Outrage Over Veteran Injured at 'Occupy' Protest
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
By JESSE McKINLEY and MALIA WOLLAN
Published: October 27, 2011
OAKLAND, Calif. — For supporters of the Occupy Wall Street movement, whose diffuse anger has been a defining and sometimes distracting characteristic, the wounding of an Iraq war veteran here has provided a powerful central rallying point.
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And while Mr. Olsen's condition has since improved, his injury — and the oddity of a Marine who faced enemy fire only to be attacked at home — has prompted an outpouring of sympathy, as well as calls for solidarity among the scores of Occupy encampments around the nation. On Thursday night, camps in several major cities — including New York, Chicago and Philadelphia — were expected to participate in a vigil for Mr. Olsen, according to Iraq Veterans Against the War, of which he is a member.
"I think people would have been outraged even had this been a civilian," said Jose Vasquez, the group's executive director, "but the fact that he survived two tours of duty and then to have this happen to him, people are really upset about that."
Friends of Mr. Olsen — who worked in computer systems at a Bay Area technology company — said that he had eagerly joined the Occupy movement, heading to the San Francisco camp after work and sleeping on the streets in solidarity with the campers there. He was in Oakland on Tuesday to take part in the demonstration there.
"He was loving it," said Jason Matherne, a fellow Iraq war veteran who met Mr. Olsen several months ago. "I think he believed that corporate greed needs to end, and I think he felt the war economy was part of that."
Video of Mr. Olsen, lying bleeding and stunned, has been shown on the Internet and on television news reports, though what exactly hit him remained unclear. But Joshua Shepherd, 27, another veteran, said there had been a "barrage of police tear gas canisters flying everywhere."
"I did not know Scott had been hit," Mr. Shepherd said. "People dragged him away."
Since the skirmish, which resulted in more than 100 arrests, several liberal groups — including Amnesty International — have condemned the use of tear gas as well as the actions of Mayor Jean Quan of Oakland, who said the measures were justified because protesters threw rocks.
The Oakland police have since promised an investigation, and Ms. Quan repeated on Wednesday that Oakland is a "very progressive city" that supports the goals of Occupy Wall Street. But petitions were already circulating calling for the resignation of Oakland's interim police chief, Howard Jordan.
Some 3,000 people gathered peaceably on Wednesday night, debating the merits of calling a general strike in Oakland next week, echoing calls from some Occupy supporters for a national strike. That event was followed by a march through downtown. Unlike Tuesday night, the Oakland police kept their distance.
Outside City Hall on Thursday, meanwhile, several tents had once again sprung up on the contested campground, after protesters removed a police barricade the night before. Nearby, a makeshift tribute to Mr. Olsen had been built around a flagpole, with the words "Pray 4 Scott" chalked onto the pavement.
A handful of protesters also stood guard, including Joann Herr, 60, of Oakland, who said Mr. Olsen's injury had enraged her. "I was mad," Ms. Herr said. "How could you not be?"
"Those who stand for nothing fall for anything"
Alexander Hamilton
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