LAPD Faces First Test

ByABC News
August 13, 2000, 2:50 PM

L O S   A N G E L E S, Aug. 13 -- Law enforcement personnel charged with keeping the peace here during the Democratic National Convention are facing their first test.

A horde of some 4,000 demonstrators were marching on the Staples Center convention site today to protest the scheduled execution of Mumia Abu-Jamal, a black man sentenced to death for killing a Philadelphia police officer.

The mass protest, the first of the week, comes on the eve of the four-day nominating convention, which is set to get underway inside the mammoth sports arena in less than 24 hours.

If We Can Get Through This One

Leaders of the 15,000 activists expected to converge on the city this week promise peaceful demonstrations at the convention, but the federal, state and local authorities assigned to provide security for the event are loaded for bear and prepared for the worst.

With emotions running high among activists, the Los Angeles Police Department views todays protest which has been sanctioned by the LAPD as the first major test of their elaborate security plans and preparations.

I figure if we can get through this one, reasoned one high-level LAPD official, the rest of the week will be OK.

As the march from Pershing Square, a nearby park, to the Staples Center began, protesters appeared to be standing by their promise of non-violence. While some shouted slogans through bullhorns, others distributed pamphlets calling for an end to The Racist Death Penalty, and waved signs reading New Trial for Mumia and Not One More Lynching.

As a police helicopter circled overhead, uniformed officers lined the designated route, on foot and on motorcycles, keeping a watchful eye on the first major demonstration of the week. Police had initially anticipated as many as 10,000 demonstrators to take part in the march, so the relatively low turnout and the peaceful nature of the protest may make the first test for law enforcement here easier than expected.