential candidate Ron Paul, a favorite of libertarians.

The scene in Chicago late Saturday night was described as energetic after a demonstration that organizers say drew at least 2,000 people earlier in the day. Protesters linked arms to form a human chain and yelled "The whole world is watching!" as the event was streamed online and tweeted.

Chicago police spokeswoman Laura Kubiak said there were no reports of violence.

Police offered individual protesters the choice of leaving or being arrested. The arrests started shortly before 2 a.m., and without enough police cars and wagons, officers put protesters on Chicago Transit Authority buses to take them to jail. Most were released by Sunday morning.

David Orlikoff, 22, of Chicago, was among those arrested. The Columbia College student said the group doesn't intend to provoke a confrontation but will use civil disobedience "when we feel it's appropriate."

He said he's disappointed Emanuel didn't intervene to allow the protest to continue. When police reached him, Orlikoff said he had to make a decision.

"I thought that I believed in it and I was the one who was there doing it and who else was going to get arrested but me?" he said.

In Sacramento, Calif., noted anti-war activist Cindy Sheehan was among those arrested.

Elsewhere in the United States this weekend, Des Moines police said an assault at an Occupy Iowa camp-out was a random act unrelated to the nationwide protest movement.,/P>

Sgt. Jeff Phillips said three or four young men saw the group gathered at Stuart Square Park early Sunday morning and decided to cause trouble. The men reportedly entered the camp about 2:30 a.m. and started a fight, punching two protesters and asking for money.

Police confirmed that two people suffered minor injuries. No arrests were made.

In Minneapolis Sheriff's deputies tore down several tents erected by Occupy Minnesota demonstrators on the plaza of the Hennepin County Government Center, but there were no arrests.

About 75 members of Occupy Pittsburgh said it plans a protest against BNY Mellon this week. The protesters spent the night in a downtown park after a march Saturday.

Twenty people were arrested following a demonstration that drew 400 people to North Carolina's State Capitol in Raleigh. Police said the people arrested - ranging in age from 20 to 66 - had refused to leave the Capitol grounds hours after their demonstration was scheduled to end. They were charged with second-degree trespassing. A similar protest in Greensboro drew about 600 on Saturday, police said, while more than 80 people in Wilmington protested outside the Bank of America building downtown.

Demonstrations were also held in Tulsa, Okla., where about 150 people marched; Richmond, Va., where about 300 people marched to a downtown plaza to start what they said would be a local occupation in the heart of the capital city's financial district; Charleston, Va., and Charlottesville, Va.

© 2011 CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
85 Comments Add a Comment
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bmarcus220 says:
Rahm, let them stay in the park lest you end up on the wrong side of the fight. This is bigger than Chicago and certainly bigger than the park. In fact, why don't you be productive and support citizen mobilization? Hell it got you and your former boss elected.
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Skyy630 replies:
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http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dP0-gRaIfsM A sulute to our soldiers
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Smokey75 says:
by Progress4USA October 17, 2011 8:32 AM EDT
The fools are the top 1% that let real wages for the middle class fat line over the past 15 years. Do you enjoy seeing Harvard educated young people with Masters Degrees starve because they can't get a job in this country!?!?!?!? You're the fool!

======================================================================================================================================

Please show me a link that shows proof of the mass Harvard grads starving in the street.

It is just sad liberals have to stoop to lying to further their cause. If there are any Harvard grads starving in the streets it is because they chose stupid useless majors like African studies or liberal arts as a lot of the hippies do just to say they have a degree.


Keep in mind Cornel West is a educator at a university! This might explain why alot of these kids come out of college with no useful information at all.
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bmarcus220 replies:
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Oh yeah cause that makes a ton of sense. Big banks and corporations couldn't have anything to do with shrinking the job market! That'd just be..... Oh wait.....

Time to get with the program. This is bigger than any of us. We've collectively been screwed. Stop pointing fingers at your fellow worker and start focusing on those who have intentionally designed a system to make them a lot of money while we get stuck with middle and lower incomes.
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skithebumps says:
The Occupy arrests in Chicago were done in a very orderly and non-confrontational way.
Only those who wanted to be arrested were arrested. The rest of the kids had already left the park in a peaceful way.
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bmarcus220 replies:
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It's too bad Rahm won't let them set up camp. It's amazing what a little mutual respect can do...
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hsr060 says:
I'm almost certain that the beligered middle class is ready to handle the economic rpoblems, it would be better off for the world to offer it a chance to ride out the economic storm.
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ecofiend says:
Thanks, CBS! If any of your "journalists" had studied geography and been born after 1863, they'd know that Charleston is the capital of West Virginia, not Virginia.
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KnowerseekerReturns says:
1. The People need to be able to maintain prolonged protests if this is going to be/remain a free country. That means they need a place to stay while they protest. Hear that, pig-cops and politicians?!

2. I wish I could do something to help these folks out, but I'm too busy just working a job and trying to put food on my family's table, which is of course what the capitalists and plutocrats are banking on to keep up their status quo.

3. I hope that *when* we win through these protests, and we scrap the government and start a new one -- with The People's interests in mind, a democratic socialist government -- that all the arrested protesters get pardoned.
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slappy-mcjohnson says:
I'm glad to see some civil uprising.

It's about time the people took to the streets again.

.
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Progress4USA replies:
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I agree...this country has been too complacent. The top 1% needs to feel some pain...
KnowerseekerReturns replies:
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We've gotten weak since WWII and then the 60's.
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HuntinFishin says:
sandiegopete: The people of India didnt need to know the kind of government to replace the British. Getting the British out was a pretty clear objective. So how are going to eradicate greed and corruption. Nazi-esque "Greed and Corruption" Police?
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KnowerseekerReturns replies:
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Social democracy: it takes capitalism and does not scrap it but highly regulates it so that workers get a bigger piece of the pie and more rights.
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HuntinFishin says:
The news showed protesters tormenting people standing at ATM machines just because they wore shirts and ties. Rowdy and destructive like the Nazi-era Brown Shirters.
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slappy-mcjohnson replies:
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Which channel?
HuntinFishin replies:
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It was probably NBC two days ago. NBC because it is the only one I Tivo.
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HuntinFishin says:
slappy-mcjohnson: "I have ideas. A flat national sales tax. TN and 8 other states don't have a personal income tax, and we do fine.
Also, get rid of all tax credits for corporations and individuals."

And you really think this is going to pass? And if it does, is it really going to stop greed and corruption that caused the financial meltdown?

You are dreaming.
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slappy-mcjohnson replies:
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As I said before, you seem to be the type that "nothing has worked so far, so quit trying."
OnTheCrown replies:
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slappy "is" dreaming. In the first place, I find it difficult to believe that these protests are fighting so they can have a flat tax.

Again, all smoke and mirrors no substantive solutions.
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