News

Actions

NAACP demands restraining order against El Cajon police in Alfred Olango protests

Judge to take TRO request under submission
Posted at 7:37 AM, Oct 26, 2016
and last updated 2016-10-26 20:31:46-04

SAN DIEGO - A federal judge Wednesday took under submission a request by the NAACP and others to issue a temporary restraining order preventing police from declaring unlawful assemblies and arresting peaceful demonstrators in the wake of the fatal police shooting of Alfred Olango in El Cajon.

Bryan Pease, an attorney for the plaintiffs, told U.S. District Judge Janis Sammartino that by declaring unlawful assemblies, police and sheriff's deputies are trying to suspend people's First Amendment rights.

"Aren't you asking me to issue the TRO to order police to follow the law?" the judge asked Pease.

Attorney Steven Boehmer, representing the city of El Cajon, said the plaintiffs were asking the judge to rewrite a statute requiring police to follow the law.

Chief Deputy County Counsel George Brewster told the judge that most of the people arrested in the days after Olango's killing on Sept. 27 were taken into custody for failure to disperse after an unlawful assembly had been declared.

Brewster said officers could be heard pleading with protesters to "please go" after the gathering had been declared unlawful.

Pease countered that police cannot preemptively declare an unlawful assembly before it happens.

On one occasion, police declared an unlawful assembly at a second location after an intersection at a different location was blocked.

After the hearing, Pease stood with three minors listed as plaintiffs because they watched their mother detained during a protest.

Pease said people were also being kept from peacefully assembling in the parking lot where Olango was shot because it is private property.

Police said that before the fatal encounter, Olango was uncooperative, repeatedly refused to remove his hand from his pocket, assumed "what appeared to be a shooting stance" and pointed an object at an officer that turned out to be an electronic smoking device that resembled the barrel of a gun.

El Cajon police said Officer Richard Gonsalves fired his service gun at Olango as Officer Josh McDaniel simultaneously shot him with an electric stun gun. Both officers have 21 years of law enforcement experience and were placed on administrative leave per department protocol.